Preview

Joan Korenman On Womanhood

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
382 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Joan Korenman On Womanhood
Joan Korenman, the author of the website International Women's Web Sites, has obviously put a large amount of time and effort to provide an international database of topics that would not be easily found with your average search engine. There is absolutely no stone unturned, as a man, I could not think of any topic regarding womanhood that is not covered. Ms. Korenman provides the internet novice or academic scholar a starting point to find a specific topic or agenda for research or personal knowledge. If you click on the “Go back to complete list of women-related WWW sites”, located at the bottom left of the page, it will take you to the Women's Studies / Women's Issues Resource page that is organized by topic, so if one is looking for something

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Through Christine Stansell's work “City of Women: Sex and Class in New York 1789-1860, we are introduced to women of the manufacturing industry. The period explained in this chapter is the early industrial revolution era. With the growth of cities in the North, and the lack of space for farming, factories became the basis of the economy. Through an excerpt from her publication,we look at labor systems and conditions and how they impacted women during this era. Women were given work focused in industries that produced products such as garments and shoes, or other products that seemed to need a woman's “female hands” to accomplish (Stansell 116).…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The movie that I watched is entitled, “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. It actually started out as a novel, written in 1971 by Ernest J. Gaines. It was produced as an award-winning television movie in 1973. The movie was produced by Robert W. Christiansen and Rick Rosenberg. It was directed by John Korty, with screenplay written by Tracy Keenan Wynn. The main actresses/actors are as follows: Cicely Tyson (Miss Jane Pittman), Eric Brown/Arnold Wilkinson (Jimmy), Richard Dysart (Master Bryant), Joel Fluellen (Unc Isom), Will Hare (Elbert Clureau), Katherine Helmond (The lady at the house), Davis Hooks (Colonel Dye), Elinora Johnson (Mary), Warren Kenner (Job), Dudley Knight (Trooper Brown),…

    • 708 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Mary Kilbreth, the author of the article “The New Anti-Feminist Campaign,” wrote about about how the feminist movement in the 1920s was not to favor corruption like it was, notwithstanding to gain equality for between women and men. In the 1920s, women who became flappers wanted to have independence and experience happiness, rather than being stuck with controlling husbands and bastardized feminists who did not benefit America itself. These feminists supported “the bureaucratic burden of a Socialist “maternity benefit system,” and nationalized “education,” with “a women in the Cabinet” and the rest of it,” (Kilbreth). What these feminists wanted was very corrupt and that is not what feminism signifies. Feminism symbolizes a “revolt against…

    • 145 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    I have chosen to write my annotated bibliography on “The Common Woman” poems by Judy Grahn. I will be focusing on the issue of the female stereotype along with sexism/misogyny. I chose this because each of the poems had a very strong message, but they all sounded like stories we had heard before. As a female, I feel like I am a natural feminist. These poems really stuck out to me because there is still people all around the world that feel that these portrayals of woman are in face “a common woman”. I am hoping to find analyses and research on these poems that tell me where each one got its story from. I am also hoping to find the reasons for writing these poems. What was her intention? In order to answer my questions, I will need to find…

    • 250 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In order to gain Cordelia’s approval and friendship, Elaine becomes a scapegoat for her three friends. On account of her family’s travelling as well as because of her earlier lack of girlfriends, she feels somewhat different from her classmates. In fact, Cordelia, Carol and Grace not only impose their ideas on Elaine and never respect her but abuse her for two years with the excuse of improving Elaine’s ways of living as well. They continuously dominate her and force her to do what they want and she suffers in their hands as well as at their homes and at school. As a result, Elaine always feels as if they are not her friends but her enemies. Although Elaine is oppressed and abused by her three girlfriends, nevertheless Cordelia is Elaine’s…

    • 1035 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The article "When Women Rule" published by Nicholas D. Kristof presents readers with a new way of viewing the underlying discrimination of women. Many educated intellectuals have compared men to women over the years, but have found women to prevail in skills, such as superior leadership and team-building skills which are foreign to men. Regrettably, many female leaders or professionals must cast away futile qualities to stay on top of competitors, for a feminine manager will be unfairly distinguished as either efficient or appealing, but not both. Being physically attractive as a woman in high standings can be morally demoralizing, and can actually be a disadvantage when applying for managerial jobs. In archaic times there were not set regulations…

    • 154 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Preserving Women Summary

    • 1105 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The article ‘Preserving Women’ by Shelley Nickles gives a thought-provoking history and analysis of the ways in which the modern refrigerator was developed and the many factors of class, sex, and advertising reform that played integral parts in this developmental history. In this Historical Perspectives on Technology class we learned to take a hard look at the “players” who were in a work, and this piece offered an interesting and complicated story of how the different players (advertisers, different classes of people, refrigerator companies, women, etc.) interacted with each other. The author talks about how many people bill this time as a time when women helped “develop…

