Historical Development of Feminism and Patriarchy

Introduction

Feminism refers to a movement and a set of ideologies aiming at identifying and defending the political, economic, and social rights of women in society. In particular, the major role of feminists is to advocate for equal chances for women in education and employment.

Concerns of feminism emanated from imaginations of various people who sought to comprehend the nature of gender inequality through the understanding of social roles and various positions of individuals in society (Gwyn & Margo, n.d).

Even though there are varieties of feminists, the major aim of all feminists is to fight for the rights of women in society. These aims include the fight for the reproductive and bodily rights of women.

In this regard, feminists argue that women should be given the freedom to make decisions touching on their health without and prejudice or imposition of such decisions to them (Holland & Cortina, 2013).

In the attempt to lay a fundamental mechanism for understanding how gender roles are socially constructed within a society, feminism has created a new interpretation of gender and sex.

Consequently, this paper aims at discussing how the theoretical perspectives of feminism and patriarchy have been historically developed.

Putting into consideration the above raised issues surrounding the discussions of feminism, this paper specifically extends this debate to shed light on how theoretical paradigms of feminism are received by women and other people who subscribe to the feminist school of thought.

The paper also argues that, despite the fact that a number of women fight for gender equality, they do not support feminist objectives. Surprisingly, these women fail to consider themselves as feminists.

However, they portray male characteristics of superiority (patriarchy) in different aspects of life.

Therefore, as revealed in the paper, women should not only uphold feminist activities, but also accept their positions as women to ensure that they have equal participation in various social, political and even economic building of their countries.

Defining Feminism

The term feminism is deployed to refer to a variety of beliefs and ideologies whose main concerns are campaigning equal rights of women. Many of the issues that affect the lives of women attract some ethical and moral concerns from various people.

For instance, the question of abortion is an enormous issue that attracts both religious and political criticisms.

Feminists consider the failure to give women the rights to determine whether they want to carry on with their pregnancies or not as amounting to denial of fundamental human rights for autonomy in control of a persons productive health and even to control ones body (Penny & Nicola, 2001, p.360).

Consequently, scholars subscribing to feminist school of thought argue that women should be given reproductive rights such as using contraceptives and procuring an abortion at will.

A larger extension of this argument is that women should also have the ability to say when, how, and with whom she has sexual intercourse.

In the modern society, what entails reproductive health is well documented. The world agency in charge of health (WHO) notes that couples should be given the freedom to decide on the number of children they should have (Cole & Sabik, 2010).

However, people should be responsible as they make their decisions owing to the sanctity of life. Nonetheless, religious critics contend that human life is special. This means it should not be terminated at will.

Apart from deciding on the number of children, couples should always determine the spacing of their children.

This is an attempt to ensure that women have full control of their lives without the influence by external forces beyond their control (Duncan, 2010, p.499). Unfortunately, this argument has not always been the case.

Women in the United States have always encountered challenges that interfere with their individual fulfillment in society. Some have risen up to fight for their rights, but they hardly identify themselves as feminists due to the stigma associated with the term.

McCabe (2005) supports this argument by asserting further that campaigns aimed at fighting for the rights of women create an impression that women are the weaker sex. Hence, they cannot fight for their own rights by themselves without the support of various women movements.

This argument means that women have to come together and fight for their rights as a team since the voice of one woman might never be heard as opposed to that of a group of women (movement).

However, it is important to note that institutionalism of respect for all fundamental human rights requires collective action.

Globally, women are willing to challenge the existing social structures, but they are aware of the resistance they might encounter when doing so.

Through constitutional development, women have managed to advocate for the ratification of laws that protect them from inhumane conditions such as rape, violence and subjugation to the domain of the home.

Women are currently engaged in socio-political and economic activities in the United States. From this perspective, McCabe (2005) argues that, even if this engagement is paramount, it is not adequate to bring about equality.

Much has to be done to ensure that women enjoy their rights, just like men. Feminists employ the ideas of Marx to challenge the existing social structure. For instance, Gwyn and Margo (n.d) reckon that existing social structures foster patriarchy (p.25). This means that they support one gender.

According to hooks, patriarchy refers to an outstanding depiction of male superiority traits (hooks, 2000). Feminists contend that social structures that oppress people, especially women, should be rejected.

Hence, for gender equality, the capability of an individual should be measured based on his or her strength, but not sexual qualities. The main argument raised by feminists is that women have been historically marginalized or suppressed in comparison to men.

In this context, Cole and Sabik (2010) support this assertion and further retaliates that reasons leading to the emergence of feminist theory are akin to the argument women are disadvantaged socially compared to men.

In the most simplistic terms, feminisms can be defined as movement to end sexism, sexist exploitation and oppression (hooks, 2000, p.1).

The desire for moving from one perspective of view about the rights of people is channeled by groups of people who subscribe to the idea that women deserve to have equal treatments in all occupations just like men.

The change advocated for is that of alteration of cultural norms and beliefs that treat women as inferior compared to men. Advocating for such a change has given rise to a number of theories being advanced to explain and give historical accounts of feminism struggles.

One of the theories that important for discussion in the context of attempting to define feminism is that advanced by hooks (2000).

Hooks initiated a well-liked theory of feminists, which is anchored in a good sense and the perception of mutual understanding. The vision presented by Hooks is that of a beloved society that pleases everybody and is dedicated to equality (hooks, 2000).

The author underscores the fact that the most controversial and challenging concerns facing feminists in the contemporary world include encompassing violent behavior, ethnicity, work, and reproductive rights.

With the use of customary awareness and candor, the author calls for feminists that are free from disruptive hindrances, but endowed with thorough discourse to join hands in fighting for their rights.

Hooks reveals that feminism, instead of being perceived as an obsolete impression or one restricted to scholarly leaders, should be perceived as reality for everyone.

In his contribution on the debate touching on feminism, McCabe (2005) evaluated the relationship among various variables, including feminist self-identity, political inclinations, socio-demographics and a scope of gender-associated approaches.

The research was supported by information from the General Society Survey of 1996.

The study found out that just 20 percent of American women identify themselves as feminists while 80 per cent of women believe that both men and women ought to be socially, politically and economically equal (McCabe, 2005).

Equalitarianism is the most extensively accredited factor among women. Findings disclose that feminists can be very educated city women who are free to be liberals or Democrats.

The feminist self-identity considerably associates itself with opinions concerning the effect of the movement of women on equality.

The scholar recommends the significance of examining collections of attitudes concerning perfect gender conformities, evaluations, and distinguishing other forms of approach.

The concerns about gender segregations in the context of discussions of equal participation of men and women in various political, social and economic activities underline the fight for gender equality acerbated by feminists movements.

Feminist Theory

The feminist speculation refers to various efforts of broadening hypothetical perceptions of concerns of feminism into the idealistic world.

The extension involves many studies in various disciplines such as economic, literary critics, anthropology and Women Studies without negating sociology (Moradi et al., 2012: Ray, 2003).

However, most scholars see the development of theoretical perspectives on feminism as predominantly belonging to the discipline of women studies.

Women studies focus on historical experiences of women in terms of their struggles to gain independence from culturally degrading beliefs and ideologies that often lead to denial of several rights for women including determination of gender roles of women, which have no economic gains and participation in the political process through voting (Snyder-Hall, 2010).

In fact, it is until 1920s that women in America acquired suffrage rights. This gain was highly attributed to the undying efforts of women movements, which for the purpose of the discussions of this paper, are considered as belonging to the umbrella that advocates of feminism.

Feminist theory develops an incredible understanding of the issues surrounding the perception of gender inequality together with how they are propagated within a society. According to Showalter (1999), it focuses on gender politics, power relations, and sexuality (p.27).

The main goal is to deal proactively with the deeply seated beliefs fostering exclusion of women in these three essential aspects of socialization of people. It also aims at developing and promoting various rights of women coupled with their interests.

Key themes that are introspected in the feminism theory include Patriarchy, stereotyping of women, sexual objectification and even oppression (Showalter, 1999). In his literary criticism of feminism, Showalter argues that feminist theory is developed in three main stages.

The first stage is the feminist critique. In this stage, the feminist leader examines the ideologies behind literary phenomena (Showalter, 1999, p.27). In the second phase, which Showalter terms as Gynocriticism, women act as producers of textual meaning (Showalter, 1999, p.28).

In the last phase, gender theory is developed through exploration of philosophical writings together with their influence on sexual characteristics or gender arrangement (Showalter, 1999, p.28).

The theory of feminism continues to develop with new concerns of women with respect to areas in which people believe women are disadvantaged emerging. The goal is to ensure that Patriarchy disappears.

In fact, the argument against patriarchy forms the fundamental basis in which theoretical paradigms of feminism are anchored. Indeed, the history of feminism begins from a world of pure patriarchy.

History of Feminism and Patriarchy

Women oppression is something that was anchored in the social norms of various people in different nations but in different extents the age of patriarchy (Gwyn & Margo, n.d, p. 27). In this age, women were perceived to be assets just like land. Men principally owned them.

Thus, the society was organized by the male authoritative figure. In such as a system men take noble roles in ruling over property, children and even women. A patriarchy system is thus one, which advocates for men privileges and subordination of women (Gwyn & Margo, n.d, p. 27).

Consequently, feminists contend that a patriarchal society is unjust and essentially oppressive to women.

For instance, Hennessy and Ingraham (1997) assert that the the patriarchal distinction between masculinity and femininity is the political difference between freedom and subjection (p.6).

In the theoretical perspective of feminism, a patriarchy encompasses all the mechanisms in the society, which plays the roles of exerting coupled with reproduction of dominance of male gender against the female gender.

Feminists theory considers patriarchy as a social manifestation, which can be counterattacked through a critical analysis of the ways in which it is manifested (Gwyn & Margo, n.d, p. 29).

One way of realizing this goal is by introspecting the areas in women are disadvantaged and then putting effort to ensure that corrective action is taken.

Such needs gave rise to the first wave of feminism in which suffrage rights took a principal focus in early 1910s in the U.S. followed by such a struggle in 1930s in France and other parts of the world.

From the paradigm of culture, nation, and/or historical moment, different feminists across the globe are driven by different goals, aims, and objectives. Different views by historians are evident on who fits in the definition of feminists precisely.

