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James Moloney Gracy
Gracey is the second in James Moloneyââ¬â¢s contemporary set of three that manages a scope of issues confronting Aboriginal society. In t...
Saturday, October 12, 2019
Women in Tickets Please are More Assertive than Those in Tony Kyters, The Arch Deceiver :: D.H. Lawrence Thomas Hardy Women Essays
Women in Tickets Please are More Assertive than Those in Tony Kyters, The Arch Deceiver      'Tickets Please' was written by D.H. Lawrence in the ending phase of  World War One a time when women were beginning to realise that they  were equal citizens to men and that they did not have to stay at the  houses cooking for a loving husband. The protagonists of this short  story are Annie a rather well build woman who has a way with the  opposite sex and also knows fully well that she is feared as the  ringleader of the pack of women that now haunt the tram tracks of the  Midlands, and there is also John Thomas a somewhat good-looking man  who - knowing that most men are off at helping in the war effort -  realises that he has all the women at his back and call. John Thomas  also enjoys his female attention and is really quiet a flirt. The  women in 'Tickets Please' are feared by men of a bigger stature than  themselves but why? This is because they have an aura around them that  creates a sense of masculinity that comes with there job.    On the other hand we have 'Tony Kytes, The Arch-Deceiver' written by  Thomas Hardy the women are totally the opposite to the women mentioned  above they bow low and are treated as second class citizens that are  lower in the rankings of society than the all dominant male. They  instantly follow Tony's commands to sit in the back of the wagon and  never argue back. They seem fragile and weak, and eager to settle down  and marry.    One of the reasons for this dramatic change in character development  is that both stories are set in different periods which significantly  effects the women in the stories sense of pride in there sex. The  girls in 'Tickets Please are 'fearless young hussies' compared to the  women in 'Tony Kytes, The Arch-Deceiver' who wouldn't dare answer back  to a male. 'Tony Kytes' women are portrayed as dainty, neat, fragile,  light hearted women who have no real reason to be on the face of the  earth apart from creating more males. The reason they is portrayed in  this way is due to the periods that they are set in. One as mentioned  above is in World war 1, and the other was in the early 18th Century.  These periods are totally different as one is in the face of total war  and the other is in the peaceful reign of queen Victoria. In World War  One women took on new responsibilities which meant that the had to    					    
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