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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page review of the multifaceted
nature of feminism. This diversity is emphasized by a number of writers, one of the
more notable of which is Estelle Freedman. Freedman's "No Turning Back: The History
of Feminism and the Future of Women" is complimented by an exploration of a number of
other authors and viewpoints. Rosemarie Tong's "Multicultural and Global Feminism",
Pat Mainardi's "The Politics of Housework" and Barbara Ehrenreich's "The Road to Equality" each add considerable insight into the diversity of feminism. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPfemini.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Feminism is an evolving and multifaceted movement. Feminist themselves, in fact, have a diversity of viewpoints as to what feminism is. Sometimes they
agree with one another and sometimes they do not. This diversity is emphasized by a number of writers, one of the more notable of which is Estelle Freedman.
Freedmans "No Turning Back: The History of Feminism and the Future of Women" is complimented, however, by an exploration of a number of other authors and viewpoints. Rosemarie Tongs
"Feminist Thought", for example, contains a chapter titled "Multicultural and Global Feminism" that adds considerable insight into the diversity of feminism. These works are accompanied, of course, by
hundreds of others that each give their own particular insight into a very diverse topic. When reading the works mentioned above it quickly
becomes apparent that although feminism itself officially started at a much earlier point in our history, in 1848 with the passage of a "Declarations of Sentiments and Resolutions" at a
womens rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York, feminism did not exert a very heavy toll on womens lives as a whole until the womens liberation movement of the 1960s.
As women focused on greater political, social, and economic equality, however, it soon became apparent that there was no one view of what constituted equality and how it should
be achieved. Different women took different approaches to effect the changes which they saw as necessary in regard to their traditional
gender roles. Some joined together with women such as Pat Mainardi and other women of the Redstockings, a group of radical New York women who aggressively sought change (Mainardi,
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