J.B. Priestley's When We Were Married: a Feminist Insight

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Ansam Riyadh Abdullah Almaaroof, Maha Naman Zaid

Abstract

As ladies nowadays, one appreciates several privileges, from choosing to forge a ballot, driving, learning, and working. One would possibly see that each society commonly gets these freedoms. Still, altogether taking these freedoms does not measure the consequence of an extended battle of Feminism. Women faced varied circumstances of diminution, separation, badgering, and savagery towards her being an independent individuals within the regular routines, which affirms the need for additional women's activist battle. What is that mean for women's activist development? However, may it grow up? In addition, what is its set of experiences? The response to those inquiries is the worry of this paper. Women's rights are associated with various social and political associations and thoughts dedicated to characterising and accomplishing political and social fairness among sexes. Women's liberation alludes to a political, financial, or business development shielding ladies' equivalent privileges and lawful securities. Woman's rights concern the likelihood of the uniformity of the genders in social, economic, and political problems. This paper investigated Priestley's vision of women in his play When We Were Married. It will, at first, clarify women's liberation from a literary point of view, trailed by the floods of Feminism. The paper can likewise determine Priestley's occupation in reproducing the image of ladies concerning the earlier mentioned play to find out Priestley's Feminism, as the conclusion of the paper shows.

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