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Gender Inequality and Women’s Movement

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Title: Gender Inequality and Women’s Movement


1
Gender Inequality and Womens Movement
2
  • Womens Role in the 19th and Early 20th Centuries
  • 1. Victorian Women

3
  • Women were seen as pure and clean. Because of
    this view, their bodies were seen as temples
    which should not be adorned with jewellery nor
    used for physical exertion or pleasurable sex.

4
  • The role of women was to have children, please
    their husbands, and tend to the house.
  • Victorian femininity purity, piety, submission
    and domesticity

5
  • Married women could not enjoy their hard working
    profits or any of their possessions, because they
    would be accredited to their partner. They were
    seen as their husbands' "property.

6
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7
  • Viewed as the dependents of their husbands or
    fathers, women, for the most part, could not
    serve on juries could not hold elective office
    and, could not vote

8
  • By the turn of the century improved technology,
    an expanding transportation network, and
    burgeoning cities were pulling women out of the
    household into jobs and professions that had
    never existed before or that had long belonged
    exclusively to men.

9
  • By 1900 about 40 of all unmarried women were
    working for wages. Young women's increasing
    separation from family control and their
    intermingling with men in the world of work
    fostered a growing spirit of independence. 

10
  • Changing Opportunities
  • 1. Domestic Service in 1900 domestic service
    accounted for a third of all women workers. But
    long hours limited freedom.

11
  • 2. Factory work the typical female factory
    worker tended to be young, single, and an
    immigrant or the daughter of immigrant, and she
    tended to be working in the garment industry. 

12
  • 3. White Collar Work If a family could afford to
    keep a daughter in school through the eighth
    grade and if she spoke good English, the path
    would be opened to a position as a sales clerk,
    teacher, secretary. 

13
  • Sexual Segregation and the Wage Gap The gender
    roles that divided work in the family carried
    over into the world of work outside the home.

14
  • Employers liked to reserve the growing number of
    unskilled jobs for women, who were mostly young,
    temporary workers. They hired men, on the other
    hand for the higher paying, heavier, and more
    highly skilled jobs.

15
  • Because women were young, temporary, and had
    little training they found it difficult to
    command high wages. They made about half what men
    earned.

16
  • 2. New women
  • An icon of changing gender norms, the "new woman"
    first emerged in the late nineteenth century.

17
  • the new woman had greater freedom to pursue
    public roles
  • They challenged conventional gender roles
  • They expressed autonomy and individuality

18
  • modern new women ventured into jobs, politics,
    and culture outside the domestic realm.
  • Conservative forces in society, such as churches
    and the Ku Klux Klan, strongly opposed women's
    new roles.

19
  • Gender Inequality
  • I. Gender Inequality
  • The difference in the economic, social and
    political conditions between females and males

20
  • The male is given the prominent position while
    the female often plays only a supporting role.

21
  • The male is expected to have superior strength,
    greater stamina, higher intelligence, and better
    organizing ability.

22
  • The male is trained to play the role of decision
    maker, whereas the female is encouraged to be
    submissive and obedient.

23
  • II. Education
  • Men receive over 60 of professional degrees and
    doctorates.

24
  • Majors---More females are in the liberal arts and
    humanities, while more men major in science,
    mathematics, and engineering, which are most
    likely to lead directly to high-paying careers.

25
  • Women's preference for a more general liberal
    education may also reflect the fact that women
    expect to carry more child-rearing
    responsibilities and thus may shy away from
    majors leading to demanding careers that would
    interfere with those responsibilities.

26
  • III. Employment
  • In 1975, women only earned about 60 as much as
    men, but in 1992, that figure was around 75 due
    more to a decline in men's earnings than to an
    increase in women's pay.

27
  • Many women receive smaller paychecks than men
    because they enter low-paying occupations and
    hold lower-ranking jobs within their field.

28
  • Even when men and women do the same type of work,
    women earn much less than their male
    counterparts.

29
  • Many occupations are clearly "sex-typed", that
    is, they are considered either men's job or
    women's job.

