Do You Suffra By Betty Friedan Analysis

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Do You Suffra-Get It?
Betty Friedan, the author of The Feminine Mystique, intrigued the female audience with her views on a problem that hid underneath the guise of anonymity. During the 1960’s, women were so well versed in the art of femininity that they were scared to question their true worth as individuals, settling for small houses that occupied successful lineages (Friedan 15). Betty Friedan’s work was a significant part of the 1960’s feminist movement, but her strong beliefs toward female oppression were not the first to gain recognition. In the midst of the 1910s, passionate leaders such as Lucretia Coffin Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony spearheaded the women’s suffrage movement through political pursuit and the establishment …show more content…

The news of this arrangement was clearly not taken well, especially to her new husband’s first wife, and Naieema described the attack that ensued as “nothing but continuous pain (“Survivor”).” The Acid Survivors Foundation has reported over three thousand incidents of acid throwing, which is the violent act of throwing highly corrosive acid onto the body of another. From 2002 to 2015 only two thousand and nineteen cases were filed in response to an attack. (“Newsletter”). Naieema, and a number of women across Bangladesh, Uganda, and other countries, have been held victim to acid throwing as a punishment for their “impure actions”. However, acid throwing is only one method in a number of domestic violence cases, and women across the world are continuously held victim to mentally and emotionally scarring acts of violence. For example, violence against women in America is a sensitive topic that was addressed during the 1993 United Nations General Assembly, the birthplace of the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women, but studies show that every one in three women is still exposed to physical or sexual assault (“Facts”). The World Health Organization offers a list of risk factors that influence violence against women. This list includes, but is not limited to, a history of violence in the family, childhood maltreatment, infidelity, mental illness, strong sense of sexaul entitlement, and weak legal sanctions (“Violence”). It is quite popular to witness victim blaming used as an excuse for sexual assault, whether it be the clothing that the victim was wearing at the time or how much alcohol was consumed. Jackson Katz, co-founder of the organization Mentors in Violence Prevention, approaches the subject of assault in a unique manner. Katz believes that blaming women for their own assault is part of the problem, so he invites men to take a