Humanities › History & Culture Adrienne Rich's 'Of Woman Born' Adrienne Rich's Feminist Examination of Motherhood Share Flipboard Email Print Bettmann/Getty Images History & Culture Women's History History Of Feminism Important Figures Key Events Women's Suffrage Women & War Laws & Womens Rights Feminist Texts American History African American History African History Ancient History and Culture Asian History European History Genealogy Inventions Latin American History Medieval & Renaissance History Military History The 20th Century View More By Linda Napikoski Linda Napikoski Journalist J.D., Hofstra University B.A., English and Print Journalism, University of Southern California Linda Napikoski, J.D., is a journalist and activist specializing in feminism and global human rights. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on February 06, 2019 Adrienne Rich combined her own experience as a mother with feminist theory to write Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution. Foray into Feminist Theory Adrienne Rich was already an established feminist poet in 1976 when she published Of Woman Born. It had been more than twenty years since her first volume of poetry was published. Adrienne Rich is known for confronting society and writing political themes in her poetry. Of Woman Born, a thoughtful, non-fiction prose examination of motherhood, was nonetheless an eye-opening and provocative work. Before Of Woman Born, there had been little to no scholarly feminist analysis of the institution of motherhood. The book has since become a classic feminist text, and motherhood has become an essential issue of feminism. She is often quoted as a feminist writer. Personal Experience Of Woman Born begins with excerpts from Adrienne Rich’s journal. In the journal entries, she reflects on her love for her children and other emotions. She describes moments in which she questioned her ability and desire to be a mother. Adrienne Rich then writes that even her own children recognize the impossibility of constant, 24-hour love and attention. Still, she argues, society places on mothers the unreasonable demand that they provide perfect, constant love. How the Patriarch Views the Matriarch Of Woman Born includes a historical overview of motherhood. Adrienne Rich asserts that being a mother changed as the world moved from primitive societies that revered women to patriarchal civilization. Of Woman Born explores the modern division of labor that relies heavily if not solely on mothers to do the child-rearing. Adrienne Rich asks why childbirth went from midwife’s calling to medical procedure. She also questions what childbirth and motherhood demand of women emotionally. One Dimension of Woman Adrienne Rich writes in Of Woman Born that motherhood is but one physical dimension of a woman’s being. Rather than being defined as mothers, or by their status as childless, women should be defined in terms of themselves, as all humans should be. Nor should becoming a mother mean women are isolated and not allowed to participate in the social and professional world. Instead, Adrienne Rich calls for “a world in which every woman is the presiding genius of her own body.” “None of Woman Born…” The title Of Woman Born recalls the line from Shakespeare's play Macbeth that tricks Macbeth into thinking he is safe: “…for none of woman born/Shall harm MacBeth” (Act IV, Scene 1, lines 80-81). Of course MacBeth is not safe in the end, for it turns out Macduff was “untimely ripp’d” (Act V, Scene 8, line 16) from his mother's womb. Macbeth is fraught with themes of good and evil; it also examines the downfall of a man. Lady MacBeth, with blood on her hands, and the three sisters, or witches, are among the memorable Shakespearean women whose power and prophecies are threatening. Quotes From Of Woman Born “All human life on the planet is born of woman. The one unifying, incontrovertible experience shared by all women and men is that months-long period we spent unfolding inside a woman’s body. Because young humans remain dependent upon nurture for a much longer period than other mammals, and because of the division of labor long established in human groups, where women not only bear and suckle but are assigned almost total responsibility for children, most of us first know both love and disappointment, power and tenderness, in the person of a woman.” “There is nothing revolutionary whatsoever about the control of women's bodies by men. The woman's body is the terrain on which patriarchy is erected.” edited and with additions by Jone Johnson Lewis Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Napikoski, Linda. "Adrienne Rich's 'Of Woman Born'." ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/of-woman-born-by-adrienne-rich-3528976. Napikoski, Linda. (2023, April 5). Adrienne Rich's 'Of Woman Born'. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/of-woman-born-by-adrienne-rich-3528976 Napikoski, Linda. "Adrienne Rich's 'Of Woman Born'." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/of-woman-born-by-adrienne-rich-3528976 (accessed May 30, 2023). copy citation