ipl-logo

Second-Wave Feminism In The 1970's

528 Words3 Pages

The 1970s Throughout the United States history, we’ve developed as a country of free will and ever-so changing beliefs and morals. The 1970s were turbulent times that were the continuation of the social justice and anti-war movements from the 60s. Political tensions and scandals rose into the media’s limelight and destroyed the people’s good faith in the federal government. Crime and poverty caused hysteria amongst suburban and urban areas. Youth culture had transformed with ideas of rebellion and the rising use of drugs. The emergence of inspiring and rebellious music expressed the emotions and changing morals of the people while becoming a staple in the Western world. Even though, the seventies were a time of chaos and hysteria, it had a led to the qu Feminism is the belief and advocacy of social, economic, and political equality between the sexesWomen's movements of the late 19th and early …show more content…

In contrast, the second wave of feminism in the 1960s, inspired and galvanized by the Civil Rights Movement of the same era, broadened the debate of women's rights to encompass a wider range of issues, including sexuality, family, the workplace, reproductive rights, de facto inequalities, and official legal inequalities. Second-wave feminism radically changed the face of western culture, leading to marital rape laws, the establishment of rape crisis and battered women's shelters, significant changes in custody and divorce law, and widespread integration of women into sports activities and the workplace. It also tried and failed to add the Equal Rights Amendment to the United States Constitution. The protest movements of the 1960s inspired many white and middle-class women to create their own organized movement for greater rights. Not all were young women engaged in social protest.

Open Document