This section contains 2,646 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |
Feminist Defeat and Perseverance
Summary: An analysis of A Woman Destroyed by Simone De Beauvoir, Relating to her Philosphical ideas and modern feminist views.
In Simone de Beauvoir's The Woman Destroyed, the reader is given a deep psychological portrait of a women's failing marriage. Not only does Beauvoir show us the thoughts and confidences of one beset by inner turmoil, she also portrays for us the marriage as it appears from the outside. The main character in The Woman Destroyed is the narrator Monique. She has been married to her husband Maurice for over twenty years and is trying to keep herself emotionally together after the realization that he is having an affair. Other characters the author introduces are the couple's two daughters, Colette and Lucienne. Colette has recently married and moved out of her parent's house. Lucienne, the younger of the two children, has moved to America to live an independent life from her family.
The turmoil of Maurice's affair has begun a series of emotional challenges for Monique. It is...
This section contains 2,646 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |