The Women’s Movement
Pg. 764-769By Chad Kenitzer
&Lexi Kerns
The Women’s Movement
Into the 60’sThe fifties had been primarily a time of
prosperity and security
Not all groups had participated equally
The sixties became a time for activism
Different social groups seized the opportunity to have their voices heard
“I am woman, hear me roarIn numbers too big to ignore
And I know too much to go back and pretendYes, I’ve paid the price
But look how much I gainedIf I have to, I can do anything
I am strong I am invincible
I am woman.”
- Helen Reddy
Feminism
Women’s rights began well before 1960In the 1800’s, Women had worked towards
voting and equality in work and educationFEMINISM: The theory of political,
economic, and social equality of the sexesThe feminist movement sought to change
the traditional role of womeni.e cooking, cleaning, raising children
Education and EmploymentIn 1950, only of all Bachelor of Arts degrees were earned
by WomenTwenty years later, following World War 2, that percentage
grew to 43%Educated women had high hopes but were discouraged by
discrimination in their jobs Some employees refused to hire women because they
believed a woman’s place was in the homeWorking women were paid only a fraction(59%) of what
men made for doing identical work and that number was dropping even further.
The Civil Rights MovementThe Civil Rights campaign became a “how-
to” model for the Women’s movement.It provided legal tools such as the 1964
Civil Rights Act.As an attempt to make the bill sound
ridiculous, an opponent of Civil Rights suggested the bill protect rights based on sex.
To their astonishment, the suggestion was taken and the amended bill passed.
The Feminine MystiqueWritten by Betty Frieden in 1963
It addressed women who had everything society said they should want
It described dissatisfied housewives who met in secret to discuss their lives and role in society
Many women at the time did so in kitchens and living rooms.
N.O.W.
Growing number of women were recognizing sexismIn 1966, 28 professional women including Friedan
formed NOW (National Organization for Women)These were frustrated women willing to pressure the
Equal Employment Opportunity committeeThe organization sought equal pay and job opportunity
and the sharing of parenting and household responsibilities with men
A year after being founded, there were 1000 members.Only four years later, there were 15,000 members
Impact of Feminism
In August 1970, a New York City march celebrating the 50th anniversary of women’s suffrage drew tens of thousands of supporters.
More women began identifying themselves as feminists
A women’s health handbook was published called Our Bodies, Ourselves.
In 1972, Journalist Gloria Steinem and several other women founded Ms. Magazine, which provided arguments and issues regarding the feminist movement
A Shift in Attitudes• In 1972 congress passed a new law that would prohibit sex
discrimination• Also in 1972 a woman by the name of Shirley Chisholm ran for
president and won 152 delegates votes before dropping out of the race
• Many women did not actually participate in the movement• The movement was focused on helping of the homeless women and
child care facilities, along with a bring down in sexual harassment
Roe Vs. Wade• Abortion was legalized after
this act• During the case the justices
based on the decision were that you are allowed to have an abortion during the first three months of pregnancy
• Though the courts decided this states could also choose to not allow abortion during the later stages of pregnancy
The Equal Rights Amendment
• The ERA was approved in 1972 to the constitution
• 35 states ratified it quickly and in 1977 it seemed like it would be passed but when the deadline came in 1982 the amendment died
Opposition to the Women’s Movement
• A women named Phyllis Schlafly led a national block for the ERA and said that it was because the amendment would do nothing
• Schlafly was not alone in her opposition to the ERA• A lot of women protested by staying at home and raising
children• Some women thought that the ERA was degrading to
them • Blacks also thought that sex discrimination was less
important than racial discrimination, that led to the thought that they were being encouraged to give up homemaking and take undesirable paid jobs