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Women's Role Since 1930's

Decent Essays

Women’s role since 1930’s

Women have fought throughout history in order to achieve different roles as well as to acquire recognition, independence, equality and respect. It has not been easy since they have had many barriers to overcome; their role in the family as wives, mothers and daughters; their role in society fighting for their rights, being heard and treated as men; their role as career women, not only receiving an education but also being able to work. Looking back at history, women’s role in the family has remained unchanged till last century. In the early times, women’s most significant profession was that of wifehood and motherhood and a “little more than a slave of her husband”(1). They were viewed as a creative …show more content…

At first she is amazed by the knowledge of her students, but while she starts to know more about them, she realizes that their only goal is to find a man to marry and have children with instead of becoming career professionals. Gradually, she decides to try to make them see that they are worth much more and that being a woman doesn’t mean giving up their dreams and ambitions. In general terms, women were considered weaker than men and not able to carry out any type of work that needed strength or intelligence. In the 1930’s only 24,3% of women were employed and most of them worked in domestic, personal service, as schoolteachers or as nurses. In the 1940’s 25% of women worked in domestic, clerical and factory posts or as service workers, teachers and nurses. However, during WWII skilled jobs previously unavailable to women started to open up because men were drafted and enlisted. Women began to learn a trade, to enlist in the military and to earn a decent living. Thanks to this, women no longer depended economically from their husbands; therefore they had a sense of accomplishment and satisfaction. But this achievement didn’t last long, as soon as men came back from War women had to return home to their traditional roles. This change was one of the reasons for the Liberation Movement of the 1960’s. The Equal Pay Act of 1963 and the Civil Rights Act of

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