Colby Quarterly, Volume 34Colby College, 1998 |
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Page 47
... marry , or not to marry and live with one's in - laws , is often the result of home ownership . Although marriage was not con- sidered the social and economic obligation it had been during the colonial pe- riod ( Mintz and Kellogg 56 ) ...
... marry , or not to marry and live with one's in - laws , is often the result of home ownership . Although marriage was not con- sidered the social and economic obligation it had been during the colonial pe- riod ( Mintz and Kellogg 56 ) ...
Page 86
... married .... Slaves ' inability to marry was one form - a definitive form of their inability to contract . ( 110-11 ) Cott clarifies what is at stake in this question of marriage as she emphasizes the economic and civil status that marriage ...
... married .... Slaves ' inability to marry was one form - a definitive form of their inability to contract . ( 110-11 ) Cott clarifies what is at stake in this question of marriage as she emphasizes the economic and civil status that marriage ...
Page 88
... marriage , since being able to marry was a reaffirmation of the ability to contract legally , of which professional work was also a sign . Harper's novel would make clear the difficulty that black men and women had in making these kinds ...
... marriage , since being able to marry was a reaffirmation of the ability to contract legally , of which professional work was also a sign . Harper's novel would make clear the difficulty that black men and women had in making these kinds ...
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allusion androgyny Anna Prince Annie Annie Adams Fields Ash Wednesday beauty black women Blake Blake's Boston Bruce Cary characters Colby Colby College collage context conventional Country Doctor covers Critical cultural daughter Deephaven divine goal domestic Eliot Elly England Essays experience father female feminine feminist figure Folly Island Freeman's gender George Gerry Gerry girl grandmother Harper Horatia imagination Jack Prince King of Folly Lady Ferry Leslie literary literature lives lover male marriage marry Martha Mary maternal Miss Sydney mother Nan's narrative narrator nineteenth-century novel Old Friends patriarchal poem poetry Pointed Firs protagonist Quarterly reader realism relationship role romance Sarah Orne Jewett Science sense silence story suggests Sylvia T.S. Eliot tells things tion tradition turn unwritable vision voice White Heron white women Whitman Wilkins Wilkins Freeman William Blake William Dean Howells Wollstonecraft's woman Womanhood women writers words York young