Literary Analysis
Literary Analysis Introduction This discusses Fanny Fern 's Ruth Hall (1855 ) and takes an in-depth literary analysis in trying to come up with broader exploration of the novel . Fern 's Ruth Hall portrays a pattern of imagery that is believed to be significant in digging up the more sensible part that the novel has to offer . This claims several important and reasonable issues surrounding the Ruth Hall novel Fanny Fern 's Ruth Hall Fern 's Ruth Hall revolves around a secular world expanding the boundaries of the ideology to include

white women 's right to express angered indignation at white men who deny them the right to compete in the capitalist marketplace . This novel exploded the notion that women can rely on men for economic , legal , and social protection . It is an inspiring act of resistance against the romance of dependency . The novel is distinguished by Fern 's original style and the vivid rendering of writer 's ideas . Almost as important as the ideas themselves is her presentation of them in plain language and her ability to give dramatic life to the flaws she saw in society . The Ruth Hall novel contains the elements of pungent satire . Fern stripped people - particularly men - of their grandiose airs and pompous self-complacency , and she satirized pretension in all facets of life . The novel evolves with rewarding its heroine with a marriage in which her every economic want is met by her financially successful husband . Yet almost immediately Harry , Ruth 's husband , loses his money and then dies . The remainder of the book shows how men violate the very hetero-social contract of exchange they promote . Ruth 's father and brothers abandon her financially to make her own way in the world . Her brother , for example , tells that she has no talent that way ' and advises her instead to seek some unobtrusive employment (Fern , 115 ) The turning point of the plot is concluded by Hyacinth 's words that her writings will never . be heard of outside of [her] own little provincial city (Fern , 116 . This attitude becomes a powerful spur for Ruth . She gets firmly determined , what is felt from her response : But they shall be heard of ' and Ruth leaped to her feet . Sooner than he dreams of , too . I can do it , I feel it , I will do it ' and she closed her lips firmly (Fern , 116 . This she does , becoming a successful writer . Through her writings Ruth shares her experience with the world . Fanny Fern in this novel criticizes the patriarchy comparing it with other deeply rooted social evils like poverty , misogyny or racism . All these prejudices appear on an individual 's way as the obstacles which she has to overcome in to achieve admittance to the public circles , which are supposedly exclusive male and white realm . In the end of the novel , Ruth disappears , as : no happy woman ever writes (Fern , 175 ) she dolefully tells her little daughter Katie
For the reason that Fern has made the story...





