Susan Blotin Women's March Summary

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Parades, pickets, demonstrations, marches, rallies, and protests. No matter what they are called or how you participate, perhaps the single most powerful and peaceful way to bring about social change, is for people to unite together on behalf of an important cause. We are currently in a time of increased advocacy, unrest, frustration, and action, all of which have captured the attention of many through the nationwide women’s marches that have occurred over the past few years. Many of these women and men that have taken the streets are motivated by anger, sadness, and empowerment and are demanding that change be made, and made now. The issues being “marched” for have range from equal pay and reproductive rights, to sexual assault in the workplace. …show more content…

But what is feminism exactly? An article by Susan Bolotin, published in New York Times Magazine in October of 1982, explores the topic of feminism in depth and how the author came to discover feminism herself. Bolotin begins her piece by explaining that in 1972, which was the year that she graduated from Cornell University, Congress proposed the Equal Rights Amendment, Ms. Magazine published its first issue, the Boston Marathon accepted women, and the National Organization for Women was six years old. At that time, Bolotin claimed that sexual equality would never again be perceived as undesirable but then confesses that she quickly realized she was wrong. Diminished social services, which affect women most directly, restrictive abortion laws, cutbacks in affirmative action programs, and proposed changes to the Federal Civil Rights guidelines concerning sexual harassment, were just to name a few of these …show more content…

Bolotin explains that she “came to” feminism the way that many others did during the 1960’s- through books. It was in the 1960’s that she made the decision to take women as seriously as she had always taken men- an obviously difficult task considering the years of training she had. Bolotin explains that to some women, feminism is a radical theory of separatism, a special identification with women or those things that are distinctly feminine, but that most however agree that feminism means believing in equal rights (Bolotin, 1982). Julie Rothman, a 1982 graduate from the University of Vermont, defined it in a straightforward way: “For most people, feminism means having a strong sense of yourself as an individual, independent female” (Bolotin, 1982). Others, like Rachel Flick, consider the movement “an exclusively radical, separatist, bitter movement” (Bolotin,

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