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Sisterhood In Women's History Analysis

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Nancy Hewitt wrote an article about the role of sisterhood in women’s history. She specifically focused on the sense of community formed by the common oppression in North America, from the Victorian Middle class all the way to the inclusion of Unions in the American Industrial Age. However, Hewitt summarized feelings where women would “other” other women, by focusing on each other’s racial and economic differences.
Firstly, women would “other” each other based on race, usually with white women being the superior group and non-white women being the non-superior group. Nancy Hewitt acknowledged this othering as white women having more power than black women, especially in the women’s movements. Nancy Hewitt emphasized that in “Beyond the Search …show more content…

Linda Kerber noticed that “Affluent women feel superior to poor women (Kerber, I-6).” Well in general, rich people feel superior to everybody who doesn’t receive the same paycheck as they do. In my opinion Rich women can’t relate to poor women because often poor women must have jobs to support themselves and their family. Rich woman have leisure time, and if they were brought up rich, they can never understand what it is to work for what you have. So, per Nancy Hewitt, poor wHewitt never, per say, mentioned that rich women other poor women, but in a sense, did not include them in their feminist agendas or allow them to have benefits that they had fought for. Nancy Hewitt said that, “poor women in urban and rural areas were forced to hide, limit, or relinquish their communal modes of child care (Hewitt, 314), and “Americanization courses taught immigrant daughters to emulate bourgeois lifestyles and to evacuate the crowded stoops and communal kitchens for the privatized home (Hewitt 314).” To put it in other words, rich women were getting poor women ready to be bothered. By limiting them benefits and opportunities, rich women could change school curriculum, and childcare policies so that they would need to be employed by rich families and be bothered by the women in command when the man was not

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