Some historians contend that any women movement that is constantly engaged in efforts to campaign for women rights should be termed as feminist movements.

Others such as Yoder, Tobias, and Snell (2011) argue that the terms feminists should apply to all modern movements for feminism coupled with their descendants. Amid these differences, history of the western nations reveals that the history of feminists can be categorized into three main waves.

The first wave involves the women movements of the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century, which sought to ensure that women were given suffrage rights.

The second wave comprises various movements that were fighting for liberation of women as from 1960s. The focus of this wave was on social coupled with legal rights of women including the right to own property and get elective offices.

The third wave emerged in 1990s. It is fighting with mechanisms of dealing with various failures that are associated with the second wave of feminism.

Waves of Feminism

First Wave

In the US and the UK, the first wave of feminism fought for equal marriage rights, property rights, and parenting rights for women. As argued before, this measure sought to end the culture for patriarchy in which men owned everything including children.

Any legal suit that was filed to seek parental custody was made in favor of men (Snyder-Hall, 2010: Ray, 2003). Fights for change of this culture took noble roles of the late nineteenth century women movements.

However, later, in the early twentieth century, effort of women movements expanded to include fight for engagement in the political processes through having equal rights to vote.

Nevertheless, quite a good number of the movements also continued to fight or economic and sexual reproductive rights.

Granting of suffrage rights in response to the struggles of feminists began in 1893, when women in Zealand were allowed to vote.

In Britain, the 1918 campaigns for granting women suffrage rights yielded fruits so that on passing of the representation of people acts, all women above the age of 30 years and who owned housed were permitted to engage in voting (MacKinnon, 2007, p.147).

However, in 1928, all women under the age of 21 were also given suffrage rights. In the US, feminists such as Elizabeth Cady and Lucretia Mott among others worked tirelessly to ensure that womens voting rights were granted.

In 1919, upon the passing of the 19th amendment to the constitution of United States, women acquired the rights to participate in political process through voting.

Indeed, campaigning for suffrage rights was a major activity of feminist movements in the first wave so that demonstration staged by women feminists in 1935 in France resulted to consideration of grating the rights to the demonstrators.

The Second Wave

In the 1960s, a new wave of feminism was in place, which was referred as the second wave of feminism. The demands of feminists were not so different from the previous demands. The works of Mary Wollstonecraft inspired the feminists in this wave.

They used them as the basis of raising new demands. Women advocated for equality in terms of social relationships whereby they demanded the existence of free love and the wearing of skirts.

Opposed to the first wave, the second wave did not deal with issues of suffrage rights. Rather, its main concern is on how discrimination of women could be ended.

According to MacKinnon (2007), second-wave feminists sew womens cultural and political inequalities as inextricably linked besides encouraging them to understand the aspects of their personal lives as deeply politicized&reflecting sexist power structures (p.149).

In China, the second wave of feminism is linked with issues such as evaluation of the extent to which respect for women rights has been realized. Elsewhere, across the globe, there are myriad discussions on whether equality for women is fully achieved.

In some nations such as Nicaragua, although feminism movements of the second wave managed to ensure that women acquired quality life, they failed in pushing for ideological changes coupled with social changes.

Third Wave

The third wave aims at altering the perspectives of femininity adopted by the second wave essentialists.

The third wave feminists approaches to feminism essentially functioned to place emphasis on the experiences of women belonging to the upper class while negating the experiences of women in the lower class (Snyder-Hall, 2010).

While the second wave was concentrating on ensuring that women acquired rights, which were equal to those of their male counterparts, the third wave isolates some of the things that may considered not appropriate for women.

According to Showalter (1999), the third wave used the post-culturalist interpretation of gender and sexuality (p.31).

Some of the feminists in the third wave such as Cherrie Moraga and Maxine Kingston coupled with other black feminists are also interested in consideration of race subjects in the theoretical paradigms of feminism.

In fact, the US has immense concerns for engagement of women of color in political processes. Although more struggles for incorporation of women of color in politics and running of political office are still ongoing, by 2010, incredible success had been realized.

The history of women of color in terms of participation in politics has not been encouraging, especially by considering that they have evolved from a society, which was not only gender discriminating but also racially discriminating.

The United States population that is eligible for voting, based on 2010 statistics, is composed over 33 percent of non-white persons (Wendy, 2010, p. 166).

The percent of the persons voted for various political offices is also changing incredibly since women of color are increasingly getting positions at the elective offices.

Center for American Women and Politics attribute this achievement to recent gains in womens office holding due to achievements of women of color candidates (2012, p.12).

In fact, right from a society that depicted unequal representation of women in general in politics, in America, in every three legislators derived from women population, a minimum of one legislator is from women of color in the case of democrats.

In case of republicans, two in every four women legislators are from women of color (Center for American Women and Politics 2012, p.13).

This development is magnificent in terms of feminists efforts for ensuring that women have equal rights to men and other women irrespective of their skin pigmentation.

Women and Feminism

In many parts of the world, before the advent of feminism, the living conditions of women were very poor since they were perpetually pushed to the periphery, even on matters touching on their own health. Women existed to be seen, but not to be heard since they were the properties of men.

Just as men owned other properties, such as land, women were also owned in the same way (Center for American Women and Politics, 2012). Traditional practices could not allow women to participate in some activities such as policy formulation and wealth accumulation.

Feminism shed light on the debate since it advocated for the rights of women, particularly reproductive health. Before feminism, a woman would simply be used as a sex object since she did not have any right.

Currently, most people consider sex a love affair whereby two people can only do it through consent. However, many instances of sex are evident where consent is not sought hence implying that sex is not always associated with love.

Such cases include date rape, marital rape, as well as the hook up culture that goes beyond sex to include other aspects such as kissing by uncommitted people.

Feminism advocated for the provision of free abortion, provision of free family planning contraceptives and methods, abolition of female genital mutilation, and forced marriage. Through legal ratifications, a woman in the modern society has full control of her reproductive health.

She can decide when to have a child and when to terminate a pregnancy. This freedom is attributed to the works of feminists who have achieved a lot regarding reproductive rights of women. However, this case does not apply in the US where such rights are severely limited.

In fact, as evidenced by the US law, the fetus has the freedom of living a significant life after it is born. Therefore, women will not just decide anyhow when to terminate a pregnancy.

Before the advent of the feminism, in the making of major decisions touching on reproduction, men took the most plausible role even though they are minor shareholders in the aspects of making reproduction decisions (Zucker & BayCheng, 2010).

Women have been subjected to violence and intimidation since they are perceived as weak and helpless especially when they threaten patriarchal structures of power.

Other people subscribing to male chauvinism and the male domineering school of thought view women as people who should depend on men for major decisions since they do not have the moral authority to participate in societal development (Ramsey et al., 2007).

World Health Organization demands that women should be given specific rights, including the right to procure an abortion, the right to use family planning methods in order to control births, the right to access quality reproductive healthcare, and the right to access free reproductive education, which would inform their decisions (Zucker & BayCheng, 2010).

Feminists insist that government should offer free education on contraceptives in order to prevent unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections.

Any women should be protected from practices that would interfere with reproduction such as gender-based violence, forced sterilization, and female genital mutilation.

Traditional practices that interfered with female reproduction are on the decline. For instance, female inheritance or inheriting a relatives wife once the husband dies in some societies is no longer accepted. Across the globe, constitutions of different nations prohibit forced marriage.

Merging the Three Waves of Feminism

In the second-wave, feminists were on opposite sides of a sequence of controversial discussions concerning issues such as pornography, prostitution, and heterosexuality, with some women supporting gender oppression and others backing sexual satisfaction and empowerment.

The third-wave sought to join the principles of gender equality and sexual liberty by respecting the decisions of women on the aforementioned principles (Snyder-Hall, 2010, p.258).

Whereas this perspective is often seen as insignificantly approving all that a woman decides to do as a feminist, Snyder-Hall (2010) affirms that the third-wave does not present an unreflective approval of selection, but a great reverence for pluralism and self-fortitude.

In the United States, several meetings were held to spearhead talks on the ratification of laws relating on the rights of women.

Apart from previous demands, women needed an equal pay in the labor industry, provision of equal education, job opportunities, free childcare services, financial empowerment, prevention of gender-based discrimination, and illegalization of inhumane actions such as rape and violence against women (Showalter, 1999).

Even though not all feminists movements had similar demands in the first and the second wave, a consensus between the two waves of feminists is evident that male chauvinism and discrimination are the two major problems affecting women in any society.

Consequently, the two waves aimed at ensuring that women became independent.

Although much has been achieved in terms of overcoming the culture that seeks to determine certain cultural artifacts that specify how different genders should behave within the societies such as dressing codes through the development of unisexual clothing, it is still evident that some roles are perceived as best suited to one gender as opposed to the other (Duncan, 2010).

The management of a hiring firm might also get tempted to lay off a well performing individual because, with the preferred gender occupying the position, the output would be better.

The argument here is that the differences between men and women in terms of their capability are not inherent in their sex but are acted out through social construction of gender.

Through the realization of these concerns, feminism objects to ensure that hiring of persons within all employment sectors is done from the basis of academic qualification and experiences as opposed to the gender of an individual (Wendy, 2010).

In this context, it is important to note that the concerns of different feminists are different depending on the dimension from which one is visualizing theoretical construct of feminism.

Marxist feminism has a different interpretation of the relationship between men and women. It views the relationship between women and men as characterized by subordination and exploitation, which is a typical feature of the capitalistic society (Moradi, Martin & Brewster, 2012).

Ever since the advent of private property, women have always been viewed as the property of men. In the same way, the rich owns the working class, men also own women. Women are against this type of relationship in the modern society.

They are compared to the working class (proletariat) while men are the bourgeoisie since they own everything in society. Consequently, women are unable to make their own decisions independent from their owners (men).

Their level of engagement in various societal organizations including religion and politics is also limited to the degree of their ability to control and lead their superiors (men).

The argument that femininity results in the unsuitability of women to engage in political activities has its origin in the feminist theory. In this context, the perception of feminism seeks to dig into the differences between men and women, which may hinder their success in various societal duties.

For instance, Cole and Sabik (2010) were incredibly interested to determine whether the differences in physical appearance of women and men influenced their performance in societal duties such as engagement in politics.

