Revolutionary by Alex Meyers is a historical fiction story about a brave and powerful woman named Deborah Sampson. Throughout history women have been pushed aside by men who believe women are enable of fighting in wars. Even though this is the case women throughout history have proved to men that they are stronger and more able than most to do the job men are supposed to do. In the revolutionary war, there are maybe a dozen known women including Deborah Sampson who are given glory to their part in the war. Even though there are only about a dozen women that are recognized for what they did, there were probably way more who had a part in America’s victory. This gender construction women have been faced with is something that has been hard for women to overcome even in society today. In Revolutionary, Alex Meyers depicts how women had to hide their identity just to have part in a war that determined their future. He shows throughout his book the gender construction that women faced back then, and it is still a problem in society today.…
Within the parameters of this essay, I will explore the extent of the patriarchal society’s ability to apply hegemony in advertisements, shaping women’s subjectivities in order to reassert male dominance and female subordination. Radical feminist theory defines patriarchy as “a system of structures, institutions and ideology created by men in order to sustain and recreate male power and female subordination, ” located within a system of knowledge and language which constructs both masculinity and femininity in support of the establish power imbalance (Rowland & Klein, 1996, p.15-16). Through the application of the radical feminist theory, I argue that the hyper sexualized, unattainable and sexist beauty standards imposed on women by the patriarchy…
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.…
This quotation is a speech of an anti-feminist lady. She spends a lot of time on her career but she forgets to take care of her family. Because of the media influence and the effects of the World War II, some women starts to leave the bond of family and housework. To be honest, this lady confused about the meaning of Feminist Lens. Feminist Lens is an idea of letting women be who they want to be, including modern career-lady and traditional housewife.…
Free twenty-four-hour community run day care; abortions on demand; wages for housework were the radical demands of the early women's liberation movement. The book Dear sisters: Dispatches from the Women¡¯s Liberation Movement contains a collection of broadsides, cartoons, manifestos, songs and other writings from the early years of the women's movement (1967-1977) which is beaming with energy and the intense spirit of the movement that drastically altered American society.…
The following summary is from the article How the New Feminist Resistance Leaves Out American Women by Lauren Enriquez. Lauren Enriquez is the public relations manager at Human Coalition.…
The feminist movement has been separated into three "waves" by different feminists in order to categories the different events that took place throughout the movement. The first wave mainly refers to the women's suffrage (the right for women to vote) movements of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, which was mainly concerned with women's right to vote. The second wave refers to the ideas and the behaviors, which are correlated with the women’s liberation movement, which began in the beginning of the 1960s. The third wave refers to the continuation of, as well as a reaction to the recognised failures of the second second-wave.…
Truly there are still people in this world who don’t take the gender equality and feminists acts seriously. Girls in this day and age are still being told they are not allowed, or do not have the capability of doing something because “you’re a girl” as if that should explain to a ten year old girl why she can’t play tackle football with her brothers. This destroys the psychological thinking of a young girl and makes her think that she has these limitations because “she’s a girl”. Limitations such as these can cause long psychological damage and lower a girl’s self esteem.…
Two possible theories explaining child maltreatment are the feminist theory and the choice theory of crime. First, a brief review provides each theory an avenue to explaining how it relates to the crime. Next, a discussion of both theories includes forming potential criminal justice responses. Finally, actual criminal justice system responses are examined providing insight into how the implantations relate to the theories given.…
The Guerilla Girls are an elite group of female artists that no one knows the identities to. Not only does no one know the members identities, but also no one knows how to find them. The scary part about it is that if they want to find you, they will. As I said earlier, each member is an artist, and the group formed around 1985 when the New York Museum of Modern Art opened. The museum included an astonishing number of paintings from 169 different artists, but less than 10 percent were women artists. The first action that the Guerilla Girls did was making posters educating the people of inequalities in the art industry. One of their first posters said “WHAT DO THESE ARTIST HAVE IN COMMON,” and then went on to say that they were all male. The Guerilla Girls continued to display posters all over town emphasizing the inequality women face in art. The main targets that the Guerilla Girls attacked were critics, museums, and galleries. All the posters they made included great graphical design and all had a deep meaning. Once the Guerilla Girls started to get noticed they moved into on-site appearances as well as posters. The group would dress in gorilla masks, short skirts, and lacy stockings. Often the Guerilla Girls even waved around bananas. The Guerilla Girls had such a successful campaign that the media ate it up almost instantly. The group was being interviewed and even given the…
In Marilyn’s final years she had been through a lot of good and bad times, as if her life were like a roller coaster ride, where at the end she met her death. Her last completed film was The Misfits, which was directed by her husband Arthur, in which she considered to be virtually over. She was eventually flown back to L.A. and admitted to the hospital. (Owings 76) After her divorce with Arthur was declined she stated she was having thoughts of suicide and was admitted the Payne Whitney Clinic, a psychiatric ward of a hospital in New York, even though she clearly didn’t want to be there. (Owings 78) She even made attempts to try to get herself kicked out but failed. After leaving the hospital and working on her mental state, in the summer of…
Maya Angelou is quoted to have said, “If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change your attitude”. Viktor E. Frankl similarly states, “When we are no longer able to change a situation – we are challenged to change ourselves” . This notion of complacency for the wrongdoings of another person or group is unacceptable. There are some situations that are unable to be changed but that does not mean that the disenfranchised person or group should back down and accept their fate. Had the race movement never occurred, Black men and women would still be in chains and be sworn to a master. Sometimes it takes something…
The focus of this essay was on how the female body and the disabled body are seen as inferior in society. This reading really made me realize how we view disabled and female bodies in our society, and how we typically look the disabled so differently. I also thought about how often people so easily overlook the struggles that many disabled bodies have to deal with, like disabled women who want to have children or public facilities not having wheelchair access. It’s sad to recognize how most people see the disabled as inadequate and compensate for that by pitying them, rather than trying to treat them the same way as an able-bodied person. This essay made me think of one of my good friend’s older sister with Down syndrome, and how when we are out in public with her how many people stare at her because her disability is visible. I found it interesting how this essay talked about how the female body is seen as disabled and inferior to men’s: weak, soft, passive, etc. This essay sheds light on how our society has been trained to undervalue those whose bodies are considered abnormal.…
-"You have the choose of wearing jeans and tennis shoes instead of a girdle and heels"…
At the age of eleven I experienced two fundamental shifts within my knowledge of myself and the world around me; though, of course, at the time I was quite unaware of the long lasting implications of these shifts. The first shift would lead to a drastic reworking of my inner psyche, this inner reworking founded itself when I experienced my first panic attack, an early sign of the anxiety disorder that would fester in my mind until the present. The second shift had a greater immediate impact upon my understanding of the my known world, when I suddenly came into the knowledge of my father's, worsening and still worsening, alcoholism. These two events which I viewed as independent from the other, would come to lay the foundation for my own understandings of feminism. Over the next several years, these two flourishing fragments of myself and my world would no longer be able to exist independent in my own conscious. Instead, I would…