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As a female in a highly patriarchal society, Anne Bradstreet uses the reverse
psychology technique to prove the point of her belief of unfair and unequal
treatment of women in her community. Women who wrote stepped outside their
appropriate sphere, and those who actually published their work frequently faced
social censure. Compounding this social pressure, many women faced crushing
workloads and struggled with lack of leisure for writing. Others suffered from
an unequal access to education, while others were dealing with the sense of
intellectual inferiority offered to them from virtually every authoritative
voice, that voice usually being male. Bradstreet was raised in an influential
family, receiving an extensive education with access to private tutors and the
Earl of Lincoln's large library. She was part of an influential family who
encouraged her writing and circulated it in manuscript with pride. That kind of
private support did much to offset the possibility of public disapproval.
Bradstreet believed that women in her society were treated unfairly, and that
gender should be insignificant. In her Prologue she addresses conflict and
struggle, expressing her opinion toward women's rights, implying that gender is
unimportant and male dominance is wrong. Bradstreet asserts the rights of women
to learning and expression of thought, addressing broad and universal themes.
The Prologue has a humble tone with slightly hidden surprises, containing a
muted declaration of independence from the past and a challenge to male
authority. Bradstreet also uses a rather apologetic tone to draw in the reader
so that they will form an interest in her writing despite her gender. In the
beginning she refers to wars, captains, and epics, written specifically by male
writers, worrying that her poems will shame the art of poetry. Continuing her
self-demotion with an apologetic tone she talks about the Great Bartas, admiring
his works, and sarcastically admitting that she will never be as talented as he
is. The sarcastic tone of these lines cause the typical reader to reconsider
that maybe women are not as bad as she portrays them to be, which is exactly
what she has schemed for the reader to think. Continuing, Bradstreet mentions
regret for her lack of skill, in which she laments the fact that A weak or
wounded brain admits no cure (stanza 4, line 24). As the reading progresses, she
discusses the prejudice against women, knowing that if she expresses her true
feelings, no one will look at her poem. Stanza 5, lines 25-30 implies that she
despises anyone who thinks that women are better as housewives, and that if
their work proves well, men will say it is stolen or is by chance, explaining
unfair treatment of women. Following, she mentions the Greeks as appreciative of
women, blaming the current society for the manipulation of women. She laments
that the Greeks had fewer arguments on women's rights and were more peaceful,
contrasting it with the current values of society, namely that the Greeks are
wrong and women are inferior.
Bradstreet uses sarcasm to express her emotions
toward the male dominant society, saying that men are eternally correct, and
women are inferior to them. She sarcastically says that men are better than
women, implying the exact opposite, that women are in fact, equal in ability.
She ends by stating that she does not think her work is worth a critic's time,
telling us that although she thinks women are not inferior, she cannot do
anything about it, and that her works making men's glist'ring gold [work] but
more to shine. Bradstreet was a very gifted and talented poet, recording early
stirrings of female resistance to a social and religious system that was
prevalent at the time. She used different tones, moods, and sarcasm to bring her
poetry to life, giving a vivid, clearly worded image of what she wants her
reader to know, a strikingly radical notion that her writing could be as
competent as any male's. Although much of her work was conventional puritan
poetry, it shows a sensitivity to beauty that male writers of the time lacked.
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