- YOU MUST TALK ABOUT ALL 6 EXAMPLES
- What does each example convey about barriers to (or possibilities of) female empowerment at these different historical moments?
- Are there patterns that emerge from these examples that point toward a more gender-equal future?
- Ulla Winblad’s boudoir: her boudoir is where she is free to do whatever, but as soon as she steps out to the bar, she's arrested and taken to a spinnhus; shows the unfair treatment of women who are deemed as "loose"; points out that society has wronged women, but doesn't do anything but point it out
- The steamship or the inn in Sara Videbeck: these intermediate spaces serve to illustrate a path for society to follow to accept samboende/women like Sara; show how innkeepers need to see A & S as married to treat them as such, and it works, even though they never get married; paves the way for legislation about marriage/samboende
- Nora Helmer’s dollhouse: in this historical moment, wives are like the dolls of their husbands, conveys possibility of a woman becoming a human being first instead of a wife/mother/daughter; her mask of ditsy/incompetence but she enjoys working off her debt/having control; ties into idea that marriage is not the truest form of love, it's the relationship that's important; this play led to people realizing that this situation should not happen in real life, policy changes
- Nina’s dark corner: Benedictsson uses the idea of “friendship” in similar ways: to call into being a hoped-for space beyond the tyranny of a rigid gender system; the dark corner serves to hide her body (patriarchy’s repression and objectification of female bodily experience) and is a strategy (the speaking Nina gains power to express herself by making the usual visual objectification impossible); Nina speaking is her empowerment - her voice/experience being heard
- Mother Sofi’s washhouse: Her only safespace away from the judgement of the world - in contrast with Emilie and Nora where they leave their respective houses to be free out in the world; the one thing she does to feel safe is what others judge her for - think she's sexually loose because she cleans herself "often"; she's stuck but her descendants do something - Sally's political organization
- Emilie’s townhouse: townhouse is a pattern, not an isolated incident like the original Doll House - every house on her street is similar to her, those women have analogous experience; the townhouse is even more stress for her after work and before - her interactions in the house are tired and strained, she can't even speak openly with Jon; this paves the way for future as she talks about solidarity with other women in her letter to Jon - as this is a common female experience, everyone must work to reclaim their femininity and each others'