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    Feminism In The 1800s

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    Feminism is the advocacy for women’s rights and equality of the sexes that originated earlier than what people today may believe. The earliest acts and ideas of feminism have been traced back to ancient Greece‚ but the most well-known time period that fueled the feminist movement can be traced down to the 1800s. Studies made by the Washington Post and Kaiser Family Foundation reveal that a group of Americans‚ today‚ do not understand the true values and ideals of the feminist movement. A majority

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    DBQ BThe Civil Rights Movement             Name______________________________ History 8 2003   Question: The Civil Rights movement aimed to convince white Americans to support the cause of equal rights for African Americans by abolishing segregation and guaranteeing the right to vote.  What themes did the champions of civil rights use in their appeal and why were they successful?   Document 1   Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka‚ Kansas (1954): We come then to the question presented; Does segregation

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    setting. | Seasonal Flu (Influenza) | Influenza vaccine is recommended for all adolescents and adults. The vaccine may be given as soon as it is available and throughout the influenza season.  (Note: Adults older than 49 years of age‚ pregnant women‚ and anyone with chronic medical conditions should not receive the influenza nasal spray vaccine.) | Meningococcal | You plan to travel internationally. You need this vaccine if traveling to a country where meningitis is widespread. See Meningococcal

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    American woman during the 1800’s was one of oppression. They were generally stuck in positions that did not allow them to work outside the home. The primary responsibilities of the women were to work inside the home‚ bear children‚ and look after their husbands. Activist such as Anna Julia Cooper and W.E.B Du Bois believed Black women could contribute to the workforce and earn a living outside of the home just as well as a man could. Their philosophies were that Black women should be allowed to educate

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    As the industrial growth started in the 1800s many factory owners began to hire women. Majority of the women who worked in the factories were poor‚ young‚ unmarried or widows‚ women of the middle-class were privileged to stay at home to provide their domestic duties. Women were paid lower then men due to women were subordinate to them.‚ it did not matter what kind of quality the women produced. Any income women received legally belonged to their husbands and with that status employers were able

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    Working class women during the 1800s-1900s most often had no choice but to work to help provide for their families. Female wage earners were mainly unmarried women‚ single mothers‚ or African American women. Often women’s wages were believed to be secondary to the earnings of the men in the household; even though women’s earnings were also vital to the family’s survival. “In 1890 three-quarter of white working women were unmarried.” (297) These women either worked in domestic service for richer families

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    Progressives In The 1800s

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    Riley Mangieri 12-19-15 Mr. Rauschenbach Grade 8 Progressives in the late 1800’s-1900’s Our nation lost its way during the Gilded Age (1870s-1920s). The Gilded Age was a term made up by Mark Twain due to him having a book called the Gilded Age‚ which satirized American society in the late 1800s. It was a time of government corruption‚ poverty‚ and awful labor conditions but it being covered up by big businesses‚ or “gilded”. Progressives were people

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    Freedom In The 1800s

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    depending on‚ which century one has lived in. In early 1600‚’s to the late 1800’s in American history the word freedom was something worth striving for. It kept people moving forward no matter the circumstances. In the textbook Give Me Liberty! by Eric Foner‚ there are excerpts throughout each chapter written in different times in history describing their voice of freedom. I have chosen three from the early 1600’s to the late 1800’s to see whether their definition of freedom is the same or does it differ

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    A Critique of “A Vindication to the Rights of Women” In Mary Wollstonecraft’s‚ “A Vindication to the Rights of Women‚” she “earnestly” stressed women to start standing up for themselves in society. She urges them to “acquire strength‚ both of mind and body” in order to conquer their rights. Through her writing‚ Wollstonecraft was able to send a powerful message to women‚ by telling them that they have a voice and should not allow others to take advantage of it. Wollstonecraft‚ promoting education

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    Depression in the 1800s

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    Dealing with Depression in the 1800’s William Faulkner and Charlotte Gilman are two well known writers for intriguing novels of the 1800’s. Their two eccentric pieces‚ “A Rose for Emily” and “The Yellow Wallpaper” are equally alluring. These authors and their works have been well recognized‚ but also critized. The criticism focuses on the society that is portrayed in these novels. The modern readers of today’s society are resentful to this dramatic society. These two novels are full of tradition

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