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LITR 4231
Early American Literature 2012
research post 2 |
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Kayla Riggs
April 22,2012
The Turning Point of Women Writer’s with Abigail Adams
In my first research post my goal was to show readers how women writers were
often overlooked. Many women did significant things but we only study a few in
literature classes. One woman that has made a significant impact on Early
American Literature and women writers is Abigail Adams. She, by all means, has
taken writing to a whole different level during her lifetime. Throughout the
Revolution she would write back and forth to her husband who was away from her,
carrying on the marriage in the best way they could at that moment. With
whatever happened during that time period she would put that pen to the paper
and write beautiful, intimate, descriptive letters back and forth with him.
Abigail Adams is such a powerful woman of that time frame because she shows
other women what it is like to be loving, significant, and use her words
miraculously.
As everyone clearly understands, Abigail Adams was the wife
of our second president of the
United States, John Adams. Abigail undoubtedly
stood beside John Adams in all performances and trials that he encountered, they
were a team. But, what some of us don’t see is the amount of influence Abigail
Adams had on her husband. While most women in this time period did the usual
cooking, cleaning, housekeeping type of things, Abigail Adams had a lot more on
her hands. The letters that were sent back and forth weren’t just love letters
that didn’t matter, but they were influencing letters that made big decisions
for John Adams. He genuinely accepted advice from Abigail Adams on all accounts,
and their letters played out to be important political writings. She was
definitely a woman behind the scenes who truly made some intellectual decisions
for her husband and his duties as President. This is not often seen, actually,
hardly ever seen. She was a master mind and very intelligent. She used her
writings to her husband as an educational route to help him in every way.
Abigail Adams was born in
Massachusetts, where her family was politically trained;
which is why her political influence on John Adams was much appreciated and
carried out through her lifetime until she died of typhoid fever when she was
73. Abigail Adams was an advocate for women’s rights and this is the main reason
I chose to do my second research post on her. I didn’t just pick a woman who
everyone knew and read about, although some literature classes do read over
these letters between Abigail and John. But, I wanted to write about a woman who
was dedicated to other women and wanted to change the future on women being
overlooked. Abigail Adams didn’t want women to be overlooked; it was time for
them to be equal. Equally read and equally discussed in literature classes
because in some way or another they are all significant. Abigail Adams did not
want women to be content with being housewives for their significant others. She
was a big believer that if they could not receive education then they should
educate themselves some way or another. An intellectual human being is far
greater than someone who knows nothing. Knowledge is Power. The more a human
knows, especially a woman, the greater their chance is to being significant.
Education to Abigail Adams shows strength and good guidance for not only the
world, but family as well.
These letters that Abigail Adams and John Adams sent back
and forth changed thoughts about women and their place in history; through
education and politics. Abigail Adams could have been just another first lady,
standing beside her husband through thick and thin, but instead, she was
determined to be equal with him. I would consider her the second president of
the United States
just as much as John Adams was. She was an outstanding leader and changed the
outlook on the education and purpose of women. She had a strong influence on not
only her husband, but everyone else as well. Her letters showed dominance,
intelligence, vulnerability, intimacy; everything someone could count on while
being away from their significant other.
Abigail Adams is a completely personal study for me. She is
showing women that education has a purpose and a person can do incredible things
when education is the outcome. Abigail Adams shows that man or woman, you can
succeed. Although it is far easier nowadays than it ever was back then, it is
possible. She is such a powerful figure in women’s history and I absolutely love
learning about her. Abigail Adams help me to cherish our freedom, education, and
writing amongst women. Don’t overlook women, study about them.
Just to touch up on a few things that other people wrote
about in their research posts that I really enjoyed. Sarah Wimberley discussed
that she genuinely appreciates the opportunities that we have as women in our
time period. We have to remember, this isn’t how it used to be. Women worked
really hard to be depicted as we do in this day and age and I am so thankful as
well. She jots down how women in the Colonial period did not have a lot of
educational chances, and writes some statistics as well, this is extremely
important to understand.
Lori Arnold states that “education has a power to shape how a person develops
and who they become”. This is so important to understand. Going back to Abigail
Adams and what she believed regarding education, it is so motivational.
Education gives an individual chances, without it can be difficult to succeed.
Educate yourself and become who you want to be.
Work Cited
Rowe, Linda. “Women and Education in Eighteenth-Century Virginia.” Colonial Williamsburg Research Division Web Site. Web.
5 April 2010.
Herndan, Ruth Wallice. Literacy Among New England's
transient poor (1750-1800). 1996. 29 March 2010 <http://www.questia.com/googleScholar.qst;jsessionid=LvlXR61cr2fJ5s2r5JHNpvTQvdVxCGhTx2Gj2HLXKdkHjcYb11Kh!1274572157!143387362?docId=5000392518>.
Edith B. Gelles. Abigail Adams: A Writing Life. New York: Routledge,
2002.
National First Ladies Library. 2009. <http://www.firstla/
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