To achieve this goal, researchers assessed if the attractive and unattractive aspects of femininity, which match the Feminine Interpersonal Relations (interpersonal charm) and Feminine Self-Doubt (submissiveness and passivity), have impacts on the successful involvement of women in politics (Cole, &Sabik, 2010).

Traditionally, Feminine Interpersonal Relations were linked with higher political involvement and effectiveness when compared to Feminine Self-Doubt. The upshots are conferred with consideration to the midlife advancement of women and the femininity socialization of black women.

Identification of the function of feminine attributes, such as nurturance and compassion in political endeavors (as found in Feminine Interpersonal Relations), may promote women approving feminist convictions to engage in politics.

Duncan (2010) surveyed the relative significance of feminism generation and the feminist label to a group of 667 women that were marching in the demand for reproductive rights.

Weak feminists were seen to identify themselves with the feminist label, approving several attitudes and viewpoints of strong feminists with less dedication to equalitarianism.

In his analysis, the feminist label was significant in elucidating the relationship of women to feminism as opposed to the generation. This aspect designates that disclosure to a group ideology could connect persons across generations.

Feminists had a feeling of inferiority when they judged themselves against their male counterparts besides possessing similar attitudes such as strong qualities (Duncan, 2010).

Education concerning feminism could make feminists have a dedication to equality. Duncan evaluates the manner in which feminism associates itself with the sexual harassment, which is a great challenge facing women.

Two pointers of feminism were evaluated in the study including self-recognition and involvement in feminist activism. Two kinds of sexual molestation were gauged, which included sexual advances and gender molestation.

Gender molestation means wrong interpretation of the capacity of one gender in comparison to another (Duncan, 2010). Such misconceptions amount to setting corridors to the excellence of a given gender, especially women, professionally and in socialization processes.

Duncan (2010) research identifies different types of gender molestation. They include gender identification and sexual advances according to the researcher. Feminist identification signified lesser gender molestation encounters (Duncan, 2010).

This finding contrasts with the Holland and Cortina (2013) argues that feminist-identified women account for the highest reduction in job gratification. Arguably, feminist activism is connected to greater experiences of both types of molestation.

For instance according to MacKinnon (2007), during conversations, higher chances exist in which when referring to a given character, the word woman is used than the word man.

Such a constant usage of the term woman places emphasis on the gender of the subject under discussion, especially when some negative attributes about the subject is involved. The capacity of women to deal with instances of gender molestation also attracts the attention of Duncan (2010).

The scholar argues that, irrespective of feminist activism or identification, women who have experienced sexual molestation are highly likely to fix the sexual molestation tag to their encounters than women who have faced gender molestation alone (Duncan, 2010).

This finding gives rise to the need to develop various theories explaining the manner in which women can deal with challenges associated with negative gender profiling such as gender discrimination.

It is unfortunate that most women in society approve feminist values, but do not identify themselves as feminists. Moradi, Martin, and Brewste analyzed the initiative of women founded on the presumption of personality as a probable feature in feminist non-identification.

The first study conducted by the above scholars introduced the theoretically positioned Feminist Threat Index and assesses its psychometric qualities with statistics from 91 students.

The second study examined a theoretically founded intervention set to decrease the scale of feminist threat and enhance the extent of feminist identification by permitting students to interrelate with a diverse group of feminists (Moradi, Martin, & Brewster, 2012).

The intervention decreased the scale of threat and raised the extent of feminist identification considerably in the group, but there was no change in the comparison set.

Several groups of individuals have reacted to feminism and both men and women either support or oppose it, with support for feminist perceptions being more common as compared to self-identification as a feminist.

The involvement of male and generally everyone is encouraged by feminists. This plan aims at attaining the dedication of the entire society to gender equality.

The findings of the above scholars present researchers and other stakeholders with adequate information that would be used in evaluating and decreasing the threat to feminist identification.

Previous studies have shown that the majority of women in the US support feminist objectives, but they do not consider themselves feminists. Consideration concerning the opinions of people as regards to feminism could foretell rejection of the feminist identity.

Different from this hypothesis, every woman who participated in such studies, irrespective of feminist recognition, had a conviction that other people had a negative perception towards feminists (McCabe, 2005).

Feminists were believed to be homosexuals as compared to being heterosexual in that their fights for gender equality created the impression that feminists were over concerned about issue touching on only one gender.

It is from this line of thought that prompted Ramsey et al. (2007) to research about the connection between the perceptions of feminists and the conviction they possess as to the way other people see them.

The scholars discussed the disagreement between the search for gender equality and the yearning for sexual gratification, which is a great challenge to feminists.

Significance of Topic based on Worldview and Social Background

My social background has played a key role towards my choice of the topic for my presentation. It is a burden for parents to have three daughters in the Indian culture especially when it comes to addressing their reproductive and bodily rights and needs.

For instance, it is a challenge for the Indian parents to cater for dowry expenses of the three girls. Such girls will lack proper education and/or be exposed to early marriages.

Therefore, there is the need for me to develop a set of ideologies aiming at identifying and defending the political, economic, and social rights of women in society. From my personal experience, I was always fighting for equal rights in the family but never knew the term- Feminism.

In fact, I did not know about feminism until I took the class last semester. Therefore, with such knowledge, I will strive confidently to restore the dignity of women that has been taken away not only in India but also in the world at large.

Such an effort will awaken the dreams, voice, and power of many women that could not be witnessed before.

Conclusion

Women bear the mindset and not the identity, which seems to be self-interested. They may only engage in less joint efforts in support of the rights of women. The negative depiction of feminism and feminists has made many women believe in equality.

However, they do not consider themselves feminists. As argued in the paper, when individuals are exposed to self-identified feminists and discourses regarding different types of feminism, their extent of self-identification as feminists rises.

In this regard, comprehension of whether the refusal of the feminist label is founded on the fear of stigma related to the identity, neoliberal convictions, or other elucidations is significant to the people campaigning for equality.

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Women, Religion, and Feminism

Introduction

Religion is a powerful tool whose practices, beliefs, and traditions influence the way in which people live and relate with each other.

Part of the reason why religion enjoys greater influence and power than any other practice worldwide derives from such integral components as the rituals, values and beliefs, sacred texts and scriptures, symbols, history, as well as the presence of authority figures, and the continuous participation in collective meetings, among many other components.

The greatest influence of Islam, for instance, among its female believers is the tradition of wearing veils or head scarves. These veils commonly referred to as hijabs have, however, caused many other problems to the Muslim women, particularly in other regions of the world, such as North America, where Islam is relatively a minority religion.

This paper undertakes a research to compare, as well as contrast the traditions and beliefs of three major religions in the world, Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. This research focuses on the women believers of the three religions and elaborates on some of the challenges that Muslim women encounter by virtue of their belief and tradition.

Quran Sanctioned Dress Code for Women

The Quran is the official holy book used by Muslims for their respective religious teachings and guidance. The holy book cites numerous guidelines that can be summarised into four basic rules that determine how women are expected to dress.

The First Rule

The first rule identifies the best garment for women. It defines the best garment as one that does not reveal a womans body to the others, but one that is decent.

Muslim women, thus, are expected to cover their bodies completely to avoid any sections from being revealed to other people. This gives the idea of hijab as a perfect dress code that can cover the entire body of a woman (Bigger, 2006). The hijab is freely designed piece of cloth, sometimes adorning special designs, that protects the hair, head, bosom, as well as the neck of the wearer.

On the other hand, the Bible, which is the holy book of teachings among the Christians, also identifies modest dressing as appropriate for women believers (Piper & Grudem, 2012). In particular, the Bible calls on women to dress in a distinctive style that makes it easy to identify them from men. Nevertheless, the Christian traditions and practices on women dress code are not as compelling as those practiced by Muslims are.

The modern-day Christian woman worshipper is allowed to go to church with the dress code of her own choice and worship with others without any restraint. The Christian tradition appears to be an evolution as it has failed to retain the original dress code that was the fashion during the biblical times.

The Christian tradition mostly adopts modernity, with women being allowed the free choice of determining what is effective for them to wear.

Like Islam, the Jewish teachings and laws also stipulate on a special dress code for women believers. Women and girls are required by law to cover their main body, as well as cover up their legs and arms, particularly when they are in public or with individuals who are not their immediate family members (Gurtner, 2006).

The strict law on women dressing does not provide room for women to change their style because of prevailing customs or other changes, such as modernity. This contrasts with the Christian tradition. Despite having a modest dress code during the Biblical times, the trend in Christian tradition has since changed as worshippers cite modernization and changing life conditions.

The Second Rule

Muslim traditions and beliefs consider it mandatory for women to veil their bosom, which is also regarded as the second dress code rule in the religion (Ssenyonjo, 2007). The hijab becomes the most ideal clothing that women can be used by women in the effort to cover their bosoms and protect them from being revealed to the public.

According to the religious teachings of Islam, exposure of a womans body part may turn out to be the origin of sinning, particularly the sin of adultery (Ssenyonjo, 2007). Muslims refer to the fact that the Quran has mentioned about hijab more than five times to emphasise the fact it is Gods wish and demand that women have to use this piece of cloth to cover their bodies as a measure of protection against falling into sin.

In comparison to the Jewish traditions, women believers are required to cover their heads and bosom and protect these parts from being revealed to others. Jewish religious teachers insist on women to cover their heads as a way of perpetuating the traditional practices that were exercised in the past.

This has prompted Jewish women to continue with the practise, particularly while in the synagogues, at religious festivities, or even while attending weddings (Freziger, 2009).

However, unlike Islam, the Jewish culture of women covering their bosoms and head is not one that originated from their religious practise. It was a society practise that existed before the founding of Jewish religion and only adopted later as an acceptable practise among the women.

It, thus, instructs the reasoning that although wearing of hijab among Jewish women is a common practise that continues to date, the practise has no religious ties and has only been integrated as part of the dutiful practices.

Several other Christian denominations and beliefs have their women cover their hair with headgear to protect them from revealing their hair to other people. Among the catholic nuns, for instance, the practise involves covering the head throughout, whether in attendance of a religious function or not.

This tradition among the nuns, however, does not extend to the other women believers who are not nuns. Catholic women can go to church and attend other religious functions without necessarily having their heads covered with a piece of cloth or headgear.

