Charlotte Perkins Gilman
1860–1935
“Her Women and Economics names domestic labor as economic invisibility.”
The four dimensions in the 16-axis model where this thinker scores highest. People in this archetype tend to lean the same way.
- WPWill to Power7 / 10
- TETrust in Experience7 / 10
- SRSkeptical Reflex7 / 10
- POPractical Orientation7 / 10
The six thinkers whose 16-dimensional positions sit closest to this one. Useful as next-reading suggestions.
- Paulo FreireFORGE
Pedagogy of the Oppressed — education as the practice of freedom.
- Ida B. WellsFORGE
Anti-lynching investigations — moral evidence over respectability.
- Glen CoulthardFORGE
Red Skin, White Masks — Indigenous resurgence as anti-colonial.
- Aníbal QuijanoFORGE
Coloniality of power — race as the deepest axis of modern domination.
- Anna Julia CooperFORGE
In A Voice from the South, Black women are the measure of any republic.
- Frances WrightFORGE
Free thought, abolition, and equal education filled her Course of Popular Lectures.
Short exercises in the same tradition as Charlotte Perkins Gilman's thought. Each takes 5–25 minutes.
Three doors lead onward.
- 01 · QUIZThe InheritorFind your archetype — discover whether you'd argue with Charlotte Perkins Gilman or alongside them.CONTINUE ▶
- 02 · COMPARECharlotte Perkins Gilman vs Paulo FreireOn Mull's map Paulo Freire sits closest. See where they agree and where they part.CONTINUE ▶
- 03 · DAILYToday's SparOne philosopher, one topic, five minutes. A new one drops every day.CONTINUE ▶