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How Did Southern Belles Help Dispel Their Own Stereotype

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{{Mediawiki:Banner1}}__NOTOC__[[File:southernbelle.jpg|thumbnail|200px300px|left|Southern Belle in Baltimore, depicted on the cover of ''Harper's Weekly'', September 7, 1861.]]
In all of 19th century America, with the exception of various indigenous tribes, women were seen as the weaker sex. Circumstances had changed to a certain degree in the northern states, due in part to the increasing migration to cities. Whereas the North was becoming more conducive to urban living, the agrarian lifestyle remained strong in the South. While women in the northern states ventured into politics, social causes, and ultimately independence, young ladies in the southern part of the country had no need to engage in labor.
== Antebellum Women ==
[[File:Mrs._Jefferson_Davis,_full-length_studio_portrait.jpg|thumbnail|200pxleft|250px|Mrs. Jefferson Davis.]]
The life of a plantation mistress was constructed to be one of leisure. Unlike their counterparts in the North, young ladies in the South had no opportunities to earn wages on their own, thus the only means by which to leave the family home was through marriage. Young women in the northern states; however, were entering the work force in factories and the textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts as early as the 1820’s and were able to enjoy a feeling of independence.<ref>Ellen Carol DuBois and Lynn Dumenil, ''Through Women’s Eyes: An American History'' (Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2005), 149.</ref> In Southern culture, women devoted their time to leisure and the pursuit of culture; labor was for slaves.

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