The research investigates the professional struggles faced by three distinguished female musicians of 19th-century Europe: Clara Schumann, Fanny Mendelssohn, and Cecile Chaminade. The research references biographies, correspondences, and other historical records to shed light on the social limitations that hindered their professional development. Even though all three musicians were historically recorded as talented pianists and composers, the popular patriarchal ideologies regarding women’s education, vocation, and domestic roles stopped them from advancing further in their profession. Even for these famous musicians, these beliefs and mindsets constrained them to their families. Their lives serve as a representation of the average European women’s lives at the time and provide further insight into the difficulties and general social conventions those women lived under. The research demonstrates how even the famous musicians Schumann, Mendelsohn, and Chaminade were oppressed and limited by the patriarchal society.
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