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Feminism

1917-1922

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Women?and?Communal?Strikes?in?the?Crisis?of?1917???1922?? An?interesting?fact?concerning?the?protests?by?working?class?in?the?period?during?and?succeeding?WWI?was? not?initial?demands?for?revolutionary?change?or?worker?s?rights,?but?instead?forcing?government?to?provide? basic?life?necessities?of?food?and?shelter?during?times?of?rationing.?Though?there?were?differences?in? geography?and?outcomes,?the?goal?was?the?same?in?demanding?survival?over?social?and?economic?change.? The?politicization?of?these?movements?did?not?occur?until?their?male?counterparts,?who?did?hold?memberships? in?unions?and?radical?political?groups,?sympathized?with?their?female?equivalents?and?participated?in?these?

Gender Emergence in England's History

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Gender?Emergence?in?England?s?History?? ? "Historicizing?Patriarchy:?The?Emergence?of?Gender?Difference?in?England,?1660?1760"?by?Michael?McKeon? is?a?powerful?and?original?hypothesis?as?to?"how?and?why?the?modern?system?of?gender?difference?was? established?during?the?English?Restoration?and?eighteenth?century"?(295).?McKeon,?a?professor?of?English? literature?at?Rutgers?University?is?also?the?author?of?several?essays,?including?"Politics?and?Poetry?in? Restoration?England"?and?"Origins?of?the?English?Novel."?? ? McKeon?uses?the?term?'patriarchalism'?because?it?attaches?itself?to?a?"traditional?regime"?which?will?in?later? centuries?be?replaced?by?the?"modern?conception?of??gender?"?(296).?This?term?is?mainly?identified?with?as?

The Progressive Era in American Politics and Economics

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?A Fierce Discontent:? The Progressive Era in American Politics and Economics, Part I Today?s Question 1. Who were the progressives and what were their objectives? Were they effective at solving the problems of the Gilded Age, why or why not? The Progressives Who were the Progressives? Muckrakers Progressive Presidents: Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson 4 Goals of Progressivism, pt. I Objective 1: To Control Big Business Railroad and Trust Regulation: ICC and Clayton Anti-Trust Act Food and Drug Reform: Upton Sinclair, The Jungle (1906) Political Reform: Direct Election of Senators Objective 2: To End Class Conflict Labor Laws: Triangle Shirtwaist Company Objective 3: To Change Other People Jane Addams and Settlement Houses Prohibition: WCTU Suffrage: 19th Amendment

The Progressive Era in American Politics and Economics

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?A Fierce Discontent:? The Progressive Era in American Politics and Economics, Part I Today?s Question 1. Who were the progressives and what were their objectives? Were they effective at solving the problems of the Gilded Age, why or why not? The Progressives Who were the Progressives? Muckrakers Progressive Presidents: Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson 4 Goals of Progressivism, pt. I Objective 1: To Control Big Business Railroad and Trust Regulation: ICC and Clayton Anti-Trust Act Food and Drug Reform: Upton Sinclair, The Jungle (1906) Political Reform: Direct Election of Senators Objective 2: To End Class Conflict Labor Laws: Triangle Shirtwaist Company Objective 3: To Change Other People Jane Addams and Settlement Houses Prohibition: WCTU Suffrage: 19th Amendment

APUSH Ch. 15 Vocab

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Chapter 15 ? The Ferment of Reform and Culture Vocabulary Dorothea Dix- responsible for improving conditions in jails, poorhouses and insane asylums throughout the u.s. and Canada; served as the superintendant of nurses for the union army during the civil war Washington Irving- author- "rip van winkle" and "the legend of sleepy hollow," the first american to be recognized in england (and elsewhere) as a writer Oliver Wendell Holmes- he is often considered considered one of the greatest justices in supreme court history. his opinions and famous dissents in favor of individual liberties are still frequently quoted today. he argued that current necessity rather than precedent should determine the rules by which people are governed; that experience, not logic, should be the basis of law.

Women's Rights Timeline

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The Territory of Wyoming passes the first law in the nation giving women over age 21 the right to vote. After joining the Union in 1890, Wyoming becomes the first state to permit women the right to vote in all elections, although in 1887, Kansas al- lowed women to vote in municipal elec- tions. The colonies adopt the English system of property ownership for married women, meaning women cannot own property in their own name or keep their own earnings. By 1900, every state will have passed leg- islation modeled after New York?s Mar- ried Women?s Property Act (1848), which grants married women the right to keep their own wages and to own property in their own name. 1769 1848 1868 1869 1869 Racial Equality Issue Splits Two Suffrage Associations

poem book

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AUDRE LORDE Audre Lorde was very well known in the African American community. Her poetry was published often during the 1960?s and included in black literary magazines. She was also politically involved in anti-war and feminist movements during this time. Audre Lorde based her poetry on differences including the contrast between certain groups of women. She was against feminism and racism she felt that her writings gave African American women a voice towards the community. COPING It has rained for five days running the world is a round puddle of sunless water where small islands are only beginning to cope a young boy in my garden is bailing out water from his flower patch when I ask him why he tells me young seeds that have not seen sun forget and drown easily.

Chapter 16 & 17 Women's History Notes APUSH

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Women= active in public life male professions suffrage, social work & reform 1910s & 1920s young women did not all see themselves as a community of women Emma Goldman believed gaining creers many women sacrificed valuable things Believed women were more moral than men Saw women as priding themselves to be emotionally & spiritiually empty Saw battles women fought consumed emotional reserves when they were after professions goldman didn?t believe women could emancipate themselves by overcoming ?external tyrannies? begins in soul Goldman believed women?s sexual difficulties to have a psychological basis Believed they could not be emancipated until they no longer feared sex goldman believed marriage stood in way of emancipation marriage=economic arrangement believed

Betty Friedan APUSH

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Sidrah Jamal Block 2A Betty Friedan The Feminist Movement in the United States began in the 19th century and continued on into the 20th century, especially with the help of Betty Friedan. Betty Friedan launched several feminist movements, which were both supported and opposed by the general public.

Women's Rights Paper

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The?Fight?Against?Legal?Abortion?Is?a?Result?of?the?Suppression?of?Women?s?Roles?and?Freedoms. While?Argued?Otherwise,?This?Fight?is?Not?Rooted?in?Moral?Agenda. Tal?Bruno Honors?US?History Mr.?Whitehair March?20,?2013 1 The?fight?against?legal?abortion?is?a?result?of?the?suppression?of?women?s?roles?and?freedoms. While?argued?otherwise,?this?fight?is?not?rooted?in?moral?agenda.?In?her?widely?acclaimed?piece??The Second?Sex?,?feminist?author?Simone?De?Beauvoir?asks:??what?is?a?woman???Despite?a?dictionary definition?of???woman??as?an??adult?human?female?,?the?question?is?much?deeper?than?its?literal?meaning, and?the?response?lies?within?the?purpose?of?the?woman?s?existence. Throughout?history,?conservatively?sexist?mindsets?have?suppressed?and?overshadowed?the

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