British Women in Lady Montagu’s Turkish Embassy Letters and Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South
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Abstract
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu’s Turkish Embassy Letters and Elizabeth
Gaskell’s forth novel North and South seem not to be the only literary works that
tackle the issue of women, but in fact, both authors introduce the real world where
British women lived during the 18th and 19th centuries. What Montagu and Gaskell
are doing is drawing a real painting about the hell where British women passed the
worst times under men’s control and society’s neglect. On the other hand, they
show that these oppressed women did not stay silent, but they made their best to
advance their status. Throughout Turkish Embassy Letters and North and South,
mainly through Lady Montagu and Margaret Hale, as the main characters, the
reader can see difficult circumstances in which these two women are obliged to
struggle and fight to live a respectful life, without any restrictions; the norms that
benefit only men and at the same time oppress women. In this research, both of
Lady Montagu and Elizabeth Gaskell are considered as the representatives of
British women in the 18th and 19th centuries. They are just two examples of British
women who resisted and fought for their rights, to change their status; and in fact
they realized more than they expected, of course after harsh struggles.