Harriet Honson Status Of Women Essay

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What were the role and status of women mid-19th century, and attempts to improve them? Harriet Honson Robinson: The story told by Harriet Honson Robinson demonstrates that the women’s suffrage movement has already started, but the women who finally decided to stand out for themselves found an opposition from the people with the conservative views on women rights. For instance, Robinson talks about how her mother who “was turned away from her boarding-house” simply because her daughter was a part of the protest against cutting wages. Judging on the document assigned for the class, it was not the only instance of “small revenges” against the protesters. One of the comparisons Robinson makes in her memoirs is the one between current women’s rights situation and slavery. Quoting one of the songs that were sang at the protest, she states that women no longer agree to put themselves in a position where their rights are so limited that they are basically slaves in their own homes. “I cannot be a slave, I will not be a slave, For I’m so fond of liberty That I cannot be a slave.” Considering that at day and age women didn’t have property rights or a right to vote, it’s easy to understand why women felt enslaved in the patriarchal society. …show more content…

Sadly, it would take America a lot more time to finally guarantee women equal rights. In fact, the women’s suffrage goal is not fully achieved until this day with the wage inequality among male and female