"Feminist view of the awakening" Essays and Research Papers

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    Events Leading Up to the American Revolutionary War Great Awakening (1730s-1740s) The Great Awakening was a sort of religious revival that swept through the English colonies and was a reaction against the Enlightenment which had started due to the mass of wealth and greed of the church and upper class‚ leading to up to the American Revolution by inspiring an idea of democracy and independence in the colonists. It connected the colonies by a religious bond and made many colonists feel they were equal

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    November 2013 Femininity in The Yellow-Awakening Just before the turn of the 19th century‚ two works were published in 1899‚ regarding similar topics associated with feminism such as the subordination of women and the importance of their self-expressions in the midst of the subordination. The Yellow Wallpaper and The Awakening are narrated from the point of view of a female protagonist‚ revealing the difficulties she and other women face due to commonly held views of female inferiority during this time

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    The Pre-Feminist Movement

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    The role of a feminist is to be advocator for the equality between sexes‚ usually through political and social movements to spread the ideologies about the present inequalities. To be a feminist does not mean you must be a certain sex‚ race‚ or belong to a certain religious organization. Feminist have been influential in gaining rights for women and LGBTQ communities for centuries. One of the first American movements started with the women’s suffrage in the 19th and 20th century. Roughly two

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    2014 Annotated Bibliography Bogard‚ Carley Rees. "The Awakening: A Refusal to Compromise." The University of Michigan Papers in Women ’s Studies 2.3 (1977): 15-31. Rpt. in World Literature Criticism‚ Supplement 1-2: A Selection of Major Authors from Gale ’s Literary Criticism Series. Ed. Polly Vedder. Vol. 1. Detroit: Gale‚ 1997. Literature Resource Center. Web. 3 Nov. 2014. Carley Bogard presents the criticism of Kate Chopin’s The Awakening by examining the main character‚ Edna Pontellier. She

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    Feminist Perspectives of the Family There are many different feminist views on the family and how the family should be due to the different strands of feminism‚ for example: Radical feminists believe that men try to dominate‚ control and exploit women; Marxist feminists make a direct connection between capitalism and the inferior position women hold in society; and liberal feminists believe that gender inequality comes from ignorance and the social constraints on freedom of choice. Radical feminists

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    The Awakening by Kate Chopin exemplifies how characters get caught between colliding cultures that deal with ethnic and institutional issues. The protagonist Edna Pontellier deals with cultural collisions‚ due to their role in the awakening of her desires. This cultural collision happens between the Creole women from New Orleans and Edna’s own accustoms‚ this collision causes Edna to have an epiphany. Edna realizes how different she is from the Creole women and begins to question where she really

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    Second Great Awakening

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    The Second Great Awakening was a revival movement that had occurred in the 1730s with the goal of creating a Protestant creed that would maintain the idea of Christian community in a period of rapid individualism and competition. As our book mentions‚ the Second Great Awakening was “one of the most momentous episodes in the history of American religious. This tidal wave of spiritual fervor left in its wake countless converted souls‚ many shattered and reorganized church‚ and numerous new sects. It

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    Feminist literary criticism Throughout the years‚ women have struggled for proper treatment and life style. They were oppressed and seen a male property. They were deprived for their simplest rights‚ even putting their thoughts into words. This situation led to the emergence of feminism‚ which is a set of ideologies that were meant to defend women’s rights in different areas of life‚ in other words it is the struggle for women’s rights. This set of ideologies‚ feminism‚ extended into

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    Feminist Synthesis Essay

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    worth examining is the non-inclusive history in feminist literature. To examine this history well‚ feminists adopted the intersectional lens‚ which allowed them to examine the post-“second storm” movement more in-depth. With the adoption of the intersectional lens‚ we see that feminist women‚ no matter their origin‚ are all striving for equality. Henceforth‚ the “storm metaphor” comes into play allowing feminists to obtain a worldly viewpoint on feminist ideology from all around the world. I use this

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    By the mid-18th century‚ the colonies were seeing the emergence of the Great Awakening. This was an immense religious revival that swept across the Protestant world in the 1730s and 1740s. During this time‚ England‚ Scotland‚ Ulster‚ New England‚ the mid-Atlantic colonies‚ and for some time South Carolina‚ responded very well to calls for spiritual rebirth. This so called Great Awakening‚ broke many denominational loyalties in the colonies and allowed the Methodists and the Baptist to rush ahead

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