30
  • A glass ceiling is an unofficial barrier to an
    upper management or such prominent position
    within a company or other organization which
    women are perceived to be unable to cross.

31
  • Some hopeful signs
  • a slow but steady decrease in occupational
    segregation since the 1960s, and many women have
    managed to breach the walls that kept them out of
    better-paying "men's jobs".

32
  • IV. Political Power
  • The U.S. has never had a female head of state.
  • In 1993, only 7 of the members of the U.S.
    Senate and 11 of the House were women.

33
  • No woman has ever held a key position of power in
    the U.S. Congress, and women are still largely
    locked out of the inner circles of power in the
    White House.

34
  • In the judicial branch, only two women in the
    history of the U.S. have ever been on the Supreme
    Court.

35
  • V. Social Life
  • 1. The Devaluation of Women
  • Women are considered as second-class citizens.
    They are pictured as emotional, unstable, and
    unable to direct their own lives.

36
  • Women are expected to repress their desires and
    ambitions in ways that are seldom demanded of
    men. It is usually the wife who must sacrifice
    her career if it interferes with that of her
    spouse.

37
  • Women are expected to repress their sexuality in
    the same way as they are expected to repress
    their career ambitions. During the Victorian era
    women's sexuality was almost totally denied.

38
  • 2. Language and Communication
  • The inequality of calling the human race
    "mankind" or of always using the masculine
    pronoun to refer to someone whose gender is
    unknown.

39
  • Words associated with men tend to take on
    connotations of strength and power, while words
    associated with women are more likely to be
    linked with sex or family.

40
  • male dominance in the conversation women's
    conversation tend to have a more cooperative,
    social character, while men are likely to be more
    competitive and individualistic.

41
  • In non-verbal communications, a man is more
    likely to invade a woman's personal space by
    touching her and standing close, than the other
    way around.

42
  • 3. Sexual Harassment
  • Sexual harassment includes everything from
    unwanted sexual comments and gestures to direct
    physical assaults.
  • Two types of sexual harassment

43
  • sexual comments and advances aimed directly at a
    particular individual. It involves an implicit
    and explicit threat, such as loss of a job, or a
    reward, such as a better grade, if the victim
    goes along.

44
  • hostile environment harassment. This offence
    involves unwelcome sexual comments, gestures,
    explicit photographs, and other things that
    create an offensive or intimidating environment
    for female employees.

45
  • VI. Some Laws to Protect Women against Workplace
    Discrimination
  • 1. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act

46
  • In 1964, this Act was passed. This is the
    strongest piece of federal legislation protecting
    women's rights against discrimination in the
    workplace.

47
  • It is illegal for any employer to fail or refuse
    to hire or to discharge any individual, to
    discriminate against any individual regarding his
    compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of
    employment, because of his race, color, religion,
    sex, or national origin.

48
  • An employer must not limit, segregate, or
    classify his employees for employment in any way
    which would deprive any individual of employment
    opportunities, or affect his status as an
    employee, because of his race, color, religion,
    sex, or national origin.

49
  • 2. Affirmative Action
  • In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson signed
    Executive Order 11246 in an effort to increase
    employment and educational opportunities for
    women and minorities.

50
  • The term "affirmative action" was coined when the
    order mandated that employers of specified size
    who do business with the federal government or
    receive federal funds actively seek to include
    women and minorities when hiring for jobs.

51
  • It stated that companies and educational
    institutions needed to set up certain recruitment
    and outreach programs, offer grants and
    fellowships to encourage women to enter
    previously restricted fields.

52
  • 3. Equal Pay Act
  • In 1964, EPA was passed.
  • The EPA "marked the entrance of the federal
    government into the field of the safeguarding the
    right of women to hold employment on the same
    basis as men".

53
  • It stipulated that the employers must pay men and
    women equally for comparable work.

54
  • The Act is intended to overcome the age-old
    belief in women's inferiority and to eliminate
    the depressing effects on living standards of
    reduced wages for female workers and the economic
    and social consequences which flow from it.

