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Rosie The Riveter's Effect On Women

Decent Essays

From the beginning of society women have been considered less than men and women were expected to be the caretakers of their family. As time went on and things were not changing World War II began. The Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. After Pearl Harbor the United States was outraged that the Japanese would bomb the U.S. without declaring war (Aiken). The conflict between the U.S. and Japan had been rising and finally a war began. While the men were away at war more people were needed to fill in jobs that men had to leave behind because of the draft, that left women to do all the work men had done. This led to new things that women would endure for the first time ever and little did they know this would change the way women …show more content…

When men got back from war the women were expected to go back to their housework and do what they did before the war. Rosie the Riveter was expected to dissipate and be forgotten, because women were no longer wanted or needed in the workplace. This created nationwide anger for many women that wanted to continue working and continue having freedom and a sense of importance. Most women swallowed their pride and went back to being housewives and caretakers. Rosie paved the way for gender equality and greater gains for women throughout society in decades ahead. Betty Friedan even said that the World War II female movement was “the feminine mystique” which was the title of a book she wrote that is still adored today. She wrote the book in 1962 and this sparked a renewed interest in women’s equality. Women wanted more females in the workplace and no discrimination due to gender for salary and the way women were treated in the workplace. Instead of men not hiring women because the fear of them becoming pregnant soon or just because they were women, women wanted to be respected and freed. As more and more people read the book and how it explained what women’s life was like people began to fight back. Women would hold protests in the streets holding signs high above their heads. Others got involved in the National Organization of Women (NOW) that focused on pro-equality. As time went on women were gaining more freedom again for the first time since WWII and from then on things changed. Betty Friedan once said, “What used to be the feminist agenda is now an everyday reality. The way women look at themselves, the way other people look at women, is completely different...than it was thirty years ago...Our daughters grow up with the same possibilities as our sons (“The”).” In conclusion, Rosie the Riveter was long-lasting after the war’s end and inspired women to pursue their dreams, which later on

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