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Women In The Civil Rights Movement Of The 1920's

896 Words4 Pages

In the nineteen sixties, women’s liberation also called “feminism” was often a term of derision or contempt, if it was used at all (Dubois, 673). Feminism is the fight for parity, freedom, respect and dignity for all women regardless of race or gender preference. Towards the end of the twentieth century, women in America faced an underlying conflict to find their purpose and true meaning in life. The feminist movement, also known as the second wave of feminism focused on reproductive rights, education rights, sexuality rights, health rights, politics, employment, and family roles. The feminist movement encouraged women to understand that they were being treated differently and wrongly to men. The feminist movement of the nineteen sixties is the reason why the status of women’s rights have transmuted over the years. Before women’s liberation, there was the nineteen fifties Civil Rights Movement. The Civil Rights Movement was a mass protest movement against racial segregation and discrimination in southern states. Due to the influence of the Civil Rights Movement, the second wave of feminism occurred. In nineteen sixty-six, a group of sixteen women associated with the National Organization for Women (NOW), wanted to liberate themselves and other women from the …show more content…

“It is the primacy of women relating to women, of women creating a new consciousness of and with each other, which is at the heart of women’s liberation and the basis for cultural revolution (Dubois, 730). The Radicalesbians also felt that homosexuality and heterosexuality were male dominated categories that were used to completely dominate women “Those sex roles, dehumanize women by defining us as a supportive/serving caste in relation to the master caste of men…” (Dubois, 729). Radicalesbians wanted lesbianism to be a form of feminism that did not have to involve

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