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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper examines Mill's 1869 The Subjection of Women. Many contemporary examples are used to explore this nineteenth century work. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA018Mil.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
your own." Yes, the 1970s were liberating for women. Finally, women had choices never afforded to them before, and as time went on, not only were women liberated in the
work place, but also on the home front. As the decades proceeded, women began to take on more responsibility for their own finances and having a family did not seem
to affect their ability to make money. Women today who choose an old fashioned lifestyle are by far the exceptions. Although it is true that many women regress to old
roles in the home, few women can afford not to work in the economic atmosphere that has rendered the two income couple part of the quintessential family model. There are
few families that can survive on one income today. In examining feminism, and what it has done for women, there are several questions which erupt. What are womens roles really?
Are women truly liberated today as they go out and work, or are they still doing what the male wants them to do, conforming to a male conceived model of
femininity and not actually doing what they want to do? Many women today are stressed due to overwhelming responsibility. The hopes and dreams of women of the 1960s and
1970s have fizzled to frenzied days and nights as they try to keep their job, their sanity and their children well. For a man, who still does little around the
house, things have not changed much. He continues as always. While many think of this problem as a contemporary dilemma, it might surprise one to know that the situation has
been around for decades. In fact, more than a century ago, John Stuart Mill addressed the very subject. John Stuart Mill, in 1869, published The Subjection of Women and considered
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