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Marriage in the Nineteenth Century: The Influence of Margaret Fuller’s “The Great Lawsuit” on Little Women
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Published:March 2022
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Abstract
Christine Doyle explores how Margaret Fuller’s “The Great Lawsuit” may have influenced Alcott’s writing of Little Women, especially 1869’s Part Second. She notes that Little Women “concerns itself with the development of American girls into women in practical ways as Fuller’s essay does in theoretical ones.” Detailing Fuller’s various types of marriage equality, Doyle demonstrates how these are depicted in Alcott’s novel, beginning with the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. March and then with each of the March sisters’ marriages. Fuller’s essay “provides a rather specific primer” not only for Jo’s marriage, Doyle argues, but also for her “progress toward and preparation for it.” And it is Jo and Friedrich’s marriage that fulfills Fuller’s depiction of “the highest level of equality.”
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