    • 1105 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    As an icon in the women’s rights movement, Betty Friedan did more than write about confining gender stereotypes but she became a force for change. Susan Oliver’s bibliography captivates Betty Friedan’s leading role against the sexual inequality between men and woman during her lifetime. Born as a daughter of Jewish parents in Peoria, Illinois Betty saw in her own eyes the sacrifices women were making through her mother’s loss of fulfilling a career in journalism. Once she married, Betty’s mother had to give up her job at a newspaper and latter on urged Betty to peruse a career in journalism. Betty was able to graduate from Smith College with a bachelor’s degree and did one year’s worth of work in graduate school at the University of California,…

    • 509 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Since time immemorial the African woman and generally any woman with an African descent have had the plight of struggling to achieve equality and do away with stereotyping so as to develop there selves and be to the same standards more or less as the white woman. Feminism is ordained among the black women not due to gender but because of color. Freeman notes that colored women are not just handicapped on the basis of their gender but are more mocked because of their race. Clenora Hudson-Weems explores the plight of feminism to all women with African descent that is categorically focused on the African culture that mainstreams the black feminist, the African womanist and the African feminist.…

    • 533 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Firstly exaplaining the term 'mystique' which means it is an aura of heightened value, interest, or meaning surrounding something, arising from attitudes and beliefs that impute special power or mystery to it. In 'The Feminine Mystique', Betty Friedan, a freelance writer and 1942 Smith graduate, intertwines anecdotes and observations from her own life with facts and analysis from her research, creating a work with which the feminine reader can readily identify. Her starting point was her own personal experience.…

    • 79 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Ernest Gaines novel, The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, he stresses the importance of education of black men from the period of slavery to the civil rights movement. Education has not always been available to African Americans. During the time of slavery education was very limited as not many people were educated, especially blacks. Schools for blacks were often destroyed and those found teaching them were usually killed. A lack of education was one way that whites were able to keep control over blacks along with violence to make people scared to challenge their treatment. Throughout the book there were several educated black men that made their way into Miss Jane's life, two of which were raised by Miss Jane and were like children to her. Although they lived in two different time periods Ned and Jimmy understood the importance of education and both attempted to each attempted to bring education to their people in their own way.…

    • 798 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Civil rights and legal mobilization movements all start from a root. The root being a grievance in which a person’s fundamental rights are being compromised whether it be a right that is explicitly written in the constitution or an enumerated right. The Fundamental rights are rights that are recognized by the Supreme Court as being fair and legal. The fundamental rights are illustrated in the first amendment. As it reads “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances”.…

    • 1975 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Women fought a lot to gain full equality during the Progressive era. The perfection of the American Revolution increased women’s suppositions, encourage some of the first straight forward requirements for impartiality and observed the formation of female institutions to enhance women’s education. According to http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/era.cfm?eraid=11(by the early 19th century, American women had the highest female literacy rate in the world). The American government's expanded suffrage to involve essentially all white males, nevertheless, they started contradicting the vote to free African American men and in New Jersey to women, who had temporarily won these advantages succeeding the Revolution. During the 1820s and many years after…

    • 380 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The New Woman Analysis

    • 556 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The New Woman was conveyed through the artists illustrations beginning in the 1880’s and continuing through the years, ending in the 1920’s. These images such as the works titled, “What Are We Coming To”, “In a Twentieth Century Club”, “Picturesque America”, and “Women Bachelors In New York”, all conveyed this idea of a “New Woman”. The qualities that a New Woman must have included a woman who pursued the highest education and made effort to move up in the professional world. “She (the New Woman) also demonstrated new patterns of private life, from shopping in the new urban department stores, to riding bicycles, and playing golf.” (pg. 374) The artists attempted to create this perfect all around woman who’s lives closely resembled what the men of that time were doing. Such as in figure 6.8 titled “In a Twentieth Century Club” which shows women dressed in clothing which closely resembled that of a mans attire for that era, at leisure, socializing with other woman. This “club” looked very similar to a men’s drinking and eating club. “ Although role reversal still provides the humor, the women waitresses and patrons are physically attractive, while the women’s unladylike posture and clothing would have been viewed as shocking equally significant is the cross dressing entertainer.” (pg. 374) Not only did artists attempt to convey a way that the New Woman should act, but they also created this popular physical image of what one should look like such as the Gibson Girls pictured in image 6.9. Most all of the illustrations showed a white woman of the leisure class, however African American women still envisioned and strived to become a New African American Woman.…

    • 556 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Human Work” by feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman is an analysis noting the importance of work in the lives of both men and women. She reflects on how growing social consciousness is aiding in general human unhappiness (p.8) that is linked to economic dependence. This social phenomena is why she urges us to become familiar and have comparative minds (p. 5) in order to better understand new facts that can help shape our perception. In doing so we can insure that society is more profitable and pleasant lives (p.7).…

    • 617 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays