Preview

Feminist Theory: The Importance Of Personal Narratives

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
453 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Feminist Theory: The Importance Of Personal Narratives
Abbie Alexander
Profession
Feminist Theory
September 26, 2015
The Importance of Personal Narratives
Personal Narratives carry more authority than scholarly studies, because they are the voices of women varying in color, ethnicity, nationality, religion, and cultural background. The feminist movement operates on the assumption that experiences of upper-middle class white women represent a universal female identity. In order for the feminist movement to gain traction, we must recognize the systemic oppression faced by women with multiple dimensions to their identity, and embrace their stories, experiences, and views (Gillis, S. 2004).
Scholarly studies provide valuable statistics and supporting evidence to the theories written by experts in feminist

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    They frequently reference a multitude of other researchers that further add to and strengthen their argument through the usage of quotes. Although, Ropers-Huilman and Winters do not reference their points back to the stigma of the natural inferiority of women enough to have a strong argument in that aspect. But even though my research is related to the negative stigma of feminism, the claims of Ropers-Huilman and Winters can be used to emphasize the lack of feminist voices in the most influential education journals to support my argument over the long lasting cultural view of male dominance. With their detailed explanations over how feminists research in contrast to normal research, I will have a variety of facts to support one of my questions of how their research can be ignored when they are so precise with their unique processes and put great value into their…

    • 979 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I remember when I was told I shouldn't like certain things because I'm a girl and girls just don't do that. I have always been into heavier rock music even though I did not grow up around it. I had many male friends growing up because I identified more with what they enjoyed like video games and sports and music. No matter what I have always loved video games and my family has come to realized there is nothing they can do to change who I am. I recently saw myself because more enthralled with sports, especially with football. People often found that strange when I was younger but the older I got it seemed more and more normal.…

    • 299 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Women have come a long way over the history of this earth. They have come through suffrage, voilence, and discrimination. The history of women has been a continual battle. Men has always been superior and had better rights and career opportunities. To be a wife and a mother was considered a woman’s most important jobs. As years have preceded women have won the right to vote and improved their educational and job opportunities. Cover the years as women began to advance in the politics, rights, career, business ownership and a variety of different things there was still a group of women who didn’t advance until after that Black…

    • 1022 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Feminist theory does not have one official definition and can take many different forms (Hick, 2010). Most feminists agree that all women in society have the right to obtain the same economic, political and social rights that their male counterparts experience (Hick, 2010). The belief that women are treated differently than men within society is a well-known phenomenon. Historically, the basis of feminist theory is presumed to have arisen out of the three waves of feminism (Hick, 2010). Women in Canada have made vast strides towards attaining more rights and resisting gender-based discriminatory beliefs and assumptions that aim to socially exclude women from reclaiming their womanhood (Mullaly, 2010). Women’s social position as subordinate…

    • 177 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Aren T I A Woman Analysis

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This speech was given at the Woman's Rights Convention in Akron Ohio. Her immediate audience is women and feminist, to them she uses the speech not only as a rallying point in which she shares her injustices with those who share a commonality but she also uses them as a sympathy vote in when she asks “aren’t I a woman?” she connects with them on a deeper human level to try and share her experiences and pain that she has witnessed and gone through herself to people may not have understood…

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I grew up as the ignored daughter. The first child of two very smart, diligent working class carribean immigrant parents. My parents worked tirelessly to give my sibling and I everything we needed. We never had to worry about where our next meal was comming from and we never wore hand me downs, for all intents and purposes, we were blessed. The one thing my parents passed down to us was religion. It was our way of life.…

    • 797 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Gender was always a very tricky subject for me until I finally realized gender and sex are two different things. So, gender was never something I ever really thought about. I was a girl and that was that. It was definitely assumed for me based on my biological “label” of female at birth. I grew up with two sisters so there were lots of baby dolls and Barbies. But as I got older, aspects of other gender(s) became aware to me that I decided I wanted to incorporate into my own gender. I did not like wearing dresses so that “norm” was thrown out of my wardrobe options. I was much more comfortable in pants and a t-shirt playing outside. I became very interested in sports and always wanted to be outside shooting baskets or throwing around…

    • 259 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    When this young lady in her 40s had her plastic surgery done, It was surgery that she really needed the surgery. but her outside finally matches how she felt inside. I’m not talking Kardashian, Rivers and Wildenstein extreme; I’m talking about tweaks. A better version of Her.…

    • 104 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Feminist Synthesis Essay

    • 502 Words
    • 3 Pages

    To become the next era of the feminist movement, we have to: not only include women from all around the world but also view their perspectives with the importance that we view our own. By using the intersectional lens, we will examine situations of oppression, mistreatment, and inequality and identify the groups being affected the most. Whether the issue in question is economic, social, or political, the intersectional lens will help us see the targeted groups who are experiencing patriarchy implemented inequality. With intersectionality in the spotlight of feminism, we could expect to see not only a better understanding of the importance of equality, but the further dismantling of organizations that blatantly oppress women based on their race, sexuality, nationality, religion, gender, or religion, otherwise known as - women’s…

    • 502 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cited: Valenti, Jessica. "For Women in America, Equality is Still an Illusion." Read, Reason, Write. 10th ed. 2012. Print.…

    • 721 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Feminism as a political, socioeconomic, and cultural movement validating the lives of women has transformed tremendously since its inception in the early 19th century. The movement transcend three dynamic periods or ‘waves’ beginning in 1831 to today that have each helped to shape and define a, “multifaceted, nuanced, complex, and often contentious (Swigonski and Raheim, p.11)” activism that continues to consume feminists, scholars, politicians, and detractors alike. Caroline Dorey-Stein (2015) chronicles three distinct feminist periods the first beginning in the 1830’s and ending in the early 1900 that she explained ignited and movement with a focus on the women’s fight for equal contract and property rights; the second wave, dated from…

    • 610 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When I was much younger, I had the opportunity to live in rural Georgia. While living there I had the assumption, since I had medical insurance everyone else does too. During this time I made some friends of which I had learned their family did not have health insurance. This raised my awareness of various topics. The first was not everyone is the same and not everyone has what you have. Looking back after reading and the live classroom, I realize having health insurance was a privilege, and in my case could be considered an unearned privilege. This is due to the fact my health insurance, which was earned by my father who was serving in the US Air Force, was given to me because I was his dependent. Listening to the live classroom, I came across some similarities as my classmates.…

    • 602 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Third World feminism, global feminism, Socialist feminism, and Black feminism are just a few of the “many feminisms” (Many Feminisms, March 2) that exist as a result of mainstream feminism prioritizing the experiences and voices of privileged white women and excluding marginalized groups. Under those circumstances, multiple feminisms emerged to represent minorities such as Black women, Chicanas, and lesbians. However, unlike “traditional” feminism, these feminisms’ goal is not only to achieve gender equality, but social justice as well, along with proving that “feminism is for everybody” (Many Feminisms, March 2), regardless of race, ethnicity, or sexuality.…

    • 873 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I am from South Texas meaning the farthest anyone can go without actually crossing the border with Mexico. Growing up in this place was a balancing act because you are living in a clash of two cultures that did not, particularly, think highly of women, but our house was a blend of traditional ways and more liberal thoughts. My parents are permanent residents that originally came from Mexico to the United States to work in the fields. It is important to understand that my parents finished high school in a time where attending past the second grade, in Mexico, was a luxury. For this reason, they are more open minded than other Mexican parents. Although they are more liberal, I did grow up surrounded by gender stereotypes imposed implicitly by…

    • 1856 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She argues that to be a man or woman, are matters of societal reality. To be a member of a particular race or sex brings with it different opportunities, rights and constraints. In the society today, there varied manifestations of sexism cutting across different sectors. Areas like media, politics and even religion is full of varied manifestations of sexism. For example, in some religions, women still are not allowed to be ordained as bishops or church leaders. Furthermore, in extreme cases women are not even allowed to stand before congregations to speak especially if men are part of that congregation. In politics, both political leadership and the electorate demonstrate a level of this behavior. In the world today, it is a matter of record that there have been more men presidents and even prime ministers than women. Across the globe, feminist movements are calling on governments to adopt inclusivity in key government appointments, and include more women in public leadership. Most governments have gone further and adopted resolutions that dictate the number or percentages of women appointment to any position in comparison to that of men. These resolutions are also forming policies in the private sector where most women had been locked out of senior managerial…

    • 982 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays