Women weren’t treated greatly at all; they had hardly any rights where as men had many that women had no say in. One rule that was truly unfair was that a man could order any women to do anything he wanted. Women could not get an education because Confucius thought women didn’t need it. All they needed to know was how to cook clean and look after kids. They basically had no rights or privileges; they didn’t even get choice on who they would be spending the rest of their life with. There were some strict rules regarding marriage. Firstly Women didn’t get a say in who the married because it was worked our by a family member of the spouse, they had to marry a guy who was at least a few years older than him and they had to know less than him,
As the years progressed from the 1700s into the 1800s, women started to see that they were not treated as equal as men even though they could do anything men could. During the late 1800s was when women first started to fight for more rights and equality. They started forming more and more women groups, and even went on labor strikes to protest the diversity. Although it seemed that as hard as they tried to gain this equality, the harder it was for them to obtain it. They were treated horribly and unequally to men. While African American men received the power to vote in 1870, women still did not have a chance at that right. Even though many people disagree that women were treated fairly, the studies show that they were discriminated against. The treatment of women in the late 1800s was discriminatory because they
The 1920s had a big impact on American life all around; however, one of the biggest changes during this time period was in the roles of women. During this time period, women started dressing different, leaving the house, getting jobs, and gaining rights. On top of all of that, they had a bigger role in education, they began taking parts in politics, and divorce became more of a common thing. This may not seem like a big deal to people today, but this was very important at the time. Prior, women had next to no rights. They lived to wait on and please their husbands. Women rarely even left the house. This time period could be said to have paved the way for modern day feminism and women’s roles. This was the time period when they began to be free and stop worrying about how society thought they should live. However, the question still remains: Did the changing roles of women in the 1920s really have a significant effect on women’s roles today? In the next few pages, one will be given examples of women’s role before, during, and after the 1920s. In each paragraph, the roles, rights, impacts, and more that women had at these times will be explained. To conclude, a comparison on how women were thought to act in these different time periods will be made in order to come up with an answer for the question stated above.
1919, the dawn of a new era, the era of war , and the era of women’s votes, this was also an era of elegance, but to some the era was not so kind. Young Lacey’s mother passed away in 1919, leaving her and her brother’s and sister’s to be raised by her aunt Caroline. Aunt Caroline insisted that the children attend a Christian church on Sunday’s, where she served on the missionary board doing charitable works. The church is where Lacey first laid eyes on Larry, seeing him Sunday after Sunday, wearing his loose fitting sack suit, belted high on his waist. Larry was the son of a freeman who stayed on the land that his father was given by his boss in Prince William County, Virginia. He inherited a field and a house that sat on forty acres of
Now in this precise year and day, you may view women as a strong and powerful person but was it always like that? In the 1920s, was the year women finally got the right to vote after all the campaigns made and reforms performed. In all some were still housewives while some felt the need to work in order to provide money for the family or themselves. Not all were married and had a husband to provide for them. Many obstacles had to be faced in order to be where we are today. Females faced inequality with men, but that did not stop them from accomplishing what they desired. Jobs and education in the 1920s were limited to women.
The 1920’s was known as the Roaring Twenties, the Jazz Age and the era of wonderful nonsense. There were many changes that occurred during the 1920s. Women lives’ changed with the 19th amendment, working outside the home and fashion. Other changes were the Jazz Age and Prohibition. After World War I, Americans wanted to go “Back to Normalcy.
In the early 1800’s, the disparate treatment of men and women was drastic. Women had a very limited amount of rights and not much of a chance to exercise them either. Voting, suing others, and testifying in court were all strictly verboten (Hill 1). In marriage, all their formerly owned property was surrendered to their husbands or given back to their fathers. Women were also forbidden to call a divorce and were forced down into staying in the marriage. In the rare case of a divorce, women could not claim custody over their children or any other possessions that, prior to the marriage belonged to them (“Women in the Nineteenth Century: Introduction”). Women were expected to always be subservient to their husbands and listen to their every order
Today, women have the same rights as men, but it wasn’t always that way. Women had very little rights in the 1920s. In this paper, we will look into the struggles of women, how their jobs changed from when they gained their rights, and finally we will go over some famous activists.
During the 1920s, women gained a lot more power than ever before. The Nineteenth Amendment was enacted and it gave all women the right to vote. Many of the women during this era known as the “Roaring Twenties” became flappers. These women typically had short hair, wore semi-short skirts, wore excessive amounts of makeup, drank, smoked and partied quite often with the boys of the era, known as sheiks. There were many other laws enacted during the 1920s, such as the Sheppard-Towner Act and the Equal Rights Amendment, but none of the acts passed seemed to help women in the workforce. A limitation that they faced was that although they did the same job as the men, they still were paid lower wages than the men.
The 1920’s was a very significant era in American history. In 1918 the war was just over and many Americans wanted everything to return to the way it was before. However the economy struggled and people didn’t have jobs. In the year 1919 there was chaos everywhere with strikes, race riots, and the Red Scare. Until in 1920 when Warren G. Harding won the presidential campaign and became the U.S President.
The United States during the 1930’s was marked by a time of human suffering on a scale not seen in America before. During the Great Depression levels of unemployment rose as failing companies laid off workers, which left families struggling to survive. Often out of desperation men and women sought aid through letters to President Roosevelt and the First Lady, however, distinct differences were evident depending on the writer. Letters written by men often emphasized and confirmed the socialized idea that viewed men as breadwinners. In these letters men frequently discussed failing companies as well as pay cuts they had experienced. Reduced income placed strain on a man’s ability to provide for his family, which often left men feeling like failures.
Women of the 1920s where beginning to change their social norms. At that time, peoples' view of how women should look and act began to change. Women of the 1920s were the start of that change. People wanted to social change which lead to women becoming more independent and more powerful. With the majority of women changing the social norm, others wanted to fit in, so they changed their ways to be
After reading our assigned transcripts, I have drawn a similarity in topics such as Barbie, Miss America pageant, and Marilyn Monroe. The underlying message which I found common in all readings were the importance of a women’s self-image. From the very beginning, Miss America pageants in the 1920’s based their winner primarily on their personal appearance. As the years went on, gender stereotyping became more frequent. In television ads that were running during the 1950’s had shown women as the “perfect “package.
Socially it has been ‘concluded that contemporaries saw the interwar decades as a period of change in gender relations.’1 This serves to express the change that occurred from the social world being divided as ‘a masculine public realm and a domestic feminine one.’2 Traditionally speaking women were kept at home or chaperoned in public. The New Woman interacted with men daily in the work place and in social circles. In Australia, women were gradually recognised for their ‘independence, resourcefulness and camaraderie in the limitless spaces of the new world.’3 Often ‘unrelated and unengaged women and men went together to dances, picture theatres and cafés,’4 far from the traditional system of a young women having a chaperone,5 expressing the
Meanwhile, women started to replace men. At the beginning of 1915, women were hired by some companies such as banks, administration and commercial firms. “The post offices recruited 11,000 (to replace their 18,000 mobilized men), the education sector hired 12,000, amounting to half the mobilized teachers (30,000) and the Parisian tramways hired 5,000” (Bette). It seems that women can work in difference workplaces. Society is not only focusing on men, but also it gives opportunity to women. In addition, some military institutions recruit women. In 1916, the army employed women to participate administrative departments like taking dictation and answering phones. The jobs are more extended wide for women. They can enjoy the equal pay and equal
Change of Attitudes Toward the Role and Status of Women During the 1920's and 1930's