On The Equality Of Sexes Rhetorical Analysis

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The American Revolution are three words that spark images of violent, bloody battlefields filled with injured soldiers, firing their guns, fighting to become a country. These are three words that even today, provoke a strong sense of patriotism and appreciation within the American heart. Men fought and died for us to have that feeling. They put their life on the line, so that someday we would be able to sing our National Anthem and know that without this war, we would not be one nation under God, indivisible, for liberty and justice for all…
Now, the images and thoughts of bloody battlefields and men in red coats and blue coats fighting are common for a person to have when they hear the words, “the American Revolution.” In fact, if you were …show more content…

For example, a woman named Judith Sargent Murray was a writer who, through her literature, fought for equal educational opportunities for women. In her short essay entitled, On the Equality of Sexes, she questions men by asking, “in what the minds of females are so notoriously deficient, or unequal….” She wrote this paper in 1790 when the main viewing audience was educated males. She alongside many other authors, used this to her advantage, and took the opportunity to spark thought within the male mind. She used educated language, respectful tone, and persuasive methods to establish credibility. Women of this time frame did not necessarily write to stir a beehive, they wrote to show men that they even could. Women could be …show more content…

The men who had been fighting got to return home and the British were defeated, but there was still a war going on. Women were not ready to return to their mundane daily tasks of being a wife. Each day, more and more women came to push for equality. Finally, by 1848, roughly sixty-five years after the ending of the American Revolution, men and women gathered to create The Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions. The ideas set forth by this document did not gain women any more rights than they had in 1847. This document signed by sixty-eight women and thirty-two men was created to be a guideline and a reminder. This document was a light that guided women through their suffrage movement and kept them motivated. It reminded them that “woman is man’s equal,” and, ”was intended to be so by the Creator.” Eventually, after years of fighting, women won the right to vote through the 19th Amendment set forth in 1920. While many women are still fighting to gain more equality, even today, the progress women have already made since the Revolution is remarkable. All it took was hard work, determination, a few letters, and a little love to the husbands of

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