Throughout history, women have been viewed differently from men. In the 1880’s and before, women were in charge of making a happy home, her job above all was to make sure her husband was happy. Around, the 1910’s women began fighting for their right to vote and to be viewed as an equal to the janitor that works for them. Still, to this day, women and girls are fighting to be viewed as an equal and respected as men and boys are in our society. According to, Our Deportment, or The Manners, Conduct, and Dress of Refined Society by John H. Young, in the 1880’s and before, women didn’t work outside the house, they couldn’t vote and their biggest and most important job was to make sure their husband was happy. In today’s society, women are lawyers, doctors, and teachers. They have the choice to have kids or get married rather than being expected to like they were before. Women’s rights and how they’re viewed have evolved so much in 200 plus years, they have jobs outside the house and for the most part they are viewed as an equal to men. …show more content…
Around this time, women were already working out of the home but a college professor did not have the right to vote but the janitor who worked for her did so, women wanted to change that. In, Address to Congress on Women’s Suffrage by Carrie Chapman Catt, she spoke of how the American Revolutionist proudly yelled,”No taxation without representation” but millions of women were taxed without being represented. On August 18, 1920, women in the U.S. gained the right to vote and still have that right. Today, the college professor and the janitor share the same right to be represented in the
Up until the early 1900’s, women were seen by society as people with household roles that consisted of cooking, cleaning, and tending their children. As time progressed, the view of women in society gradually changed, but their opinions still did not seem to matter. It wasn’t until 1920, that women gained suffrage with the 19th amendment. This amendment was a huge step in gaining full and equal rights for women, but unfortunately discrimination against them still happens today. There are various different situations in which the issue of gender inequality occurs. Although the law states that everyone has equal opportunities and rights, women are highly discriminated against in everyday roles such as employment, extracurricular activities, military, and in the government.
Throughout the nation’s history, American’s have sought to put an end to discriminatory practices and bring equality toward minority groups. For example, Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and Martin Luther King Jr.’s I Have a Dream speech were directed at putting an end to mistreatment of African Americans. Likewise, Jane Adams and Susan B. Anthony used their authority as women’s rights activists to push for greater equality amongst the genders. While some may argue that women are lagging behind in the race to equal rights, others claim the opposing approach. In today’s society, women are achieving true equality due to a shift in the old stereotypes toward women, increasing opportunities for women to become educated, higher expectations for women in the workplace, and a stronger influence of women in government positions.
During the first World War I women were left at home to try and figure out how they were going to care for their families. Their husband, father, and brothers were sent off to war. Many companies around the United States were left with production needs and little to no employees to do the job. In a time period, where women are expected to be confident and independent, they had to also realize they had little to no power in society. They had societal rules that they must stay at home to cook, clean, and care for the children. With the men who were prominent in their lives coming and going from war. These factors caused the birth of a new era. This is the era where women were emerging. Women were changing by being more independent sexually and expressing their emotions through music, poetry, and movies.
Women in the 1920s started to earn more respect and equality in society, mostly the right to vote. During this time, women had the opportunity to access higher education, minimum wage, better domestic living, and better healthcare. But women are still coming across challenges where they are submissive to men. Fredrick Lewis Allen introduces women as“... the guardians of morality; they were made of finer stuff than men and were expected to act accordingly” (Allen 129). Clearly, women were expected of something, but men were able to do whatever they so please to do whether it would be to hang out late at night at bars, drinking with friends, or being the one to have a house under his name and making his own money. According to Allen,
Starting in the nineteenth century women’s rights was a very hushed subject, it wasn’t really talked about because everyone thought of women as being the homemakers, taking care of the family and making meals while the men went out and worked. During
Up until the 1920s, women’s struggle for their right to vote seemed to be a futile one. They had been fighting for their suffrage for a long time, starting numerous women's rights movements and abolitionist activists groups to achieve their goal. “The campaign for women’s suffrage began in earnest in the decades before the Civil War. During the 1820s and 30s, most states had enfranchised almost all white males (“The Fight for Women's Suffrage” ). This sparked women to play a more emphatic role in society. They began to participate in anti-slavery organizations, religious movements, and even meetings where they discussed that when the Constitution states "that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain
The roles of women in society have changed a lot since the 1800’s. While in the 1800’s women were viewed as housewives, now it is more common to see something such as single working mothers or a household where the wife is the primary “bread winner”. Today’s women have been provided with the opportunity to get educated, started joining the workforce, and even gained the right to vote. Gaining these rights was not an easy task and it took a lot of hard work and dedication to get them. Even though women have been given these opportunities, women’s rights is still a big and controversial topic in today’s society.