55
  • At the time the EPA legislation was passed, women
    earned on average fifty-nine cents for every
    dollar a man earned. In 1986 sixty-four cents.In
    1997 the ratio had risen to seventy-two cents to
    the dollar.

56
  • The differential is particularly revealing when
    men enter traditionally female jobs and vice
    versa. 74 of female professors earn less than
    their male colleagues, while male registered
    nurses earn 1.04 to a female's dollar.

57
  • 4. Equal Rights Amendment
  • In 1972, Congress proposed an Equal Rights
    Amendment (ERA) stating that "equality of rights
    under the law shall not be denied or abridged by
    the United States or by any state on account of
    sex."

58
  • In 1973, both the Senate and the House of
    Representatives passed the Equal Rights
    Amendment, indicating once more the powerful
    influence the women's movement had generated
    among the people across the nation.

59
  • VII. Changes in American Women's Social Roles
  • The suffragists had assumed that women would
    think, act, and vote together as an independent
    "bloc", but women followed the lead of men in
    political or non-domestic affairs due to the
    traditional ideas on women's "place".

60
  • Ratification of the suffrage amendment also
    failed to produce any significant change in the
    economic opportunities or activities of women. In
    addition, women made few inroads into the
    occupational areas of great interest to
    feminists---business and the professions.

61
  • The principle reason was the persistence of
    social norms which prescribed separate and
    segregated spheres of activities for men and
    women.

62
  • Since women were expected to make marriage their
    career, few businessmen would not train them for
    management positions.

63
  • Although women took jobs in unprecedented
    numbers, there was little evidence of a parallel
    shift in attitudes toward equality between sexes.

64
  • Women were excluded from top policy-making
    committees, and from higher-level management and
    executive positions.

65
  • As more and more wives joined the labor force
    after 1940, the sexual segregation of roles and
    responsibilities within the family gradually gave
    way to greater sharing.

66
  • a substantial impact on the socialization
    patterns of childrenchildren who were raised in
    household where both parents worked grew up with
    the expectation that women---as well as
    men---would play active roles in the outside
    world.

67
  • Women's Movement
  • I. Brief Introduction to Women's
    Movement/Feminist Movement

68
  • It is a social movement that seeks equal rights
    for women, giving them equal status with men and
    freedom to decide their own careers and life
    patterns.

69
  • While generally providing a critique of social
    relations, many proponents of feminism also focus
    on analyzing gender inequality and the promotion
    of women's rights, interests, and issues.

70
  • Reform Demands of the Women's Liberation Movement
  • 1. The end of sex segregation that permits
    male-only restaurants, clubs, and social events
    and allows help-wanted ads to specify that the
    job applicant be male or female

71
  • 2. The end of advertising that uses women as
    "sex symbols" to sell products for manufacturers
    and retailers also the end of "beauty contests"

72
  • 3. The end of the cultural stereotype of women
    as seeking only the goal of marriage and
    motherhood also the establishing by government
    of child care centers so that mothers, who so
    wish, may be free to pursue business and
    prefessional careers

73
  • 4. The use of the title Ms.(in place of both
    Miss and Mrs.) for women as comparable to Mr. for
    men---neither title indicating marital status and

74
  • 5. Full equality for women with men in
    employment, education, and before the law.

75
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton and other feminist leaders
    traveled the country lecturing and organizing for
    the next forty years. The campaign for woman
    suffrage met such staunch opposition that it took
    72 years for the women and their male supporters
    to be successful.

76
  • Feminist political activism focuses on issues
    such as reproductive rights, domestic violence,
    maternity leave, equal pay, sexual harassment,
    discrimination and sexual violence.

77
  • II. First Wave Feminism
  • In the 19th century the awareness of women's need
    for equality with men crystallized in America in
    so called first wave feminism.

78
  • Participants fought for suffrage in the United
    States beginning with the meeting in Seneca Falls
    in New York in 1848 and culminating in the right
    to vote in 1920.

79
  • III. The Second Wave
  • In 1963, Betty Friedan published a landmark book,
    The Feminine Mystique. In it she documented the
    emotional and intellectual oppression that
    middle-class educated women were experiencing
    because of limited life options.