The Third Rule

The Quran mentions a third rule on the manner of dressing that Muslim women are required to observe and adhere. According to the Quran, God has instructed all women to conceal their adornments or beauty spots.

This instruction has in turn influenced the use of hijab among the Muslim women since the piece of cloth is used to conceal a womans beauty, particularly the face, hair, and neck as per the instructions of God (Ssenyonjo, 2007). Like in all instances where women are required to cover their bodies, the main objective is to minimize the chances of men getting sexually attracted to the women, which may in turn lead to adultery.

The greatest adornment in a Jewish woman is her hair. Thus, Jewish women have to equally cover their hair in order to protect it from being revealed to other women (Freziger, 2009). A hijab is perfectly suggested and won among the Jewish women as a way of ensuring that their important adornment remains concealed.

However, as already noted earlier on, the hijab wearing among the Jews is a practise that has only been incorporated into religion. This dress code is traditional among the Jews, and therefore was easily included as part of a religious doctrine. The holy Bible mentions about women veiling their heads during prayers. It also mentions further about their hair and the need to keep it concealed.

According to the Bible, failing to cover the head during prayers is tantamount to dishonouring ones own head. It equates such an act to having ones head shaven. However, the Bible teachings appear to provide women with alternatives about covering their head, where those not willing to do as per the instructions can still have their heads shaven. This account is covered in the first epistle to the Corinthians in Chapter 11, verse 5 and 6.

Although a majority of the Christian denominations do not emphasise on their women members to veil their heads when in church, a section of them follow the teachings to the latter (Piper & Grudem, 2012).

The Christian traditions and belief appear to contrast greatly with the strict Islam doctrines and to an extent even the Jewish teachings on veiling for women. Although the Bible has instructed women to cover their heads when praying or prophesying, these requirements do not seem to be conservatively applied by Christian women.

Equally, the church and its leadership, to a greater extent, do not seem to emphasise on the need for women to follow the dress code rule strictly. It is possible that the Bible account itself introduced this laxity and freedom by giving women the alternative to either cover their heads or shave their hair (Piper & Grudem, 2012).

The Fourth Rule

Another critical verse contained in the Quran instructs Muslim women to lengthen their garments as a way of gaining recognition and evading molestation (Ssenyonjo, 2007). The idea of lengthening womens garments has particularly influenced the use of hijab among Muslims. Religious teachers see it as a way of adhering to Gods teachings and have over the ages emphasised on the need for Muslim women to veil themselves.

The lengthening of garments for female believers has seen women being required to cover all parts of their bodies, including their hands, legs, and feet. Among the Muslims, women find it agreeable to wrap themselves totally in huge clothing as they see it as a religious command that has been issued by God himself.

It is evident from the Quran accounts that there have been numerous attempts towards interpreting the lengthening of garments. However, Ssenyonjo (2007) indicates that the use of hijab as an additional clothing to conceal body parts is acceptable as a Godly practise.

The Islam tradition on wearing hijab, although cited in the holy Quran, also receives greater emphasis from religious leaders. Equally, the greater Muslim community strengthens the adherence of religious traditions through emphasising on particular practices (Ssenyonjo, 2007). Thus, it is not easy to see a Muslim woman attend prayers at the mosque without veiling her head.

The rest of the worshippers will openly rebuke such an act, even before the religious teachers notice. Such strict traditions, however, are not witnessed among Christians. While the religious teachers may be responsible for leading their congregations, their roles do not seem to go beyond offering teachings and rebuking their members for failing to adhere to certain teachings.

This explains why such a practise is not a common occurrence among Christian women, despite the Bible mentioning on the need for women to cover their heads when praying or prophesying in church (Piper & Grudem, 2012).

The Jewish traditions have a closer resemblance to the Muslims and their practise, particularly where emphasis by the religious leaders is concerned. The religious teachers among the Jewish emphasise on the need for women to always use hijabs to cover their head and bosom and to help avoid sinning via adultery.

This emphasis has helped in creating a strong and deeply rooted tradition as women feel as though the practise is part of their responsibility. They do not need to be reminded about wearing hijabs because the tradition has been engrained in them (Freziger, 2009).

Problems and Issues of Hijab

The hijab is the strongest symbol of Islam, particularly in regions such as North America and Europe where other religions, apart from Islam, are practised more (Ameli & Kharazmi, 2013). At a time when global terrorism has become an issue of great concern, the hijab has met great resistance in this region of the world with the Muslim world being considered to be the greatest source of terrorists (Ameli & Kharazmi, 2013).

Terrorists, for instance, have targeted the United States of America in the recent years in what the dissidents say is an effort to punish the country for its anti-Islam crusade.

The Al-Qaeda terror network successfully wrecked havoc in the US in September 11, 2001 when terrorists allied to the group hijacked passenger aircraft and crash-landed them on significant landmarks in the country, including the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, the USs military headquarters.

As such, most Americans view Islam as an evil practice whose main teachings and traditions are trained on killing and tormenting others, more so Americans (Bell, 2003). Such negative thoughts have had far-reaching consequences on Islam and its traditions, symbols, as well as practices in the country (Haddad & Smith, 2002). Women on hijab in the country continue to face open discrimination and mistreatment.

The hatred that is pegged on stereotype has seen the non-Muslim communities in America utter obscenities and other uncomfortable words at veiled women, and sometimes physically insulting the women.

Instances of religious discrimination against Muslim women have been rife in institutions of learning, with the female staff and students being denied their right to practice their religion. The Muslim communities in these institutions have been agitating for the right to wear hijabs rather than the official dress codes observed in the institutions (Gurbuz & Gulsum, 2009).

However, the common reaction from the administrators of such institutions has been unwavering, with the Muslim students and members of staff required to observe the laid-out dress code rules strictly.

In some instances, as Gurbuz and Gulsum (2009) note in their article, the affected Muslim communities have sought for legal redress in their attempt to compel the administrators of such institutions to give them the leeway to wearing the hijab as their religion demands.

Feminist groups in North America have equally been fighting the hijab, which they see as a form of discrimination against Islams women believers. The hijab is particularly viewed as a conservative garb whose main aim is to deny women the freedom to choose their dress code without such a choice being compelled by such forces as religion (Russo, 2006).

The feminist groups are not in disagreement with the choice of religion that Muslim women have opted to confess their beliefs too. However, the main cause of disagreement is on the strict religious rules and laws, which they say seek to undermine the rights of women.

The feminist groups demand that women have beautiful bodies that they need to show off to others as an appreciation of whom they are rather than covering the bodies in the hijabs throughout their lifetime.

The fact that Islam does not allow for women leadership offers yet another dimension upon which feminists are taking issue with the hijab. The religious laws that condemn women into wearing hijab are particularly fronted and stressed upon by men, something the womens right bodies are taking exceptions over (Russo, 2006).

Racial and religious discrimination has also been cited by hijab wearing women in North America when it comes to seeking public services (American Civil Liberties Union, n.d.). Visitors entering North American countries when wearing hijabs, particularly the USA, are looked at with a lot of suspicions and treated as second-class citizens.

In the US embassies and consular based in foreign countries, women on hijab have reportedly found it difficult to secure visas to the country. Often, the reason for instituting such complex barriers for Muslim women seeking to enter the USA has been supported by the authorities, who consider it as a security measure aimed at curbing the spread of terrorism in the country.

Women and girls who wear hijab are sometimes denied entry in public places such as shopping malls, public buildings, and even swimming pools. According to the American Civil Liberties Union (n.d.), such women are usually sexually harassed by being subjected to search by male guards.

In some other instances, Muslim women wearing hijabs are given the single option of removing their headgear before being allowed access into the facilities.

With the increasing mistreatment and discrimination that women wearing hijabs continue to suffer in Northern America, there has been a growing tendency among Muslim women to stop wearing their veils when in public (Reeves & Azam, 2012).

The suffering that the women endure has prompted quite a majority of them abandon their veils, albeit against their wishes and beliefs, in order to reduce their susceptibility in the hands of a hostile society. However, these decisions go against the Islam teachings and to an extent force the women to sin, which is against their beliefs.

In other words, the hijab, which is a religious outfit, is being forced into oblivion as the Muslims in Northern America attempt to dispose of any physically visible religious symbols in order to stay safe from heinous acts being directed at them (Reeves & Azam, 2012).

Conclusion

Different religious beliefs and practices have varying doctrines, especially on how women are supposed to dress. While these doctrines may appear different in certain aspects, there are several similarities that apply across board. Islam requires that women cover their bosoms and heads with hijab as a way of preventing men from getting attracted to women and ending up sinning through adultery.

The hijab has been mentioned severally in the holy Quran, which highlights Gods strong preference for the garment. A womans body is only supposed to be revealed to her husband and not any other strangers because that is an avenue through which sinning can be condoned. The Jewish religion, on the other hand, equally prefers the use of hijab particularly among the women in order to conceal their heads from strangers.

Unlike in Islam, the Jewish religion does not have any special mention on the hijab, despite the religious leaders and teachers emphasising on its use. The hijab was part of the dressing code which women used to veil women and conceal their bodies from being exposed to strangers in the traditional Jewish culture, prior to the advent of religion.

The practise among Christians is, nonetheless, not pronounced as a majority of the women do not veil themselves when in churches or attending to religious events. However, Catholic nuns strictly cover their hair and heads every time. Hijabs have been the greatest source of attacks and discrimination directed towards Muslim women, particularly in Northern America.

The spread of global terrorism and its perceived association with Islam has seen non-Muslim communities target women on hijab in America. Muslim women also complain of discrimination, especially being perpetrated by institutions of learning. Muslim women accuse these institutions of refusing to grant them the permission to wear hijabs.

References

Ameli, S. R., & Kharazmi, Z. N. (2013). American virtual colonialism and the Islamophobia politics: Muslim/Iranian Womens Hijab at YouTube international Journal of Womens Research, 3(1) 5-22.

American Civil Liberties Union (n.d.). . Web.

Bell, W. (2003). How has American life changed since September 11? Journal of Futures Studies, 8(1), 73-80.

Bigger, S. (2006). Muslim womens views on dress code and the hijaab: some issues for education. Journal of Beliefs & Values, 27(2), 215226.

Freziger, A. S. (2009). Feminism and heresy: the construction of a Jewish metanarrative. Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 77(3), 494-546.

