According to the history Deroine was a prominent figure during the revolution of 1848, campaigned for the women’s rights, and against the exploitation of children and harsh treatment of convicts. Pauline Roland was an active in feminist, social agitation and the publications of “The Voix Des Femines”. She established association of socialist teachers, stressed the importance of equality of the sexes in an education and women stayed in the work force. They wrote a letter to second woman conventions stated, how they feel to the women right with the empathy. The feeling for their political and civil rights that they deserved was unending, and they were backed up their demands with well-thoughts and determination. Pauline and Deroine started demanded political rights for the women. They wanted to change their conditions and they believed that the French revolution would bring change, and would be the right time for them to achieve what they wanted. They knew that, …show more content…
they had to face a lot of difficulties in order to gain their rights and to improve their social status.
However, they contributed a great deal in French Revolution, their involvement always gives rise to the public. The unfair truth is that men, who believed in the revolution, didn’t believe in women s rights. The majority of men believed that women's participation in government was both inessential and no longer needed. I would say that women were undertaken to have the same interest, and opinions as the men who represented them, and they are repeatedly being confident that their husbands, sons, and fathers would always have their best interest at all times. Women were encouraged to support the revolution by assuming the duties associated with being a good women, was not by forming legions or social clubs that argued for equal rights. The History of Woman Suffrage suggested that women have good common sense and good judgment as men do. Their political activism was all the more remarkable because they had to juggle their public lives with their domestic duties.
Although, the History of Woman Suffrage apparently told the story of the suffrage campaign, it situated that effort within a broader context of social reform.
The biographical sketches and reminiscences from the activists themselves addressed a variety of issues, including abolition, temperance, prison reform, and co-education. In addition, the volumes took on many of the most controversial issues of the day, including dress reform and the status of women in the Christian church. By telling the stories of women who spoke out publicly on a broad range of issues, the History not only illustrated the wisdom and historical contributions of women, but also the courage, skill, and moral virtue they displayed from the public platform. Countering the prevailing belief that women compromised their moral virtue by participating in politics, the History told the story of women who proved their civic virtue by speaking out in
public
Moreover, most men believed that women had different and special contributor for their families. For Example, when I was growing up, people used to say that women having an education was a waste of money. Their perceptive and their point of view is that, women will later get married, have their children and ended up in the kitchen, as the role of a woman in the society. I think due to women’s rights, and power, women are more likely to attend school now than they were in the past. They have been a large number of associations that encourage girls and the women the benefit of education. By broadening both the historical and ideological scope of the fight for women’s rights, the History showed how women had earned the right to full “sovereignty” and citizenship.