Women, for a long time, were one of the most undervalued assets essential to life in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Throughout recorded history, women have been treated as less than men. They have been viewed as simply a vessel for reproduction or a maid to do housework and prepare meals for her husband. In many ancient cultures and some cultures today women are viewed merely as possessions. Surprisingly, women were even oppressed in the United States, which was founded upon freedom and equality. Women have been struggling to shed the chains of motherhood and be recognized as equal human beings for as long as written records have been around. The unequal treatment of women was often based on religion or tradition. The United States did not
From the beginning of time, women have always received less opportunities than men because back then women did not have the same rights as men. It was not until around the 1920’s when Mary Combs was born that things began to change; due to new technologies and laws passed, significant changes in women’s lives were not only happening in the home but also in the work force, education and politics. In the first 20 years of Mary’s life, we will discover how the rights that women were beginning to receive challenged the ideal feminine role of society during those times. In the 1920’s the population of Hazard, Kentucky was increasing, and during that time Mary Comb’s family moved there for a job in the coal industry.
Society has long since considered women the lessor gender and one of the most highly debated topics in society through the years has been that of women’s equality. The debates began over the meaning between a man and woman’s morality and a woman’s rights and obligations in society. After the 19th Amendment was sanctioned around 1920, the ball started rolling on women’s suffrage. Modern times have brought about the union of these causes, but due to the differences between the genetic makeup and socio demographics, the battle over women’s equality issue still continues to exist. While men have always held the covenant role of the dominant sex, it was only since the end of the 19th century that the movement for women’s equality and the
Throughout history, women have fought valiantly to be treated as equals and have the same rights as men, who are seen as
A major part of our world today is women wanting a voice and to be treated just as equal as men. Women’s fighting for their rights has been going on since early as the 1900s and still currently in 2014. Although we have had made improvements the issue still arises everyday in the workplace, household, etc. Between different movements, powerful people standing up, or drastic matters being taken, women were fed up and for once were finally standing up for themselves. From wanting the right to vote, civil rights in the United States between same sex couples, and outside the household work, the list would just begin to grow and grow everyday as women became more powerful and began speaking up for not only themselves but everyone else who is effected
In the mid-1800s to early 1900, females had it difficult. There was a big differentiation in the treatment of man and woman then. Females were not permitted to go into professions such as law or medicine; they were even banned to have an education because of the rare universities that accept females with barely few exceptions. Women were not permitted to vote until 1920. They were always considered as a support and company only. But now time has changed drastically where many values, thoughts, and beliefs, which were once obligatory, have now been thrown out of the window. Women struggled hard and extensively over the years to earn the respect they have these days. Through fights, failure, pain, they reached their purpose of individuality
The allies have won the war, business is booming, new things are being invented, and the economy is at an all time high. The 20s were a time of great prosperity and change. Women were now more independent, wearing more revealing clothes, some even working office jobs. African Americans began moving west and north bringing their culture and a new style of music known as Jazz. Factory workers were being payed more and worked less. All was good in the 1920s.
Women have not always been as respected in society as they are now. In early America, women were banned from participating in most parts of society and their lives were mainly controlled by their fathers and husbands. While the women’s rights movement can be tracked as far back as 1850 is wasn’t until the early 1960s that