Primary Source Analysis This paper will contain an analysis on two documents that I have chosen on Women’s Rights. The two documents are: Abigail and John Adams Converse on Women’s Rights, 1776 and the National Organization for Women (N.O.W.) Statement of Purpose, 1966. Both were created hundreds of years apart, but they will give an understanding of how long of a fight it was for women to obtain a sense of equality. The information about these two documents will cover the context as to when these sources were formed, each documents perspective, style, content, and information about the time period in which each was written. It is apparent from the titles that these documents were created in completely different time periods. During the …show more content…
They both talk about how women are just as much humans as men and that they should all be treated equally. In Abigail and John Adams Converse on Women’s Rights, 1776, women want to be given the chance to live and be able to accomplish the tasks and responsibilities as everybody else in America. In the letter, Abigail writes to John saying without the women’s works that men will not be able to keep a family. She also says that he should not put all of the power with the men, because women need power to be able to take care of the family and work to keep their family both happy and safe. Abigail told John in her letters to remember the women when he was attending his meetings to develop the new Code of Laws. She expected John to honor this request and to give them some rights. She also let him know that if the women were not taken into consideration in the laws that an uprising would occur on this matter. John, on the other hand, displayed a sense of humor and did not take Abigail’s request seriously. In the National Organization for Women (N.O.W.) Statement of Purpose, 1966 document, the focus was again on women’s rights. The writing did not focus on individual characters but rather a group who banned together and were harsh in their efforts to continue fighting for the rights and equality of women. The N.O.W. document discusses how women deserve to live and develop to their true human potential. Women want to help their husbands support their families. The husband should not have all that responsibility. This document points out the fact that at this time women were actually failing in the respect of gaining higher positions and occupations and as far as finishing their college education. They were also not being paid near the amount of money as the men were paid for the same job. This made it even more important to follow their beliefs to help women
4. Both Abigail Adams and Stanton are making it understood that change for women is long overdue. Both selections have a specific highlight on the “tyrannical” way men have ran their society and with no “impunity”. Stanton goes into great length with this among with many of instances marking the patriarchy, with Abigail Adams sticking mainly to addressing the men who have already recognized this discrimination and making an importune call for the change in women’s rights.
Following the American Revolution and the separation from Britain, the main group that seemed to “hold all the power” were men, mostly white, of property. Many other groups during this time did not hold the same amount of power as the men. Women, in particular, suffered in terms of rights during and after the American Revolution. Between how women were to be seen in the eye of the public and their place in politics, women had very little rights.
Throughout history the inferiority of women can be seen everywhere in society. That is why the ratification of the long hard fought 19th amendment to the Constitution in 1920 guaranteeing women the right to vote was a major achievement on the path to equality. But, however it was a minor turning point in United States women’s history. It was a minor turning point in United States women’s history because before the amendment was ratified most women only participated in the domestic household parts of their lives and never really had to earn money or make their own decisions.
“To deny people their human rights is to challenge their very humanity” - Nelson Mandela. Since the beginning eras, several injustices have sparked in order to achieve human rights. Human Rights were advocated since the foundings of America until present day. This concept has become a major controversial issue worldwide. The speech, “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July” by Frederick Douglass, the newspaper article “For the Cherokee Phoenix Signs of the Times” by Cherokee Phoenix, and the document “Declaration of Sentiments” by Elizabeth Cady Stanton all address the inequity for human rights by contributing effective rhetorical appeals.
Women were domestic beings and some men, even saw women as nothing more as children. Abigail pointed out that if men were to have unlimited power, they would become tyrants and what she wanted was not a revolution, but for women to be
In a time of fighting for freedom, not all felt free. The new declaration claims “All men are created equal”, leaving the women still with no rights and completely relying on men. Abigail Adams, the wife of John Adams, used her position to bring forward her own strong feminist views and felt women should be included in the declaration. Abigail’s fight for women's rights made an extensive impact on history because she pioneered a path for future women to come. While Abigail Adams fought for women's rights, John Adams thought women should just be house workers and supporters.
