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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper provides an overview of the issue of women's rights and the women's rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHWomRig.rtf
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society. Those in what can be described as the dominant culture controlled by Anglo-European American males, demonstrate a kind of cultural, social and political dominance that has determined conflict
and shaped views of opposition. The Womens Rights Movement of the 1960s was what many consider a liberation movement, a movement that could be linked to similar politically
oppositional organizations with a focus on conflict against the traditions of the dominant culture. It is not surprising, then, that the Womens Rights Movement had its greatest period of
direct visibility during the Black Power Movement of the 1960s and 1970s. One of the misnomers in the modern culture, then, is that the civic identity of the
United States is fundamentally defined by a democratic process through which all men and women can achieve influence, but the liberation movements of the 20th century are a clear indicator
that many do not feel this kind of equity exists (Smith 4). The Feminist Movement of the 1960s and 1970s and the subsequent creation of a feminist pedagogy was determined
by distinct social and political factors that shaped a call for greater equity for women. Gender parity, then, or the desire for equal treatment for men and women determined
a kind of focus for the Feminist Movement that rejected the concept of femininity and the separation of men and women in the family that had dictated social perspectives for
centuries. One of the central problems with the Feminist Movement was that the image of the feminist in the United States appeared to exclude many women, and some theorists
have argued that the general decline of the feminist perspective extended from the lack of representation in the feminist perspective for women of color and of varied ethnicitys. Black
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