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Women Hollering Creek Summary

Decent Essays

While reading the “Women Hollering Creek” I clearly see how patriarchy dominates the story. Perfectly describing a social system where the male rules and distributes privileges, where men are the head of the family and women are seen as property, subservient and not allowed to exercise any control over their own lives, including marital and sexual control. Cleofila is from Mexico, where she is raised with traditional values in her culture. She grew up in an environment where she was easily influenced by the patriarch in her life, her father, and after she married she continues to be treated as property, when Cleofila is being physically abused by her husband Juan Pedro. Cleofila’s life had always been ruled by the men in her life, and was never allowed to make her owns decisions, or allowed to assume her own responsibilities in order to learn how to be an independent woman. How many Cleofila’s existed around the world and continue to exist, where they are being oppressed by men, “This woman found on the side of the interstate. This one pushed from a moving car. Always, the same grisly news in the pages of the dailies” page 2825. …show more content…

That would be so easy to say, but, for example, if you give a child a tool that they have never seen before, would you expect them to know how to use it? In other words, how can I blame Cleofila of allowing herself of becoming a victim, when she didn’t have a maternal figure or any female figure in her life to teach her how to value herself, and how to be an independent person. She was raised and influenced by the main figure in her life, her father, who apparently was an authoritarian person, making all decisions in her life, and her six

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