Women held few rights and had few choices in life. Most of them just served the men in their lives including fathers, brothers, and husbands.…
Regardless of cultures, era and time, women have always been receiving fewer rights than men do. Despite they have a lot of moral obligations and duties at home, church and in the community, they however had very limited or almost no political and legal rights in the country. Their main role would be for be married for political purpose, productive, social status and reproductive. Most of the time men do not appreciate what women do, they were also seen as a merchandise to enhance their own social status. Their situation has not been improved until the mid 19th century, where a several brave, outspoken women sparked the fight for social reform, justice, prostitution, and slavery. The force of Feminist then rose to fight for the equality for the oppressed.…
Women back then were treated like subordinates. Traditionally, their only role was to marry, bare children, stay home and take care of the family. They had no say to political views. Women raise their sons to be a future leader. However, since the Second Great Awakening and after the American Civil War, women became more outspoken, opinionated and even took some of the men’s role at their home since most men never returned home from the war. Women started to see other possibilities. They worked outside their homes; they became great workers and teachers. Most of these women created a movement for women’s rights and they spurred a great wave of social reform. The potential for religious, political and social influence in women was…
Back in the 1870s, women were being treated very unfairly. Women weren't allowed to express their opinion, and if they did, no one would listen and take them seriously. They were thought of as property of their husbands and fathers and they were thought of as weak and frail. Women had less rights then men, and they had no control over their families. The first women's rights convention was held in 1848. From then on, the amount of people voicing their opinions about women's rights increased. Fast forward a few years to 1920, the year the Nineteenth amendment was ratified. The Nineteenth amendment gave women the right to vote, but everything was still not perfect throughout the 1920's and 1930's. Although they got rights, they still were…
As The United States moved into the 20th century, society had to confront the effects of industrialization, the growth of economic power, americanization, and a great wave of immigration. The Progressive movement came to be because of the desire to change aspects of industrialization, and to make the government more responsive to people and their opinions. The atmosphere of reform gave rise to a new women’s movement. There were new opportunities for women while there was a growth in big business such as working in a factory, or being a saleswoman. However, women often found their efforts being dominated by men. As women tried to address these social problems, they had to cope with the view that women were inferior to men. The way that…
The success of the women’s rights movement in the mid-1800s was mostly from the women’s of the 1800s to get equal rights, better education, the right to vote, and so much more. Reformers such as Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton became powerful speakers for women’s rights movement. They held Anti-Slavery Conventions in London and were not able to participate in the proceedings. And took act that women should get more rights. Mott and Stanton begun thinking of holding a conventions. And after long years women got better education, new careers, and the right to vote.…
"Gradually, Americans came to accept some of the basic goals of the Sixties feminists: equal pay for equal work, an end to domestic violence, curtailment of severe limits on women in managerial jobs, an end to sexual harassment, and sharing of responsibility for housework and child rearing." (Walsh, 2010) The women's suffrage movement, which lasting from 1848 until 1920 greatly expanded rights for women in later years in many aspects. There were mainly four aspects: 1.Women's political involvement; 2.Women were elected to political office in record numbers; 3.More social welfare for women; 4.women were granted by legislation of all races equal rights socially, politically and economically with men. (Lee,…
One frigid January morning, hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children gathered together to participate in one of the most influential protest of all time- The Women's March. This event, which took place in a multiplicity of locations across the globe, was subsequently held the day after the inauguration of President Donald Trump. A flurry of lively marchers swarmed the streets with swift legs, bedazzled signs, fuchsia hats, and passionate hearts. They longed for equality, change, and tolerance. With every chant, with every cheer, with every clap, and every step, the protesters marched closer to their goal. Once the dust and confetti had settled and the crowds has dispersed, it was realized that a feminist genie hadn't granted these…
Over the years, the U.S has changed dramatically to get to how it is today. Even though there were many events and time periods that contributed to the formation of the United States, one of them played a key role in our society. This time period is known as the Second Great Awakening. This specific “era” consisted of a plethora of movements that focused on different ideas and beliefs. The reform movements in the U.S during the 1800s had a massive impact on expanding democratic ideas; In particular, abolition, women’s rights, and education.…
There are so many different things that led to women getting involved in the Progressive Era. Before women’s suffrage ended these ladies were treated like dogs or slaves to there husbands. These women’s main jobs were to be housewives and mothers while the men were able to go pursue careers and be the decision makers of the people. This made women furious that there…
Women fought a lot to gain full equality during the Progressive era. The perfection of the American Revolution increased women’s suppositions, encourage some of the first straight forward requirements for impartiality and observed the formation of female institutions to enhance women’s education. According to http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/era.cfm?eraid=11(by the early 19th century, American women had the highest female literacy rate in the world). The American government's expanded suffrage to involve essentially all white males, nevertheless, they started contradicting the vote to free African American men and in New Jersey to women, who had temporarily won these advantages succeeding the Revolution. During the 1820s and many years after…
Men have always been seen as the dominant gender that were in charge of their wife and children while the women had nothing to defend themselves from the critics. Women were often unable to obtain education, property rights, or decent jobs because they had to take care of the house or their children. American women could rarely find an occupation other than common jobs such as domestic servants, secretaries, nurses, teachers, and most commonly, a factory worker (Mass 28). Whether a woman had the same job that a man or not, the women would get a lower paycheck than the man. This is because men thought women weren’t capable of doing their jobs. Married women had no right to own property, not allowed to gain an education because neither colleges nor universities accepted women students. Women wanted a movement that would change the way men and society looked at them. They didn’t want to be treated like garage, useless and disappointing. Women wanted the power that they were never giving in several years. They wanted to be able to live their life without the need of a man to help them. Without the need to ask permission to a man to do there desired activities. They wanted men and society to give them respect, grant access to a higher education, the right to own property, have more job opportunities, better working condition and incomes and most important, the right to…
The 1848 convention had challenged America to a social revolution that would touch every aspect of life. Early women’s rights leaders believed suffrage to be the most effective means to change an unjust system. By the late 1800s, nearly 50 years of progress afforded women advancement in property rights, employment and educational opportunities, divorce and child custody laws, and increased social freedoms. The early 1900s…
The women’s rights movement was a huge turning point for women because they had succeeded in the altering of their status as a group and changing their lives of countless men and women. Gender, Ideology, and Historical Change: Explaining the Women’s Movement was a great chapter because it explained and analyzed the change and causes of the women’s movement. Elaine Tyler May’s essay, Cold War Ideology and the Rise of Feminism and Women’s Liberation and Sixties Radicalism by Alice Echols both gave important but different opinions and ideas about the women’s movement. Also, the primary sources reflect a number of economic, cultural, political, and demographic influences on the women’s movement. This chapter really explains how the Cold War ideologies, other protests and the free speech movements occurring during this time helped spark the rise or the women’s right’s movements.…
The roles of women in modern day society have undergone tremendous change since the emergence of the Women 's Liberation Movement in the 1960 's. After decades of gradual progression, the assemblage of Australian women to unite under a common cause has led to liberation. Their resorts to often desperate measures has ensured unparalleled achievements.…