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Unit 10 SEMINAR By: Donn Mallari Per.4 3/26/12 Compare and contrast the goals and achievements of the feminist movement in the period circa 1850-1920 with those of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit 10 SEMINAR


1
Unit 10SEMINAR
  • By
  • Donn Mallari
  • Per.4
  • 3/26/12

2
Prompt
  • Compare and contrast the goals and achievements
    of the feminist movement in the period circa
    1850-1920 with those of the feminist movement in
    the period 1945 to the present.

3
Background
  • A significant transformation in the cold war era
    was the emancipation of women in Europe and North
    America.
  • Set sail for future success of a new generation
    of feminist thinkers and womens military
    movement into the 1970s-1980s.
  • Before the industrial revolution women and men of
    Europe usually married later and once they were
    married, had plenty of children (3-7) as 1/3 of
    the children made it to adulthood.
  • As the industrial revolution raged on, people
    married earlier, death rates fell, and
    populations grew.

4
Background Cont.
  • Healthy habits wore on into the 1950-1960s, in
    the west women bore families and married earlier.
  • Postwar baby boom made for larger families and
    rapid population growth from 1 to1.5 percent.
  • 1960-1970 population growth stopped.
  • Women were having there last babies by the age of
    26-27.
  • Women had about 40 years of life after their
    children went off to kindergarten.
  • Economic boom of 1950-1973 led for a strong
    demand of labor and resources, which in turn led
    to women leaving the home for a source of income.
    (Time after WWII)
  • Big revolution since beforehand industries and
    jobs were run by men, and women's equality and
    emancipation prevailed.

5
The Second Sex (1949)
  • Written by French author and philosopher Simone
    de Beauvoir (1908-1986).
  • Exposed to the real hard world as a young child.
  • Analyzed the position of women within the works
    of existentialism.
  • Argued that women were always free, but trapped
    by inflexible and limited conditions.
  • Self assertion and action was the only way to
    escape the role of inferiority that men had
    created.
  • Inspired future generations of women
    intellectuals.

6
Feminist Movement
  • The 1970s were the birth place of a large
    feminist movement, that demanded genuine sexual
    equality and promoting general interests of
    women.
  • Three major reasons behind this
  • 1. Ongoing demands for rights on the behalf of
    motherhood and work pay raised demands and
    conditions.
  • 2. Women vanguards who influenced many other
    women to rethink the status quo and challenge it.
  • 3. Following the civil rights movement, realized
    they had to band together in order to achieve
    influence.

7
Feminist Movement cont.
  • Betty Friedan (1924-2006) opened discussion of
    womens issues in the United States.
  • Believed in American group action to form
    political solutions.
  • As a mother of a family, she was aware of the
    conditions and pressures of family.
  • Wrote The Feminine Mystique, which identified
    that the problem of womens rights was in
    identity.
  • Women faced a problem called Sexism

8
Feminist Movement cont.
  • 1966 formed the National Organization of Woman
    (NOW) to account for womens rights.
  • In 1967 has 700 members, and in 1974 it had over
    forty thousand members.
  • Many other womens organizations followed.
  • Wanted change in the laws for equality of women.
  • Concentrated on gender and family laws, such as
    rights to divorce, legalized abortion, single
    mother needs, and protection from violence/rape.
  • Led to revolutions in other groups such as
    gay/lesbians, and people with disabilities.

9
Conclusion
  • 1850-1920
  • Women did not participate in labor.
  • Usually were wives/mothers Watching their homes.
  • Had about 3-7 children during her life time.
  • Large discrimination towards women equality.
  • Men did not believe that women could do well in
    the work place.
  • 1945-Present
  • More genuine reform movements for womens rights.
  • Promotion of general womens interests and
    genuine equality.
  • Feminist speakers/activists demanding for
    equality.
  • Establishment of the (NOW) National Organization
    for Women.

10
Propaganda

11
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12
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