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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. Women have fought long and hard to attain the same freedoms – or at least close to – as those of their male counterparts. Looking back upon history, there are myriad memorable moments where the struggle for women's rights has been made that much less severe, with a handful of notable individuals – both men and women – speaking out for the female voice. One such extraordinary person was both a woman and a minority, which made her struggle that much more difficult; however, she never allowed that to get in her way, particularly when she made this celebrated speech one hundred and fifty years ago. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCWmnRt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
struggle for womens rights has been made that much less severe, with a handful of notable individuals - both men and women - speaking out for the female voice.
"We all believe in the value of gender equality, yet we have different concerns about gender equality. In that sense, womens rights are not a universal good; neither are
they timeless" (Luh PG). One such extraordinary person was both a woman and a minority, which made her struggle that much more difficult; however, she never allowed that to
get in her way, particularly when she made this celebrated speech one hundred and fifty years ago. Sojourner Truth, an "emancipated slave" (Wortham 324), went to bat for every woman
when she spoke before a crowd of "hostile white" (Simon C34) people at the 1851 Ohio Womens Rights Convention, who were in no mood to hear what she had to
say. After gaining permission to convey her message, the nearly six-foot-tall muscular black woman took hold of that crowd with a defiance and assertion uncharacteristic of the black race
at that time. Throughout her short but impassioned speech, Truth held the audience in the palm of her hand, bravely asserting her opinions with regard to womens rights.
Indeed, she did not apologize for her forceful tone or powerful declaration; rather, that proved to be her strategy by which she would ultimately win support in the continuing fight
for womens rights. With the very first line, Truth exposes her defiance toward the systems rules, which, as she points out, have all been designed by men, for men.
Eloquent in both style and approach, Truth does not allow her gender to get in the way of insisting that nowhere in the framework of human rights has it been
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