Women's Rights Movement Research Paper

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Women have been thought of as housewives who are not supposed to be independent. Women used to be seen as the ones who cook for their husbands and their children, clean the house, make sure the children are taken care of, while they let the men do all of the work. Women can be just as strong and as smart as men, and they can be independent. Women have realized that they could do whatever they want and that they do not need to be dependent on anyone, and that all they need is theirself. All people deserve basic human rights, regardless of sex. A woman is of equal worth to a man, they are not superior, and they are not inferior.The Women's Rights Movement is an important movement in history. This paper will include background information …show more content…

It created the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is a federal agency that administers and enforces civil rights laws against workplace discrimination. This was important for women to be able to get a job and be treated as an equal. This helped open up more doors for women, and their movement (The Civil Rights Act of 1964…. 3).
On August 26, 1970, women were encouraged to leave their jobs or their homes to take part in a march. It was called Women’s Strike for Equality. A full fifty years after the passage of the nineteenth amendment, 50,000 women marched in downtown New York City. The organizers of the event agreed on a set of three specific goals, which reflected the overall spirit of what the movement was about: free abortion on demand, equal opportunity in employment and education, and the establishment of 24/7 childcare centers (Cohen 1) (Cohen …show more content…

Silva Thin’s 1967 television commercial was one example. “Cigarettes are like girls,” said the announcer. “The best ones are slim and rich.” Women have always had pressure with their bodies. Just recently, the Sister Marches were held, and one thing talked about was women’s bodies and how it’s their choice with what they do with them (Gourley 9) (Gourley 77).
Women were not viewed as individuals, but as an extension of their husband. It was common for married women to introduce themselves using their husband’s names. A woman could usually not apply for a bank loan to buy a car or a house unless she had the signature of a husband or father. Women were considered to be poor risks to consumer credit companies. Women were not allowed a public voice (Jennings 29) (Gourley 33).
Most churches and other social institutions forbade women from speaking during services or meetings and women were not supposed to publicly speak their opinions. Religious leaders preached that women should be stay-at-home wives and mothers. Popular magazines told young girls how to get and keep a man, since this was the only source for their happiness (Jennings

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