Betty Shabazz

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    by men. Feminists advocate for women rights and equality of the sexes. “Their only dream was to be perfect wives and mothers; their highest ambition to have five children and a beautiful house, their only fight to get and keep their husbands.”When Betty Friedan wrote “The Feminine Mystique.” She explained how there was an idealized image of what women were supposed to be. Friedan ensured that women in the 1960s got a meaningful message, which change the mindsets of a lot of women who were the traditional

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    FRATERRIGO, ELIZABETH. "The Happy Housewife Heroine" And "The Sexual Sell." Frontiers: A Journal Of Women Studies 36.2 (2015): 33-40. SocINDEX with Full Text. Web. 7 Nov. 2016. This article focuses on Betty Friedan and the Feminine Mystique. Fraterrigo examines the Feminine Mystique and the problem has no name. She focuses on Friedan disapproval of housework bring an ultimate fulfillment for a woman. Friedan says that society encourages women to embrace the role of a wife and mother. She blamed advertisers

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    In this chapter of The Feminine Mystique, Betty Friedan denounces a fundamental notion of the mystique: The role for women in the home is equal to the role of men in society. To further explain this notion, she makes use of several different rhetorical devices such as antithesis, when she establishes a connection between the dreadful physical and mental health of full time housewives plus men working on assembly lines, and she does so in order to accentuate the hidden problems of “alcoholism, obesity

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    Women 's Role For Women

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    In the 1950’s, women truly believed they were living the life. Every day, they would do chores like making beds and clean up after her children. All their “desires are to glory in their own feminity” (Friedan). They believed that to be the best wife is to please their husband and should only be “concerned only about her husband and children” (Friedan). Even though women assumed they were being an ideal wife and mother, their role should not define who they are as women because they should not feel

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    for equality. Gloria Steinem is among many of the influential women who took the world by storm with their radical ideas of feminism and challenge the ideals that society had set forth for post-war women of the time. Before joining Bella Abzug and Betty Friedan in the formation of the National Women’s Politic Caucus, Gloria Steinem was taking care of her divorced, mentally ill mother in Toledo, Ohio. Steinem spent six years caring for her mother before she left for Smith College where she obtained

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    The Women’s Movement The women’s rights movement was a huge turning point for women because they had succeeded in the altering of their status as a group and changing their lives of countless men and women. Gender, Ideology, and Historical Change: Explaining the Women’s Movement was a great chapter because it explained and analyzed the change and causes of the women’s movement. Elaine Tyler May’s essay, Cold War Ideology and the Rise of Feminism and Women’s Liberation and Sixties Radicalism

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    Women in the 20th Century

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    The 1960’s was a time period in the United States history that saw an abundance of change for the American people. One of the many changes was the “sexual revolution”, which mainly focused on women. Not only did it focus on the sexual liberation of women, but also the attitude towards women in corporate America. The sexual revolution was a major turning point on how women were perceived in public, media, and politics. Throughout the 20th century women had become a political presence. They fought

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    Riverdale is an American television program that is based primarily on the Archie comics which were first released in the 1940’s. The comics focus largely on a love triangle between the three main characters, Betty Cooper, Veronica Lodge, and Archie Andrews. Unlike the television show, Betty and Veronica see one another as frenemies and are constantly at odds over Archie, who is never at fault for any of the mishaps that happen. The Archie comics were never big advocates of feminism and instead focused

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    Working outside of the home was rare for women at a time and was wrong if it was done. Women that did work outside of the home were not taken seriously being seen as less intelligent than men and less able to cope with stress (Harrington 16). They were “physically and intellectually inferior” so women weren’t usually allowed to face the outside world (Collins 4-5). Women were told if they worked, they would be taking jobs away from men that needed to support their families, but in reality most women

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    In the critically acclaimed musical “Grease”, we are introduced to a group of teenagers going through the trials and tribulations of average high school students in the 1950s. The lead characters of this musical, Danny and Sandy, exhibited the various characteristics and key concepts of the respectable decade. While this musical and its characters may be quickly written off as super-sexist with outdated ideas of gender, it actually demonstrates in a subtle way the rise of feminist ideals. A perfect

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