80
  • By the end of the 1960s, the women's movement had
    succeeded in challenging nearly all of America's
    traditional cultural assumptions about women's
    proper place, and had become one of the media's
    biggest news items.

81
  • The more moderate wing of the movement, as
    represented by NOW, challenged employment
    discrimination, bias against women in politics,
    and anti-female prejudice so dominant in
    America's major economic and social institutions.

82
  • The National Organization for Women (NOW), the
    largest womens rights group, was founded in
    1966 by a group of feminists including Betty
    Friedan.

83
  • Goals
  • NOW seeks to end sexual discrimination,
    especially in the workplace, by means of
    legislative lobbying, litigation, and public
    demonstrations.

84
  • The more radical wing of the movement, typified
    by young college graduates, organized to build
    day-care centers, fight for repeal of abortion
    laws, create women's health collectives, write
    non-sexist children's books, provide support for
    alternative life-styles.

85
  • Through such a remarkable variety of activities,
    feminists successfully put their message across
    the country and managed to enlist an ever growing
    amount of support from women, and men as well.

86
  • IV. The Third Wave Feminism
  • The third wave feminism consists of many of the
    daughters and sons of the second wave, as well as
    the second wavers themselves.

87
  • Their issues include parental leave and day care
    for the children of working parents, making
    positions in corporate and governmental high
    offices, worldwide sustainable development, and a
    global awareness of feminist causes.

88
  • The third wave is a global surge in the US it is
    multi-cultural and inclusive and it supports
    women of all heritages as well as the rights of
    lesbian women and gay men.

89
  • Nowadays, many American feminists see women as
    fundamentally strong, confident, brave
    individuals, they look for greater integration of
    women into politics, economics, and social
    forums.

90
  • V. Main Points and Issues of American Feminists
    Program
  • Access to education through fair consideration
    for women for scholarships, equal access for
    women to jobs and careers, equal pay, access to
    politics and power structures.

91
  • Also most of American feminist organizations seek
    control over reproduction through reproductive
    freedom for all women, including maintaining
    legal access to abortion.

92
  • Also they struggle against violence through
    ending control over women's mobility and personal
    freedom and through censuring domestic violence,
    sexual harassment and rape.

93
  • VI. Varieties of Feminism
  • 1. Liberal, or Equality, Feminism
  • Liberal feminists stress the importance of
    freedom to choose. They see more similarities
    between women and men than differences and
    usually come out in favour of equitable
    opportunities for both sexes.

94
  • These feminists view choice as an absolute right
    and also strive to avoid the obviousness of
    gender codes and the gender socialization of
    children.

95
  • 2. Cultural, or Difference, Feminism
  • Cultural, or Difference, Feminism has become a
    really strong movement by 1980s. It attempts to
    revalue the feminine aspects that have been
    devalued by society.

96
  • Difference feminists celebrate the differences
    between women and men, seeing feminine qualities
    as a source of personal strength and pride and
    providing affirmation that women occupy the moral
    high position.

97
  • Cultural feminism focuses on cultural
    transformation, stressing the role of the
    intuitive side of life. First-wave difference
    feminists also argued for protective labor
    legislation for women.

98
  • 3. Radical Feminism
  • Radical Feminism stresses the differences between
    females and males. Whether the difference is
    biological or formed by society it isnt so
    important the results of male difference and
    dominance are at issue.

99
  • According to the radical feminist ideology, the
    violence of the heterosexual male has led to the
    patriarchal and hierarchical cultures of today.

100
  • Further, the male has victimized the female
    through pornography, violence, and the
    militarization of the world.

101
  • 4. Marxist and Socialist Feminism
  • Marxist and Socialist Feminists believe that
    women are seen as a sex class, gendered by
    society into a secondary position through a
    systemic sex gender system that dictates social
    roles, purposes, and norms.

102
  • These feminists believe that women are exploited
    as both a sex and a class, whereas men take the
    roles of goods production and potentially reach
    freedom.