Gurbuz, M. E., & Gulsum, G. (2009). Between sacred codes and secular consumer society: the practice of headscarf adoption among American college girls. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 29(3), 387-399.

Gurtner, D. M. (2006). The veil of the temple in history and legend. JETS 49(1), 97-114.

Haddad, Y. Y., & Smith, J. I. (2002). Muslim minorities in the west. Oxford: Altamira Press.

Piper, J., & Grudem, W. (2012). Restoring biblical manhood and womanhood: a response to evangelical feminism. New York, NY: Crossway Books.

Reeves, T. C. & Azam, L. (2012). To wear hijab or not: Muslim Womens Perceptions of Their Healthcare Workplaces. Journal of Business Diversity, 12(2), 41-51.

Russo, A. (2006). The feminist majority foundations campaign to stop gender apartheid: the intersections of feminism and imperialism in the United States. International Feminist Journal of Politics, 8(4), 557580.

Ssenyonjo, M. (2007). The Islamic veil and freedom of religion, the rights to education and work: a survey of recent International and national cases. Chinese Journal of International Law, 6(3), 653710.

Historical Development of Feminism and Patriarchy

Introduction

Feminism refers to a movement and a set of ideologies aiming at identifying and defending the political, economic, and social rights of women in society. In particular, the major role of feminists is to advocate for equal chances for women in education and employment.

Concerns of feminism emanated from imaginations of various people who sought to comprehend the nature of gender inequality through the understanding of social roles and various positions of individuals in society (Gwyn & Margo, n.d).

Even though there are varieties of feminists, the major aim of all feminists is to fight for the rights of women in society. These aims include the fight for the reproductive and bodily rights of women.

In this regard, feminists argue that women should be given the freedom to make decisions touching on their health without and prejudice or imposition of such decisions to them (Holland & Cortina, 2013).

In the attempt to lay a fundamental mechanism for understanding how gender roles are socially constructed within a society, feminism has created a new interpretation of gender and sex.

Consequently, this paper aims at discussing how the theoretical perspectives of feminism and patriarchy have been historically developed.

Putting into consideration the above raised issues surrounding the discussions of feminism, this paper specifically extends this debate to shed light on how theoretical paradigms of feminism are received by women and other people who subscribe to the feminist school of thought.

The paper also argues that, despite the fact that a number of women fight for gender equality, they do not support feminist objectives. Surprisingly, these women fail to consider themselves as feminists.

However, they portray male characteristics of superiority (patriarchy) in different aspects of life.

Therefore, as revealed in the paper, women should not only uphold feminist activities, but also accept their positions as women to ensure that they have equal participation in various social, political and even economic building of their countries.

Defining Feminism

The term feminism is deployed to refer to a variety of beliefs and ideologies whose main concerns are campaigning equal rights of women. Many of the issues that affect the lives of women attract some ethical and moral concerns from various people.

For instance, the question of abortion is an enormous issue that attracts both religious and political criticisms.

Feminists consider the failure to give women the rights to determine whether they want to carry on with their pregnancies or not as amounting to denial of fundamental human rights for autonomy in control of a persons productive health and even to control ones body (Penny & Nicola, 2001, p.360).

Consequently, scholars subscribing to feminist school of thought argue that women should be given reproductive rights such as using contraceptives and procuring an abortion at will.

A larger extension of this argument is that women should also have the ability to say when, how, and with whom she has sexual intercourse.

In the modern society, what entails reproductive health is well documented. The world agency in charge of health (WHO) notes that couples should be given the freedom to decide on the number of children they should have (Cole & Sabik, 2010).

However, people should be responsible as they make their decisions owing to the sanctity of life. Nonetheless, religious critics contend that human life is special. This means it should not be terminated at will.

Apart from deciding on the number of children, couples should always determine the spacing of their children.

This is an attempt to ensure that women have full control of their lives without the influence by external forces beyond their control (Duncan, 2010, p.499). Unfortunately, this argument has not always been the case.

Women in the United States have always encountered challenges that interfere with their individual fulfillment in society. Some have risen up to fight for their rights, but they hardly identify themselves as feminists due to the stigma associated with the term.

McCabe (2005) supports this argument by asserting further that campaigns aimed at fighting for the rights of women create an impression that women are the weaker sex. Hence, they cannot fight for their own rights by themselves without the support of various women movements.

This argument means that women have to come together and fight for their rights as a team since the voice of one woman might never be heard as opposed to that of a group of women (movement).

However, it is important to note that institutionalism of respect for all fundamental human rights requires collective action.

Globally, women are willing to challenge the existing social structures, but they are aware of the resistance they might encounter when doing so.

Through constitutional development, women have managed to advocate for the ratification of laws that protect them from inhumane conditions such as rape, violence and subjugation to the domain of the home.

Women are currently engaged in socio-political and economic activities in the United States. From this perspective, McCabe (2005) argues that, even if this engagement is paramount, it is not adequate to bring about equality.

Much has to be done to ensure that women enjoy their rights, just like men. Feminists employ the ideas of Marx to challenge the existing social structure. For instance, Gwyn and Margo (n.d) reckon that existing social structures foster patriarchy (p.25). This means that they support one gender.

According to hooks, patriarchy refers to an outstanding depiction of male superiority traits (hooks, 2000). Feminists contend that social structures that oppress people, especially women, should be rejected.

Hence, for gender equality, the capability of an individual should be measured based on his or her strength, but not sexual qualities. The main argument raised by feminists is that women have been historically marginalized or suppressed in comparison to men.

In this context, Cole and Sabik (2010) support this assertion and further retaliates that reasons leading to the emergence of feminist theory are akin to the argument women are disadvantaged socially compared to men.

In the most simplistic terms, feminisms can be defined as movement to end sexism, sexist exploitation and oppression (hooks, 2000, p.1).

The desire for moving from one perspective of view about the rights of people is channeled by groups of people who subscribe to the idea that women deserve to have equal treatments in all occupations just like men.

The change advocated for is that of alteration of cultural norms and beliefs that treat women as inferior compared to men. Advocating for such a change has given rise to a number of theories being advanced to explain and give historical accounts of feminism struggles.

One of the theories that important for discussion in the context of attempting to define feminism is that advanced by hooks (2000).

Hooks initiated a well-liked theory of feminists, which is anchored in a good sense and the perception of mutual understanding. The vision presented by Hooks is that of a beloved society that pleases everybody and is dedicated to equality (hooks, 2000).

The author underscores the fact that the most controversial and challenging concerns facing feminists in the contemporary world include encompassing violent behavior, ethnicity, work, and reproductive rights.

With the use of customary awareness and candor, the author calls for feminists that are free from disruptive hindrances, but endowed with thorough discourse to join hands in fighting for their rights.

Hooks reveals that feminism, instead of being perceived as an obsolete impression or one restricted to scholarly leaders, should be perceived as reality for everyone.

In his contribution on the debate touching on feminism, McCabe (2005) evaluated the relationship among various variables, including feminist self-identity, political inclinations, socio-demographics and a scope of gender-associated approaches.

The research was supported by information from the General Society Survey of 1996.

The study found out that just 20 percent of American women identify themselves as feminists while 80 per cent of women believe that both men and women ought to be socially, politically and economically equal (McCabe, 2005).

Equalitarianism is the most extensively accredited factor among women. Findings disclose that feminists can be very educated city women who are free to be liberals or Democrats.

The feminist self-identity considerably associates itself with opinions concerning the effect of the movement of women on equality.

The scholar recommends the significance of examining collections of attitudes concerning perfect gender conformities, evaluations, and distinguishing other forms of approach.

The concerns about gender segregations in the context of discussions of equal participation of men and women in various political, social and economic activities underline the fight for gender equality acerbated by feminists movements.

Feminist Theory

The feminist speculation refers to various efforts of broadening hypothetical perceptions of concerns of feminism into the idealistic world.

The extension involves many studies in various disciplines such as economic, literary critics, anthropology and Women Studies without negating sociology (Moradi et al., 2012: Ray, 2003).

However, most scholars see the development of theoretical perspectives on feminism as predominantly belonging to the discipline of women studies.

Women studies focus on historical experiences of women in terms of their struggles to gain independence from culturally degrading beliefs and ideologies that often lead to denial of several rights for women including determination of gender roles of women, which have no economic gains and participation in the political process through voting (Snyder-Hall, 2010).

In fact, it is until 1920s that women in America acquired suffrage rights. This gain was highly attributed to the undying efforts of women movements, which for the purpose of the discussions of this paper, are considered as belonging to the umbrella that advocates of feminism.

Feminist theory develops an incredible understanding of the issues surrounding the perception of gender inequality together with how they are propagated within a society. According to Showalter (1999), it focuses on gender politics, power relations, and sexuality (p.27).

The main goal is to deal proactively with the deeply seated beliefs fostering exclusion of women in these three essential aspects of socialization of people. It also aims at developing and promoting various rights of women coupled with their interests.

Key themes that are introspected in the feminism theory include Patriarchy, stereotyping of women, sexual objectification and even oppression (Showalter, 1999). In his literary criticism of feminism, Showalter argues that feminist theory is developed in three main stages.

The first stage is the feminist critique. In this stage, the feminist leader examines the ideologies behind literary phenomena (Showalter, 1999, p.27). In the second phase, which Showalter terms as Gynocriticism, women act as producers of textual meaning (Showalter, 1999, p.28).

In the last phase, gender theory is developed through exploration of philosophical writings together with their influence on sexual characteristics or gender arrangement (Showalter, 1999, p.28).

The theory of feminism continues to develop with new concerns of women with respect to areas in which people believe women are disadvantaged emerging. The goal is to ensure that Patriarchy disappears.

In fact, the argument against patriarchy forms the fundamental basis in which theoretical paradigms of feminism are anchored. Indeed, the history of feminism begins from a world of pure patriarchy.

History of Feminism and Patriarchy

Women oppression is something that was anchored in the social norms of various people in different nations but in different extents the age of patriarchy (Gwyn & Margo, n.d, p. 27). In this age, women were perceived to be assets just like land. Men principally owned them.

Thus, the society was organized by the male authoritative figure. In such as a system men take noble roles in ruling over property, children and even women. A patriarchy system is thus one, which advocates for men privileges and subordination of women (Gwyn & Margo, n.d, p. 27).

