The idealFollowing the publication of Patmore's poem, the term angel in the house came to be used in reference to women who embodied the Victorian feminine ideal: a wife and mother who was selflessly devoted to her children and submissive to her husband. Adèle Ratignolle, a character in Kate Chopin's novel The Awakening, is a literary example of the angel in the house. Another example is in the What Katy Did novels of Susan Coolidge about a pre-pubescent tomboy who becomes a paraplegic. They are based on her own life in 19th Century America. Katy eventually walks again, but not before she learns to become the "angel in the house", that is, the socially acceptable "ideal" of docile womanhood. Another example is Thomas Hardy's The Return of the Native, in which Thomasin Yeobright is also described as 'the angel of the house'. Thomasin in the antithesis to Hardy's main female protoganist, Eustacia Vye, who is the opposite of the Victorian female 'ideal'. CriticsLater feminist writers have had a less positive view of the Angel. Nel Noddings views her as "infantile, weak and mindless" (1989: 59) and Virginia Woolf famously wrote that she "bothered me and wasted my time and so tormented me that at last I killed her" (Woolf, 1966: 2, 285). External links
ReferencesNoddings, 1984. Women and Evil (Berkeley: University of California Press) Woolf, 1966. "Professions for Women", Collected Essays (London: Hogarth Press)
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