Throughout history men have oppressed women taking away their rights and being treated as second class citizens. In 1848,at the Senca fallls convention the Declartion of sentiments was signed to gain equal .The Author Cady Stanton based the Declartion of sentiments on the Declartion of Independance and through the use of anaphora she conveys the idea that womenhave been oppresed and should have the same rights as any other citizen. Throughout the text Stanton uses anaphora to great extent to demonstrate the way women have been treated as second class citizens. There are many examples of this in the text,but one that shows that women had no voice is:”He has compelled here to submit to laws, in the formation of which she has had no voice.”
She begins her letter by stating that John is working too frequently and not spending enough time with her and her family. She proceeds to denounce his work in office by stating that despite their government’s progress towards equality of all men, the women still deserve to have equal opportunities. Moreover, she also infers that a government is only as powerful as it’s people, thus, if not provided wit equal opportunities, the women will revolt against the government. Before reading this, I was unaware that women, especially women of higher class/power, were discussing equal rights and opportunities of women. I assumed that they would have primarily discussed this with the other women in their society rather than the men.
What Came First, the Feminist or the Abolitionist? Among the deep and dark history of the human race, two of the most unjust and despicable truths are the inhumane treatments of both African-Americans and women. As the more privileged section of the population continued to discriminate against minorities for both their sex and the color of their skin, it should come as no surprise that these groups decided they had had enough marshaled enough support to fight for their rights. It should not even shock one that these two movements happened simultaneously and involved the support of many of the same people.
“These women activists provided a support system to encourage the implementation of women’s equity through the Title IX, the Women’s Educational Equity Act, and related legislation”(Aquila 7). These women were a major part of keeping the women held together through these tough times. Their support system was very bold and they stuck to their word. Another group of women were a big part in Title IX. “A group of women that year hastily formed the National Organization of Women or NOW, at a conference on women.
Today, most would think that all humans have equal rights. Unfortunately, though, women are still not treated as equal as men. Women do not get paid as much as men do, they are expected to stay home and take care of the children, and they do not have as many job opportunities as men do. All of this is in spite of the fact that women have been fighting for their rights in this country since the 1800s. Two of the most widely known speeches are “Ain’t I a Woman” and “Speech at Seneca Falls Convention.”
Education was a big factor that Abigail urged women to have more of a passion for. An educated woman is a strong woman. She promotes that women are just as capable as men, and intellectual thinkers who want their voices to be heard. Since women had little rights for themselves, some women were against slavery, especially Abigail Adam’s, they saw how little to no rights slaves were given and saw a comparison of the situations and wanted to be that voice for them and those that joined her. John Adams had complete trust in her to be able to handle all that was going on in the household while he was gone.
Nowadays our world is changing hourly – its political, social and economic global picture depends on the decisions (more or less important, but still important), which are taken every minute. Sometimes it seems that all significant events have taken place, moreover it was a long time ago. At the same time we forget that there are areas of life, our daily lives, which have been completely different recently. In modern Western societies the right to receive education and to vote for women is natural part of life, contrast to the Third world counties, where women still do not have opportunity to take part in decision-making and influence various spheres of life in their countries. Skeptics may wonder: “What is so special about the fact that women are allowed to vote?”
The life of Women in the late 1800s. Life for women in the 1800s began to change as they pushed for more rights and equality. Still, men were seen as better than women, this way of thinking pushed women to break out from the limitations imposed on their sex. In the early 1800s women had virtually no rights and ultimately were not seen as people but they rather seen as items of possession, it wasn’t until the late 1800s that women started to gain more rights. The Civil War actually opened opportunities for women to gain more rights, because with many of the men gone to war women were left with the responsibilities that men usually fulfilled during that time period.
Eras are remembered by wars, civil rights, legislation, and popular culture. In Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Little Women by Louisa May Alcott, the role of women in society are significant motifs. Little Women was written and set in the 1860’s at the same time as the development of the women's rights movement within the United States. The Great Gatsby and Their Eyes Were Watching God are both set in the 1920s when women gained the right to vote and therefore women's rights should have evolved from those featured in Little Women. The goal of this essay is to attempt to determine if literature arising simultaneously to the feminist movement parallels laws passed.