Seminar paper from the year 2014 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, grade: A, , course: Housewives in American Literature, language: English, abstract: The role of the “mother-woman” in nineteenth century literature is constantly complexified. But who is the audience? For whom are we preserving the mother-myth and what are the parameters of doing so? This inquiry gave way to an investigation on an audience that, perhaps, was not intended to be targeted in such a way: children. Undeniably, though, it was. This paper explores the way in which Sir James Matthew Barrie's novel "Peter Pan" aims at children to both perpetuate and dismiss the myth of the mother woman as a singular role, while expanding the girl-child’s power beyond earthly realms. The paper analyses the gender roles as they are presented in “Peter Pan”, the role of the mother-woman and the influence the characters of Peter and Wendy continue to have on children.