Anne Bradstreet Research Paper

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Pages: 7

Feminism in the Life and Writing of Anne Bradstreet.
Born in 1612, Bradstreet was a daughter to Thomas Dudley and Dorothy Dudley, and her father was a revered figure at the Earl of Lincoln; having served in the capacity of a steward. Bradstreet was just one amongst the extremely small amount of women of her time that went to school and enjoyed contemporary education, because of her supportive parents, despite the common traditional belief that roles of women were limited to basic training, getting married, siring children, taking care of the husband and children and finally performing domestic chores. A critical review of Bradstreet`s poetry does not portray her as a radical feminist per se, rather, one who chose to explain her environment
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For instance, according to Randal Huff “..at barely nineteen years of age, she was privileged to access without limit the Earl of Lincoln’s library where she did most of her research” (Huff 4). She became more sophisticated and exceptionally well-read to the degree that a master of language, linguistic principles, and fluency was her domain. Bradstreet had moved to the US as an immigrant to solicit for freedom of religion together with her parents in 1630. She was barely two years old in marriage, and along with the husband, one Simon Bradstreet (an assistant to her father) they relocated to the US. “Because the powers that be then favored the high over the low in church, Bradstreet and the family felt disadvantaged under the reign of King Charles the First, and because they were Puritans, they had to shift camp to the US” (Carrie 227). Nevertheless, a critical examination of the arguments of Bradstreet as she would later write in her poetry reveals that the mother, the sisters and herself did not embrace the idea of leaving England wholeheartedly. Therefore, the environment was a significant factor in shaping Bradstreet into a liberal feminist that she