Consequently, feminists contend that a patriarchal society is unjust and essentially oppressive to women.

For instance, Hennessy and Ingraham (1997) assert that the the patriarchal distinction between masculinity and femininity is the political difference between freedom and subjection (p.6).

In the theoretical perspective of feminism, a patriarchy encompasses all the mechanisms in the society, which plays the roles of exerting coupled with reproduction of dominance of male gender against the female gender.

Feminists theory considers patriarchy as a social manifestation, which can be counterattacked through a critical analysis of the ways in which it is manifested (Gwyn & Margo, n.d, p. 29).

One way of realizing this goal is by introspecting the areas in women are disadvantaged and then putting effort to ensure that corrective action is taken.

Such needs gave rise to the first wave of feminism in which suffrage rights took a principal focus in early 1910s in the U.S. followed by such a struggle in 1930s in France and other parts of the world.

From the paradigm of culture, nation, and/or historical moment, different feminists across the globe are driven by different goals, aims, and objectives. Different views by historians are evident on who fits in the definition of feminists precisely.

Some historians contend that any women movement that is constantly engaged in efforts to campaign for women rights should be termed as feminist movements.

Others such as Yoder, Tobias, and Snell (2011) argue that the terms feminists should apply to all modern movements for feminism coupled with their descendants. Amid these differences, history of the western nations reveals that the history of feminists can be categorized into three main waves.

The first wave involves the women movements of the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century, which sought to ensure that women were given suffrage rights.

The second wave comprises various movements that were fighting for liberation of women as from 1960s. The focus of this wave was on social coupled with legal rights of women including the right to own property and get elective offices.

The third wave emerged in 1990s. It is fighting with mechanisms of dealing with various failures that are associated with the second wave of feminism.

Waves of Feminism

First Wave

In the US and the UK, the first wave of feminism fought for equal marriage rights, property rights, and parenting rights for women. As argued before, this measure sought to end the culture for patriarchy in which men owned everything including children.

Any legal suit that was filed to seek parental custody was made in favor of men (Snyder-Hall, 2010: Ray, 2003). Fights for change of this culture took noble roles of the late nineteenth century women movements.

However, later, in the early twentieth century, effort of women movements expanded to include fight for engagement in the political processes through having equal rights to vote.

Nevertheless, quite a good number of the movements also continued to fight or economic and sexual reproductive rights.

Granting of suffrage rights in response to the struggles of feminists began in 1893, when women in Zealand were allowed to vote.

In Britain, the 1918 campaigns for granting women suffrage rights yielded fruits so that on passing of the representation of people acts, all women above the age of 30 years and who owned housed were permitted to engage in voting (MacKinnon, 2007, p.147).

However, in 1928, all women under the age of 21 were also given suffrage rights. In the US, feminists such as Elizabeth Cady and Lucretia Mott among others worked tirelessly to ensure that womens voting rights were granted.

In 1919, upon the passing of the 19th amendment to the constitution of United States, women acquired the rights to participate in political process through voting.

Indeed, campaigning for suffrage rights was a major activity of feminist movements in the first wave so that demonstration staged by women feminists in 1935 in France resulted to consideration of grating the rights to the demonstrators.

The Second Wave

In the 1960s, a new wave of feminism was in place, which was referred as the second wave of feminism. The demands of feminists were not so different from the previous demands. The works of Mary Wollstonecraft inspired the feminists in this wave.

They used them as the basis of raising new demands. Women advocated for equality in terms of social relationships whereby they demanded the existence of free love and the wearing of skirts.

Opposed to the first wave, the second wave did not deal with issues of suffrage rights. Rather, its main concern is on how discrimination of women could be ended.

According to MacKinnon (2007), second-wave feminists sew womens cultural and political inequalities as inextricably linked besides encouraging them to understand the aspects of their personal lives as deeply politicized&reflecting sexist power structures (p.149).

In China, the second wave of feminism is linked with issues such as evaluation of the extent to which respect for women rights has been realized. Elsewhere, across the globe, there are myriad discussions on whether equality for women is fully achieved.

In some nations such as Nicaragua, although feminism movements of the second wave managed to ensure that women acquired quality life, they failed in pushing for ideological changes coupled with social changes.

Third Wave

The third wave aims at altering the perspectives of femininity adopted by the second wave essentialists.

The third wave feminists approaches to feminism essentially functioned to place emphasis on the experiences of women belonging to the upper class while negating the experiences of women in the lower class (Snyder-Hall, 2010).

While the second wave was concentrating on ensuring that women acquired rights, which were equal to those of their male counterparts, the third wave isolates some of the things that may considered not appropriate for women.

According to Showalter (1999), the third wave used the post-culturalist interpretation of gender and sexuality (p.31).

Some of the feminists in the third wave such as Cherrie Moraga and Maxine Kingston coupled with other black feminists are also interested in consideration of race subjects in the theoretical paradigms of feminism.

In fact, the US has immense concerns for engagement of women of color in political processes. Although more struggles for incorporation of women of color in politics and running of political office are still ongoing, by 2010, incredible success had been realized.

The history of women of color in terms of participation in politics has not been encouraging, especially by considering that they have evolved from a society, which was not only gender discriminating but also racially discriminating.

The United States population that is eligible for voting, based on 2010 statistics, is composed over 33 percent of non-white persons (Wendy, 2010, p. 166).

The percent of the persons voted for various political offices is also changing incredibly since women of color are increasingly getting positions at the elective offices.

Center for American Women and Politics attribute this achievement to recent gains in womens office holding due to achievements of women of color candidates (2012, p.12).

In fact, right from a society that depicted unequal representation of women in general in politics, in America, in every three legislators derived from women population, a minimum of one legislator is from women of color in the case of democrats.

In case of republicans, two in every four women legislators are from women of color (Center for American Women and Politics 2012, p.13).

This development is magnificent in terms of feminists efforts for ensuring that women have equal rights to men and other women irrespective of their skin pigmentation.

Women and Feminism

In many parts of the world, before the advent of feminism, the living conditions of women were very poor since they were perpetually pushed to the periphery, even on matters touching on their own health. Women existed to be seen, but not to be heard since they were the properties of men.

Just as men owned other properties, such as land, women were also owned in the same way (Center for American Women and Politics, 2012). Traditional practices could not allow women to participate in some activities such as policy formulation and wealth accumulation.

Feminism shed light on the debate since it advocated for the rights of women, particularly reproductive health. Before feminism, a woman would simply be used as a sex object since she did not have any right.

Currently, most people consider sex a love affair whereby two people can only do it through consent. However, many instances of sex are evident where consent is not sought hence implying that sex is not always associated with love.

Such cases include date rape, marital rape, as well as the hook up culture that goes beyond sex to include other aspects such as kissing by uncommitted people.

Feminism advocated for the provision of free abortion, provision of free family planning contraceptives and methods, abolition of female genital mutilation, and forced marriage. Through legal ratifications, a woman in the modern society has full control of her reproductive health.

She can decide when to have a child and when to terminate a pregnancy. This freedom is attributed to the works of feminists who have achieved a lot regarding reproductive rights of women. However, this case does not apply in the US where such rights are severely limited.

In fact, as evidenced by the US law, the fetus has the freedom of living a significant life after it is born. Therefore, women will not just decide anyhow when to terminate a pregnancy.

Before the advent of the feminism, in the making of major decisions touching on reproduction, men took the most plausible role even though they are minor shareholders in the aspects of making reproduction decisions (Zucker & BayCheng, 2010).

Women have been subjected to violence and intimidation since they are perceived as weak and helpless especially when they threaten patriarchal structures of power.

Other people subscribing to male chauvinism and the male domineering school of thought view women as people who should depend on men for major decisions since they do not have the moral authority to participate in societal development (Ramsey et al., 2007).

World Health Organization demands that women should be given specific rights, including the right to procure an abortion, the right to use family planning methods in order to control births, the right to access quality reproductive healthcare, and the right to access free reproductive education, which would inform their decisions (Zucker & BayCheng, 2010).

Feminists insist that government should offer free education on contraceptives in order to prevent unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections.

Any women should be protected from practices that would interfere with reproduction such as gender-based violence, forced sterilization, and female genital mutilation.

Traditional practices that interfered with female reproduction are on the decline. For instance, female inheritance or inheriting a relatives wife once the husband dies in some societies is no longer accepted. Across the globe, constitutions of different nations prohibit forced marriage.

Merging the Three Waves of Feminism

In the second-wave, feminists were on opposite sides of a sequence of controversial discussions concerning issues such as pornography, prostitution, and heterosexuality, with some women supporting gender oppression and others backing sexual satisfaction and empowerment.

The third-wave sought to join the principles of gender equality and sexual liberty by respecting the decisions of women on the aforementioned principles (Snyder-Hall, 2010, p.258).

Whereas this perspective is often seen as insignificantly approving all that a woman decides to do as a feminist, Snyder-Hall (2010) affirms that the third-wave does not present an unreflective approval of selection, but a great reverence for pluralism and self-fortitude.

In the United States, several meetings were held to spearhead talks on the ratification of laws relating on the rights of women.

Apart from previous demands, women needed an equal pay in the labor industry, provision of equal education, job opportunities, free childcare services, financial empowerment, prevention of gender-based discrimination, and illegalization of inhumane actions such as rape and violence against women (Showalter, 1999).

Even though not all feminists movements had similar demands in the first and the second wave, a consensus between the two waves of feminists is evident that male chauvinism and discrimination are the two major problems affecting women in any society.

Consequently, the two waves aimed at ensuring that women became independent.

Although much has been achieved in terms of overcoming the culture that seeks to determine certain cultural artifacts that specify how different genders should behave within the societies such as dressing codes through the development of unisexual clothing, it is still evident that some roles are perceived as best suited to one gender as opposed to the other (Duncan, 2010).

The management of a hiring firm might also get tempted to lay off a well performing individual because, with the preferred gender occupying the position, the output would be better.

The argument here is that the differences between men and women in terms of their capability are not inherent in their sex but are acted out through social construction of gender.

Through the realization of these concerns, feminism objects to ensure that hiring of persons within all employment sectors is done from the basis of academic qualification and experiences as opposed to the gender of an individual (Wendy, 2010).

In this context, it is important to note that the concerns of different feminists are different depending on the dimension from which one is visualizing theoretical construct of feminism.

