In the readings and video presented in week 3, I think, that each one’s main theme was about gender, race, age, intersectionality, and the traditional cultures that people were raised in. In Sister Outsider, where Audre Lorde discussed age, race, class, and sex, she states that within the women’s movement today, white women focus upon their oppression as women and ignore differences of race, sexual preference, class, and age. She talks about the struggles of colored women in the todays society and lists examples like the literature of colored women, how women of color are the lowest paid wage earners in America, that they are targets of abortion and sterilization abuse, and homophobia among black women. In Borderlands La Frontera, Gloria Anzaldua she explains her culture and how females were supposed to be subordinate to males and how she chose a different route, entering the world by way of education and career and becoming a self-autonomous person. She talks about how society says that someone cannot be both genders and about the fear of going back home due to her differences she chose against her native culture like homosexuality.…
“Wasn't that the point of the book? For women to realize, we are just two people. Not that much separates us (p. 530).” Descriptions of historical events of the early activities of the civil rights movement are sprinkled throughout the novel, as are relations between the maids and their white employers. The novel is filled with details from the early-1960s culture in the United States like Martin Luther King, Jr.’s famous march on Washington…
For this assignment, I read Redefining Realness: My Path to Womanhood, Identity, Love, & So Much More by Janet Mock. Janet Mock is a trans woman of color who grew up in poverty in Hawaii and has since become a writer, activist, and spokesperson for the queer community. Redefining Realness is her first book, and she has since written another that picks up where this one leaves off, in her early twenties. Reading this memoir provided me with an intimate and clear portrayal of what life can look like for a trans woman and made me much more aware of the struggles faced by people in this community.…
In our current society, women stereotypes and prejudice on African Americans and Hispanics are played. Points said about women and girls are doing a specific job are said today. Examples are in politics. Hillary Clinton was doubted in becoming the first women president of the United States. In the text, women are being paid less than men due to that they are women and should be working at home and not in mills. Back then, African Americans and Hispanics weren’t treated as well as maybe Italians would. As there was prejudice and stereotypes said and done back then, they still play a role today in the twenty first…
Two stories that are abundant with feminist views and stereotypes are Cisneros' Barbie-Q and My Tocaya. In both stories, we see characters struggle with what it means to be a woman. Cisneros explores the standards women are held up to, and the standards they make for themselves. Cisneros does a wonderful job of bringing out the worries, fears, and Otherness that women frequently grapple with in their daily lives. She writes her tales, all the while reflecting and dismantling stereotypes of women. Cisneros, when participating in a project titled Interviews with Writers of the Post-Colonial World, stated: "I guess my feminism and my race are the same thing to me. They're tied in one to another, and I don't feel an alliance or allegiance with upper-class white women" (Jussawalla, Dasenbrock, 74).…
(C) The women in this novel are dependent on men to handle political and economical duties. Today there are some countries were they prohibit women from attending certain events or doing certain tasks. In the novel, they demonstrate that females don't have certain power and that men do obtain. For example. in India and some countries in Africa , it's the female's task to stay at home and take care the children or not even attend school.…
Remodel your nose, show your chest, and bend over for the camera. This is basically the message society is sending to women today. If you conform to the world’s idea of what a woman should look like then you will be accepted. In the two articles “The Pitfalls of Plastic Surgery” by Camille Paglia and “The Beauty Myth” by Naomi Wolf, the way women have responded to the message from society is discussed from both perspectives. Wolf is clearly against women's confinement to societal pressures. She reveals that there is a "secret underlie poisoning our freedom," referring to the way women focus on appearance and fitting in (Wolf 10). Paglia's argument focuses on the extent of women using plastic surgery to become what they believe society wants them to be. She writes about the way women have made themselves their own "works of art," taking plastic surgery to higher levels in the industry. Wolf emphasizes the way women have changed their values over the years. She makes an emotional appeal by concluding that the "contemporary ravages" are "destroying women physically and depleting us psychologically"(Wolf 19). Over time, society has influenced women to confine themselves to what the world believes is beauty instead of embracing the power of being a woman and focusing on their place in the economy.…
There are numerous symbols in the story; I’m sure I missed some of them, so add any of significance that I unintentionally omitted that you would like to discuss. I’ve listed symbols in alphabetical order.…
The cultures present in today’s society stem from ancient traditions where there was the perception that women were belongings who were owned by their father and then their husbands. This created a sense of entitlement that is still present today- the idea that women are there for men’s desires and are to obey them for their pleasure only. A prime example of which is the public’s response to a rape victim Tatiana Andreeva’s self-defence saying “there is nothing wrong with a man wanting to have sex with a girl.” It is perpetuated through the use of pop culture and glorified in lyrics such as “tried to domesticate you, but you’re an animal, baby it’s in your nature” and “What? You don’t like…
Immediately following the conclusion of World War II, the average age of women getting married significantly dropped and the number of births skyrocketed. Young men and women yearned to settle down in the suburbs with white picket fences in order to have the perfect family. While on the outside, the suburbs epitomized the perfect family, on the inside tension and discontent quietly loomed in many households. “The postwar suburbs were either heaven or hell for their inhabitants—endless stretches of brand-new houses on quarter-acre lots occupied, during weekday hours, entirely by women and children” (Collins 1).…
Have you ever seen women on T.V. or online? Most likely, yes but when you see a woman she has almost no clothes on or has a plastic body. Another media problem is if she is not naked, she is having drug or alcohol related issues. The problem with the media portraying women is many kids and teens watch. This is what children see of their elders, this is what they think is normal, an everyday influence when it is unacceptable. However, there are two solutions to this problem.…
Society has always seemed to be prejudiced against women; and in present times today, that still seems to be an underlying issue. To the same extent, women are often considered as being worthless — and inferior to their male counterparts. However, this often results in women being degraded in present day society. Today’s popular culture and hip-hop is extremely disrespectful to women, not everything — but a vast majority of popular culture and hip-hop is just utterly despicable towards women. Imagine the internal mindset of a woman, and how such blatantly hurtful words and gestures can alter a woman’s mindset. The music and actions towards women are extremely discouraging and distasteful. How can a woman remain positive and remain inwardly…
The treatment of women in the workplace, school and wider society has evolved since the first wave of feminism. But to what extent are women treated as equal to their male counterpart? The persistent gap between the treatment of men and women even after the first wave of feminism provoked a second wave. The catalyst to mainstream feminism in the 1960’s through 1970’s was Betty Friedan’s book,The Feminine Mystique. Women's right activist and writer, Betty Friedan, a leading figure in the Feminist movement. Her book ,The Feminine Mystique, was a major influence in the second wave of Feminism because it voiced what so many women lacked to say; they wanted more. The Feminine Mystique was published in 1963 and over two million copies were sold…
Currently in America Culture there is a prevailing desire to become thin. "Between five per cent and ten per cent of girls and women (i.e. five-ten million people) and one million boys and men suffer from eating disorders, including anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder, or other associated dietary conditions." (http://www.annecollins.com/eating-disorders/statistics.htm) So many people are influenced by the media that it transforms their own self image into unrealistic ideas leading many adolescent females and some males to eating disorders. Our society is driven for individual control thus forming the judgment that fatness is a loss of self-control which is a social value and a personal moral in our culture that is a boundless failure and the most feared among women. The definition of self control within the body image has changed throughout the last century, in the early eighteen hundred's corpulence was seen as strong and beautiful whereas now it is looked down upon. This desire to be thin contributes to eating disorders, low self esteem and continues the battle of acceptance into society. Beauty is acceptance which is defined by the time period and is enforced by the media.…
an example of how there was such a push for women to fit a certain mold which…