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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The concept that men are entitled to inherent privileges in marriage, while women have to earn their place in the same state of matrimony, is the clear
implication in Mary Astell's "Some Reflections Upon Marriage." Asserting feminist views about the vast differences between the roles men and women play in relationships, Astell contends that the fairer sex has routinely been victimized by society merely because of
gender; that women are lesser human beings in any respect is a concept foreign to the author's forward thinking structure. The writer discusses the concepts of marriage, roles and feminism as they relate to the essay. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Refmar.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in marriage, while women have to earn their place in the same state of matrimony, is the clear implication in Mary Astells Some Reflections Upon Marriage. Asserting feminist views
about the vast differences between the roles men and women play in relationships, Astell contends that the fairer sex has routinely been victimized by society merely because of gender; that
women are lesser human beings in any respect is a concept foreign to the authors forward thinking structure. Astell is perplexed by the grossly incongruent capacity of man and wife
as they exist within the institution of marriage. She wonders aloud why women have expected -- and received -- only the short end of the shaft when it has
come to the equality of the relationship; that when pitted against each other, women have always fallen short of what men have expected of them. Eloquently phrased in Astells
Some Reflections Upon Marriage is the authors amazement at how men behave while in the bounds of marriage. Without so much as a thought for the woman, its implications
are that men enter into marriage for their own gain: to have someone tend to their needs, wants and desires. It is only by happenstance, according to Astell, that
the woman reaps any benefit at all from her matrimonial vows. "If marriage be such a blessed state, how comes it, may you say, that there are so few
happy marriages? Now in answer to this, it is not to be wondered that so few succeed; we should rather be surprised to find so many do, considering how
imprudently men engage, the motives they act by, and the very strange conduct they observe throughout" (Astell astell.html). Standing up and fighting for what one believes is what Mary
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