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Women’s Rights Movement
The Women’s Rights Movement spans over a century and a half of progress towards a society in which men and women can be seen as equal. If it weren’t for the beginning of such a movement, it’s entirely possible that women would not be able to vote or work outside of the home and in the same jobs as men. The Women’s Rights Movement arose from a political mindset holding that women should have the same right to vote that men have, but since then it has extended women’s rights to all aspects of American life. The issue of women’s rights is now more than just whether women can help choose political leaders, it’s also about whether women can be respected as much as their male counterparts and whether they have rights over their persons and the right to dignity. Women may have won the right to vote long ago, but women’s rights are still very much an issue today. The Women’s Rights Movement hasn’t ended by any means and it continues to gain momentum. The Women’s Rights Movement began in 1848, when the first women’s rights convention was held in Seneca Falls, New York. A group of women and some men signed the Declaration of Sentiments which called for equals rights. It’s important to note that while the stereotype of the chauvinistic male does exist, there are also equal minded men who have always been the allies of feminists. “Feminism” often evokes a negative connotation because people associate it with misandry, but true feminism isn’t about the hatred and denigration of men. Feminism is about equality, and when it’s about anything else it becomes just as much about inequality as traditional misogynistic sexism. It’s been a long journey since then as the Women’s Rights Movement has tackled issues such as birth control, homophobia, racism, work and education discrimination, divorce, rape, and abortion. Abortion is particularly a heated and controversial point of contention in modern times, perhaps because it is a right unique to women. It’s one thing for women to be able to fill in ballots just like men can, but it’s difficult to liken the process of an abortion to any male experience. The concept of equality has evolved to include the “right to choose,” the right to one’s own body. Such a right is difficult to determine because it manifests differently for both sexes, and as the Women’s Rights Movement it will most certainly continue to be a matter of debate.
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