Charlotte Perkins Gilman
1860–1935
“Women and Economics — 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
A Voice from the South — Black women as the measure of any republic.
- Frances WrightFORGE
Free thought, abolition, equal education — a 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 ▶