Salem Trials Feminist Analysis

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During the ancient American history, women had less official privileges than men; their roles were mostly restricted to homemaking and child care giving, and they were treated as an inferior group and mostly associated with wickedness and enticement. Both primary and secondary evidence from the story of "Salem Trials" and the "Midwife's Diary" apparently supports the underlying situation (Salevouris & Furay, 2015; “Do History: Martha Ballard's Diary Online”, n.d; Davidson & Lytle, 2000). Also, the evidence is written in the actual period of the olden America (1692-1693) and (1785-1800) for the Trials and the Diary respectively which gives the real situation of the time (Salevouris & Furay, 2015).
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According to the Salem Trials, women had fewer rights than men in that they were not entitled to any political power because the village is strictly patriarchy in law and by the God's approval (Davidson & Lytle, 2000). Similarly, the Midwife
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First, the unmarried women like Mercy, Abigail, and Mary occupies the bottom ranking in the societal system (Davidson & Lytle, 2000). Also, they are mostly linked with witches bearing in mind that in the trial 14 suspects were women compared to 6 men (Davidson & Lytle, 2000). Equally, the Diary epitomizes that men could rape women, and the latter would be blamed for enticing the former. For instance, the case of the abused girl among others was referred as friend rape, and she was accused of luring the attacker (“Do History: Martha Ballard's Diary Online”, n.d.). In the case of premarital pregnancy, the unmarried women were forced to name the father of the kid during the climax of the labor (“Do History: Martha Ballard's Diary Online”, n.d.). All the exemplars showed that females were lowly treated, and since they were neither economically nor educationally empowered, they were unable to fight for this ill