Marxist feminism has a different interpretation of the relationship between men and women. It views the relationship between women and men as characterized by subordination and exploitation, which is a typical feature of the capitalistic society (Moradi, Martin & Brewster, 2012).

Ever since the advent of private property, women have always been viewed as the property of men. In the same way, the rich owns the working class, men also own women. Women are against this type of relationship in the modern society.

They are compared to the working class (proletariat) while men are the bourgeoisie since they own everything in society. Consequently, women are unable to make their own decisions independent from their owners (men).

Their level of engagement in various societal organizations including religion and politics is also limited to the degree of their ability to control and lead their superiors (men).

The argument that femininity results in the unsuitability of women to engage in political activities has its origin in the feminist theory. In this context, the perception of feminism seeks to dig into the differences between men and women, which may hinder their success in various societal duties.

For instance, Cole and Sabik (2010) were incredibly interested to determine whether the differences in physical appearance of women and men influenced their performance in societal duties such as engagement in politics.

To achieve this goal, researchers assessed if the attractive and unattractive aspects of femininity, which match the Feminine Interpersonal Relations (interpersonal charm) and Feminine Self-Doubt (submissiveness and passivity), have impacts on the successful involvement of women in politics (Cole, &Sabik, 2010).

Traditionally, Feminine Interpersonal Relations were linked with higher political involvement and effectiveness when compared to Feminine Self-Doubt. The upshots are conferred with consideration to the midlife advancement of women and the femininity socialization of black women.

Identification of the function of feminine attributes, such as nurturance and compassion in political endeavors (as found in Feminine Interpersonal Relations), may promote women approving feminist convictions to engage in politics.

Duncan (2010) surveyed the relative significance of feminism generation and the feminist label to a group of 667 women that were marching in the demand for reproductive rights.

Weak feminists were seen to identify themselves with the feminist label, approving several attitudes and viewpoints of strong feminists with less dedication to equalitarianism.

In his analysis, the feminist label was significant in elucidating the relationship of women to feminism as opposed to the generation. This aspect designates that disclosure to a group ideology could connect persons across generations.

Feminists had a feeling of inferiority when they judged themselves against their male counterparts besides possessing similar attitudes such as strong qualities (Duncan, 2010).

Education concerning feminism could make feminists have a dedication to equality. Duncan evaluates the manner in which feminism associates itself with the sexual harassment, which is a great challenge facing women.

Two pointers of feminism were evaluated in the study including self-recognition and involvement in feminist activism. Two kinds of sexual molestation were gauged, which included sexual advances and gender molestation.

Gender molestation means wrong interpretation of the capacity of one gender in comparison to another (Duncan, 2010). Such misconceptions amount to setting corridors to the excellence of a given gender, especially women, professionally and in socialization processes.

Duncan (2010) research identifies different types of gender molestation. They include gender identification and sexual advances according to the researcher. Feminist identification signified lesser gender molestation encounters (Duncan, 2010).

This finding contrasts with the Holland and Cortina (2013) argues that feminist-identified women account for the highest reduction in job gratification. Arguably, feminist activism is connected to greater experiences of both types of molestation.

For instance according to MacKinnon (2007), during conversations, higher chances exist in which when referring to a given character, the word woman is used than the word man.

Such a constant usage of the term woman places emphasis on the gender of the subject under discussion, especially when some negative attributes about the subject is involved. The capacity of women to deal with instances of gender molestation also attracts the attention of Duncan (2010).

The scholar argues that, irrespective of feminist activism or identification, women who have experienced sexual molestation are highly likely to fix the sexual molestation tag to their encounters than women who have faced gender molestation alone (Duncan, 2010).

This finding gives rise to the need to develop various theories explaining the manner in which women can deal with challenges associated with negative gender profiling such as gender discrimination.

It is unfortunate that most women in society approve feminist values, but do not identify themselves as feminists. Moradi, Martin, and Brewste analyzed the initiative of women founded on the presumption of personality as a probable feature in feminist non-identification.

The first study conducted by the above scholars introduced the theoretically positioned Feminist Threat Index and assesses its psychometric qualities with statistics from 91 students.

The second study examined a theoretically founded intervention set to decrease the scale of feminist threat and enhance the extent of feminist identification by permitting students to interrelate with a diverse group of feminists (Moradi, Martin, & Brewster, 2012).

The intervention decreased the scale of threat and raised the extent of feminist identification considerably in the group, but there was no change in the comparison set.

Several groups of individuals have reacted to feminism and both men and women either support or oppose it, with support for feminist perceptions being more common as compared to self-identification as a feminist.

The involvement of male and generally everyone is encouraged by feminists. This plan aims at attaining the dedication of the entire society to gender equality.

The findings of the above scholars present researchers and other stakeholders with adequate information that would be used in evaluating and decreasing the threat to feminist identification.

Previous studies have shown that the majority of women in the US support feminist objectives, but they do not consider themselves feminists. Consideration concerning the opinions of people as regards to feminism could foretell rejection of the feminist identity.

Different from this hypothesis, every woman who participated in such studies, irrespective of feminist recognition, had a conviction that other people had a negative perception towards feminists (McCabe, 2005).

Feminists were believed to be homosexuals as compared to being heterosexual in that their fights for gender equality created the impression that feminists were over concerned about issue touching on only one gender.

It is from this line of thought that prompted Ramsey et al. (2007) to research about the connection between the perceptions of feminists and the conviction they possess as to the way other people see them.

The scholars discussed the disagreement between the search for gender equality and the yearning for sexual gratification, which is a great challenge to feminists.

Significance of Topic based on Worldview and Social Background

My social background has played a key role towards my choice of the topic for my presentation. It is a burden for parents to have three daughters in the Indian culture especially when it comes to addressing their reproductive and bodily rights and needs.

For instance, it is a challenge for the Indian parents to cater for dowry expenses of the three girls. Such girls will lack proper education and/or be exposed to early marriages.

Therefore, there is the need for me to develop a set of ideologies aiming at identifying and defending the political, economic, and social rights of women in society. From my personal experience, I was always fighting for equal rights in the family but never knew the term- Feminism.

In fact, I did not know about feminism until I took the class last semester. Therefore, with such knowledge, I will strive confidently to restore the dignity of women that has been taken away not only in India but also in the world at large.

Such an effort will awaken the dreams, voice, and power of many women that could not be witnessed before.

Conclusion

Women bear the mindset and not the identity, which seems to be self-interested. They may only engage in less joint efforts in support of the rights of women. The negative depiction of feminism and feminists has made many women believe in equality.

However, they do not consider themselves feminists. As argued in the paper, when individuals are exposed to self-identified feminists and discourses regarding different types of feminism, their extent of self-identification as feminists rises.

In this regard, comprehension of whether the refusal of the feminist label is founded on the fear of stigma related to the identity, neoliberal convictions, or other elucidations is significant to the people campaigning for equality.

Reference List

Center for American Women and Politics. (2012). Women of Color in Elective Office. New Brunswick, NJ: Center for American Women and Politics.

Cole, R., & Sabik, J. (2010). Associations between femininity and womens political behavior during midlife. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 34(4), 508-520.

Duncan, E. (2010). Womens relationship to feminism: effects of generation and feminist selflabeling. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 34(4), 498-507.

Gwyn, K., & Margo, O. (n.d). Womens Lives: Multicultural Perspective. London: Routledge.

Hennessy, R., & Ingraham, C. (1997). Materialist feminism: a reader in class, difference, and womens lives. London: Routledge.

Holland, J., & Cortina, M. (2013). When sexism and feminism collide the sexual harassment of feminist working women. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 37(2), 192-208.

Hooks, B. (2000). Feminism is for everybody: Passionate politics. Brooklyn, NY: South End Press.

MacKinnon, C. (2007). Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

McCabe, J. (2005). Whats in a label? The relationship between feminist self-identification and feminist attitudes among US women and men. Gender & Society, 19(4), 480-505.

Moradi, B., Martin, A., & Brewster, M. (2012). Disarming the threat to feminist identification: an application of personal construct theory to measurement and intervention. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 36(2), 197-209.

Penny, F., & Nicola, F. (2001). Differential aesthetics: art practices, philosophy and feminist understandings. Aldershot, Hants, England: Ashgate.

Ramsey, R., Haines, E., Hurt, M., Nelson, A., Turner, L., Liss, M., & Erchull, J. (2007). Thinking of others: Feminist identification and the perception of others beliefs. Sex Roles, 56(10), 611-616.

Ray, S. (2003). Against Earnestness: The Place in Performance in Feminist Theory. Studies in Practical Philosophy, 3(1), 22-79.

Showalter, E. (1999). Towards a Feminist Poetics. New York: Croom Helm. pp. 2536.

Snyder-Hall, C. (2010). Third-wave feminism and the defense of choice. Perspectives on Politics, 8(1), 255-261.

Wendy, S. (2010). African American Women and Electoral Politics: A Challenge to the Post-Race Rhetoric of the Obama Moment. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Yoder, D., Tobias, A., & Snell, F. (2011). When declaring I am a feminist matters: Labeling is linked to activism. Sex Roles, 64(2), 9-18.

Zucker, N., & BayCheng, Y. (2010). Minding the Gap Between Feminist Identity and Attitudes: The Behavioral and Ideological Divide Between Feminists and NonLabelers. Journal of personality, 78(6), 1895-1924.

Feminism and Patriarchy

There are many specific explanations and definitions of terms feminism and patriarchy. First of all, it should be stated that these two notions create an opposition as feminism presupposes the domination of women with the restriction of subordination to men while patriarchy is the male domination over women.

However, the explanation to these notions is not easy. There are a lot of cases in the history which help explain these notions. Patriarchy is the particular regime when male domination is observed, men occupy the higher positions and do not allow women tot have their opinion, to express their desire, etc. Patriarchy presupposes the direct subordination of women to men as men are the main in such society.

The discussion of the feminism is more complicated than just reference to the female domination. Feminism is an ideology, not a regime, that is why it may exist any time and the restructuring of the regime cannot change the point of view of individualities. Feminism should be explained as the desire to create the world with equality and justice for women in all spheres of their lives. Feminism may be compared with racism as in this case women consider themselves as the minority and struggle for their rights.

