The Devil In The Shape Of A Woman Analysis

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The Changing Roles Women: From the Hangman’s Noose to the Daughters of Liberty

When God Himself created Adam, he saw that even a masterful, powerful creature such as man cannot reach the full potential of his creation without the missing piece of life’s delicate puzzle. Eve, a creature begotten by Adam’s own rib, emerged as the counterpart of man; woman now existed as an extension of man. The survival of one intertwined with the other, for one without the other is vulnerable to nature’s wicked bane. When Eve bit into the forbidden fruit, she created a chain reaction throughout the Christian world that changed the view of woman and their relationship with men forever. Fast Forward to the late seventeen-hundreds, a time when the Puritans kept a firm grip on the culture of Salem, a culture seen in Carol F. Karlsen’s monograph The Devil in the Shape of a Woman, and the culture viewed there is one where men and women have a certain place in society, and had an intricate relationship with each other in order to coexist with the Puritan standards of life. The Puritan faith was unforgiving to those who do not comply with their strict guidelines and belief system. Such occurrences were so frowned upon that a major outbreak of fear, scandal, and intercolonial freud occurred throughout Massachusetts, especially in Salem. The relationship between men and women and their roles in the early colonial period stood out as one of religious guidance, but was also a relationship that would not make it to the creation of the United States of America. With the nation