Difference between revisions of "Week 9 Questions/Comments"

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I agree with Kelly in the fact that Catherine Sedgwick journal is personal.  She shows how deeply she feels towards her family.  It seems to me that she has some regret in not getting married.  Her brothers have replaced her as women of the house with their wives.  She has lost her status as the house maiden.  I get the feeling that she may even be jealous of the affections shown by her brothers to their wives.  It must have been hard to go from being the adored sister to the old spinster.---Cheryl
 
I agree with Kelly in the fact that Catherine Sedgwick journal is personal.  She shows how deeply she feels towards her family.  It seems to me that she has some regret in not getting married.  Her brothers have replaced her as women of the house with their wives.  She has lost her status as the house maiden.  I get the feeling that she may even be jealous of the affections shown by her brothers to their wives.  It must have been hard to go from being the adored sister to the old spinster.---Cheryl
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Going along with Kelly and Cheryl, this very personal journal really struck me. It's almost refreshing to read Sedgwick's experiences and feelings and emotions compared to some of the others we've read. She's almost allows for us to be able to relate to her more. Sometimes, for me at least, it's easy to read historical accounts and be completed disconnected from what I'm reading. But pieces like this one, as cheesy as it sounds, gives life to these people. Sedgwick's regret and maybe even jealousy, as Cheryl suggested, is something we can all relate to, even if indirectly. -- Vanessa Smiley
  
 
In her letter from Lowell Harriet Farley writes about the "Yankee spirit" of the women in the mills. She writes using the rhetoric of the revolution (like we discussed in class) using terms like independence and freedom. It seems that the community of women provided a safe and affirming place for women to further develop and voice their beliefs. --Kelly Martin
 
In her letter from Lowell Harriet Farley writes about the "Yankee spirit" of the women in the mills. She writes using the rhetoric of the revolution (like we discussed in class) using terms like independence and freedom. It seems that the community of women provided a safe and affirming place for women to further develop and voice their beliefs. --Kelly Martin

Revision as of 02:53, 25 October 2007