103
  • 5. Eco-feminism
  • Eco-feminism grows from the idea that women's
    values are closer to nature than mens ones. It
    revalues feminine traits. Women are seen as in
    tune with nature, while men have a hierarchical
    relationship to nature.

104
  • This view poses the idea that men's control of
    nature has created an ecological crisis nowadays
    in much of the world.

105
  • Eco-feminists look for nonviolent solutions to
    world problems. They consider feminine values
    necessary for surviving in the conditions of the
    world's patriarchy.

106
  • Eco-feminists may also subscribe to liberal,
    radical, or Marxist/socialist thought, but they
    focus on ecology - both of nature and human
    systems.

107
  • 6. Black Feminists
  • Black feminists have demanded that feminists
    consider the problems of racism and classism (the
    hierarchy created by a caste-like economic and
    social class system) along with sexism.

108
  • Further, they have explained the interconnections
    from racism to sexism to classism. Sexism cannot
    truly be understood without understanding its
    racist undertones in the similar way, racism
    embodies sexism.

109
  • Black feminists have disproved the stereotypes of
    black women as matriarchs and superwomen and have
    organized movements to gain economic and
    political rights for women of color.

110
  • African American women support numerous feminist
    and women's issues organizations, some of them
    chiefly for women of color. They are also part of
    the general feminist movement and leadership.

111
  • 7. Male Feminism
  • Men have been allies and supporters of feminism
    from the beginning of the women's movements. They
    may consider themselves to be Eco-feminists,
    cultural feminists, liberal feminists, and so on.

112
  • Usually, their goal is to create nonsexist
    relationships, to join in the battle to end
    violence against women, and to develop
    partnerships with women instead of hierarchies.

113
  • VII. Progress and Achievements
  • For instance, during the past two decades,
    feminist organizations have been some of the most
    successful fundraisers in the non-profit world,
    with grants from government, foundations, and
    private corporations.

114
  • The political sphere is also quite available for
    women for example, to date thirty three women
    have served in the United States Senate, with
    fourteen serving at this time.

115
  • In American business 10.6 million firms are at
    least 50 owned by a woman or women. The number
    of female senior vice presidents in the business
    world has increased 75 .

116
  • Women are also actively participating in solving
    most difficult and important social problems such
    as environmental crisis, drug abuse and
    homelessness.

117
  • VIII. Problems
  • In the early 1980s, 70.8 of all non-college
    teachers were women 80.3 of all clerical
    workers were women, and 96.8 of all nurses were
    women. In 1982, women made about 57 cents of
    every dollar men made.

118
  • As late as the mid-1990s, American women's
    earnings were still only two-thirds of men's, for
    most of them remained largely segregated in the
    semi-skilled service sector.

119
  • Positions of great importance and high prestige
    still prove to be difficult for women to take.
    The glass ceiling usually prevents women from
    succeeding in social life, especially in getting
    promotion.

120
  • A glass ceiling is an unofficial barrier to an
    upper management or such prominent position
    within a company or other organization which
    women are perceived to be unable to cross.

121
  • Women are not only held down economically. They
    also suffer from the specter of gender violence.
    According to the National Victim Center, 683,000
    women are raped annually.

122
  • Another statistics shows that according to the
    American Medical Association, domestic violence
    in America results annually in 100,000 days of
    hospitalizations.

123
  • With these statistics, it would be very hard to
    believe that any form of gender equity has been
    reached. It would seem that the world still needs
    feminists.

124
  • Image Crisis
  • One of the greatest problems that faces
    American feminism now is an image crisis. When
    people picture feminists in their heads, the
    first image they get is a homely, middle-aged
    woman who just hates all men.

125
  • With this image in mind, it is easy to understand
    why many people, who believe in the ideals and
    policies which are essentially feminist, choose
    not to identify as feminists.

126
  • A woman who does something as simple as vote is a
    feminist. A woman who educates herself about her
    reproductive health is a feminist. A woman who
    holds an office is a feminist. Feminism is about
    women taking their rightful place as equals in
    the society.
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