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Maria Popova

Maria Popova - Maria Popova is the editor of Brain Pickings. She writes for Wired UK and GOOD, and is an MIT Futures of Entertainment Fellow.

'The Open Country of Woman's Heart': Illustration From the 1800s

By Maria Popova
Oct 2 2011, 4:59 PM ET Comment

womansheart1.jpgNineteenth-century ideals of womanhood and beauty expressed as much about women as they did about the society in which they were germinated. At a time of radical sociocultural and economic shifts -- rapid urbanization, new modes of transportation and communication, increasing mechanization of industry -- the expectations for women's role in society shifted as well, with an idealized version of what was known as "True Womanhood" underpinning pop culture representations of women in everything from newspaper advice columns to art.

A Map of the Open Country of a Woman's Heart was a map created by D. W. Kellogg circa 1833-1842, in the tradition of these maps of the human condition you might recall, subtitled "Exhibiting its internal communications, and the facilities and dangers to Travellers therein." Though it mostly depicts Woman as a sentimental, selfish, and superficial being driven by vanity, it places Love at the center of her heart, with Good Sense, Patience, and Prudence at its tip -- or bottom, depending on the interpretation.

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For a fascinating look at the expectations of True Womanhood, marvel at Bernard O'Reilly's 1883 classic The Mirror Of True Womanhood: A Book Of Instruction For Women In The World.

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This post also appears on Brain Pickings.



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