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Gender roles in Colonial America Hartman

Gender roles in Colonial America Hartman 1 During the late seventeenth & early eighteenth century in Colonial & English America , the roles men expected of women followed a strict guideline. Those guidelines kept women in certain boundaries. Women had no defined legal identity as an individual. Women grew to resent being repressed socially and legally with the constant law changes restricting the liberties permitted to their Gender . Their only outlet was gossip, allowing them to have a degree of control over their own lives and the lives of others. The fine nuances found within idealistic womanhood could contribute to the tensions generating suspicions among the female Freedoms of speech permitted to women could be considered a catalyst of the Salem Witch trials in 1692. The results of the Salem trials proved the greatest preventive of any future outbreaks in the court After Salem, the law realized the errors made during Salem, and pardoned the victims of the afflicted girls cruelty.

suspicions among the female gender. 1. ... charge, the men have been a neglected subject in analyses of witchcraft prosecutions.7 ... considered whatever power women had would be based on personal relationships formed outside the hierarchy of the village authority. By the 1650s, the most serious dissenters

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  Power, Roles, Gender, America, Female, Colonial, Hartman, Witchcraft, Gender roles in colonial america hartman, Female gender

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