Moreover, all the achievements and women have are put as the main destinations which are to be affirmed and supported. In other words, feminism is understood as the movement for justice (Shaw and Lee 10). Hogeland is sure that feminism requires an expansion of empathy, interest, intelligence, and responsibility across differences, histories, cultures, ethnicities, sexual identities, othernesses. (Hogeland 658).

It is possible to predict that feminism is an aggressive movement while the desire of women to be equal with men is another notion which may be considered as the healthy competition. Remembering different actions and movements at the streets of the USA with the feminist proclamation, it is possible to remember how aggressive women are.

The main difference between feminism and patriarchy is that patriarchy is the regime which is created under particular circumstances while feminism is the intrusion into the human life and the desire to convince then that men are trying to be the heads in the society and it is impossible to leave the things as it is. Feminism is an aggressive ideology which has nothing in common with reality.

Those who have personal opinion about this issue may understand that sometimes the attention to feminism becomes too high and it creates problems.

Reading My Name, it becomes obvious that the notions feminism and patriarchy have played vital role there. The time which is discussed is the patriarchy as the domination of men is seen. Esperanzas great-grandmother could do nothing but obey and it means that men were dominant.

However, it is also possible to say that the great grandmother was a feminist as she ever accepted the fact that a man threw a sack over her head and carried her off. (Cisneros 11)

Moreover, being unable to accept and to forgive great-grandfather, the great-grandmother showed her inner power and strength sitting and looking out the window her whole life, the way so many women sit their sadness on an elbow. (Cisneros 11) This is the greatest example of the patriarchy as the regime where a woman has to obey to a husband and the feminist ideology when being subjected a woman still follows her personal considerations and does not break.

Works Cited

Cisneros, Sandra. My name. The House on Mango Street.

Hogeland, Lisa Marie. Fear of Feminism: Why Young Women Get the Willies. Womens Voices, Feminist Visions: Classic and Contemporary Readings. Eds. Susan Shaw and Janet Lee. New York: McGraw-Hill Companies, 2011. 655-678. Print.

Shaw, Susan and Janet Lee. Womens Studies: Perspectives and Practices. Womens Voices, Feminist Visions: Classic and Contemporary Readings. Eds. Susan Shaw and Janet Lee. New York: McGraw-Hill Companies, 2011. 1-22. Print.

The Picture of Arabic Feminist

The three stories titled The Picture share the perspective that sex and desire are complicated, not uniformly happy elements in a womans life, and that they carry terrible risks, whether one is very young or quite mature in years.

Looking at three women and the families around them, the stories by Layla Al-Uthman, Nawal Al-Saadawi, and Latifa Al-Zayyat examine women who are becoming aware of a new aspect of their sexual life, often with less than joyous implications.

Narjis, the barely pubescent heroine of Nawal Al-Saadawis story, discovers both her own emerging sexuality and her fathers hypocrisy and exploitativeness of his household servant.

Latifa Al-Zayyats heroine, Amal, becomes aware of the potential for her beloved and desired husband to be faithless. Layla Al-Uthman recounts the tale of her heroine in the first person, a woman contemplating the possibility of cuckolding her husband. All three discover aspects of their own sexuality that open up the potential for great pain.

In Al-Saadawis tale of self-discovery, the little girl explores her own body in a way that would be entirely unremarkable in a western or secular household. However in the context of her religious upbringing and the strict and reserved behavior of her father, this self-exploration becomes frightening, and momentous.

It ultimately destroys her world, which is founded on a worshipful respect for her father. If she were not feeling the new feelings engendered by her growing and developing body, she would not have been up so late to belatedly fulfill the obligatory ablutions her father and her religion have imposed on her.

As a result, she is awake at a time of night when her father imposes his sexual will on the house servant. Thus, she discovers the possibilities of her own body and that of all women, in a cataclysmic moment of revelation.

Narjis is apparently motherless. There is nothing to suggest that she has a mother now, or ever did. Her only female role model is the taciturn house servant who is fulfilling the role of mother, servant, and, apparently, sex object for her father.

Thus, at this turning point in her life, she has no one to ask, no one to share her new-found insights with. She is limited.herself, to the role of supplicant at her fathers feet, doomed never to look him in the face, a hero worshipper, uttering the same two words that her fathers servant uses to communicate with him.

She persists in her investigations of herself, nonetheless, experimenting and wondering at what she finds. She is too young to have experienced the male gaze, but has frequently basked in the reflected glory of her fathers respected position in the community.

Thus, her budding buttocks are in a sense the first element of her own identity apart from her overbearing father. They are something he has not asked her to do, that he did not cause to happen, and they are her exclusively her own. As noted above, however, they are also a mystery. Najir notes that,

She could see Nabawiyya from the rear, but not herself. At that moment, she imagined that she had discovered a new human misfortune: you could see other peoples bodies but not the body in which you were born and which you always carried around

However, in a society where women have little or no status, what could be a womans own territory, or fiefdom; namely, her own body, Najir is confronted with the unavoidable fact that all a womans parts are at the service of men.

This is symbolized by Najirs fathers exploitation of his maidservant. The fact that the act may be pleasurable for Nabawiyya is irrelevant. Najirs fathers taking of her sexually excludes her from chances at a marriage of her own, because she is deprived of her virginity, and exposes the young woman to the risk of a pregnancy which could be literally life-threatening.

The fact that the two girls are developing secondary sexual characteristics at the same time suggests that they are roughly the same age, which makes his deflowering of Nabawiyya all the more disturbing.

The author leaves us with the clear sense that Najir is bound to a path that will be different from the one she was on when the story opened. She does not drape herself modestly in the sight of her fathers portrait.

She regards him, in the same photograph that she so admired at the start of the story, very differently. Here is how her fathers image is described before the revelation: His head looked big, his nose large and crooked, and his eyes hollow and wide, almost swallowing her up.

After her discovery, the description changes subtly. There is almost a phallic feel to the way Najirs fathers portrait is depicted  note the use of the image of bulging, and slicing: His wide eyes were bulging, and his sharp, crooked nose sliced his face in two.

By the end of the story, Najir has acquired a sense of her own identity, her own body, her own thoughts. Her buttocks, the readers imagines, will likely be bestowed, in her future, where and when she chooses, and not where any man insists they be bestowed.

At the other end of a womans sexual and reproduction life is the heroine of Layla Al-Uthmans version of The Picture. She tells her story herself, a near brush with humiliation.

The woman has the societal role of a wife and mother, with a grown son, so her marriage was at an early but perhaps not too early age. She acquires an ambition which even she herself terms frivolous, to have an affair. This occurs in spite of her being married to a man to whom she is still attracted, and who cherishes her enough to stage an elaborate birthday party for her.

In the process of contemplating her own potential infidelity, she considers the possibility that her husband has long since been unfaithful to her.

She also reviews the possible candidates for both disloyalties. The fact that none of the men in her life strikes her as being as attractive to her as her own husband signals that the lech is not so much sexual as existential. Is it not more likely that she wants excitement to offset the ennui she feels? She says,

I became very calm, but my mind was racing. I felt a continuous sense of rebellion. I was driven by boredom, drawn from one room to another, from wardrobe to drawer. I searched for something to do. All the things that might need tidying up or dusting suddenly looked in perfect order. I loathed everything around me. The house was rejecting me.

Her role in the family is very probably constraining and suffocating, although she has the freedom to drive a car, and walk in public. She finds no relief in driving fast, however.

Instead, she encounters a woman who either is, or resembles closely, the older woman with whom her son had a brief affair. It is clear from the sons letter that he regards the woman as having humiliated herself and disgusted him by her behavior.

In remembering this story, the protagonist draws a direct comparison between herself and this nameless older woman. She is appalled at the prospect of her own aging body and face being involved in such a liaison. She would, herself, play the role of a fading beauty trying to recapture some desirability of youth if she pursued her intention of infidelity.

As she guns the car motor, she flees both her own foray into infidelity, and, perhaps, the chance to escape the stifling boredom of her life as it has been. In this depressing finale, the reader senses the tyranny of youthfulness in determining sexual desirability.

There is no a priori reason why an older woman should not be as attractive as a younger one when fertility is not the aim for the relationship. However, the protagonist clearly feels, by the end of the story, that she is disqualified from that particular solution to boredom and social constraints.

The reader is left to hope that the protagonist will find constructive ways to spread her wings and bring some fresh air into her cigarette-drugged lungs, ways that do not hold the risk of destroying her family.

The somewhat younger woman in Latifa Al-Zayyats story still has an active role to play as the mother of a young son. She has the excitement of finding that her husband still is capable of fierce desire for her, perhaps sparked by the unfamiliarity of an away vacation.

However, this gratification is spoiled by her suspicions that her husband is contemplating infidelity. The author does not make clear whether Amals concerns are justified.

The process by which Amal arrives at her suspicions draws attention to the sade fact that she seems to have defied her parents and married for love rather than with an arranged marriage.

She also seems to have exerted lifelong efforts to be a modest and appropriate woman and wife. During her engagement, for example, she did not want to have a picture taken that revealed a public display of affection.

Her chaste and devoted behavior contrasts violently with the other womans. The other woman wears shorts, swings her posterior, smokes, drinks, and laughs at another womans husband.

The other woman is as trapped by her role as Amal is, however. Even if she is actually a PhD in chemistry, her image labels her as a floozy. Izaat may follow at her heels, panting, but he will not take her seriously. She is as shut out of serious life as Amal is.

Amal clings to her son in her effort to remind herself of her rights as a mother and wife. However, when she clings to her huband, she finds herself embarrassed by the result. The picture shows her as a desparate woman squeezing her husbands arm so hard that he grimaces.

He runs off immediately afterwards, putatively for change, but the reader is left to wonder whether he has actually gone to get change, or to arrange an assignation with the shameless woman in shorts.

Amal takes this photograph as a true reflection of her relationship with her husband. She clearly feels that something has been breached that will not allow for healing.

How else is the reader to interpret her willful and spiteful act of defacement of the photo? In case this message is not clear, Al-Zayyat ends the story with the fateful statement that, there was a long road ahead of her.

This is a bleak assessment of Amals future. As a mature woman, she faces loneliness and possibly deprivation if she breaks with her husband. If she takes her life into her own hands, she will irretrievably change her life.

She may lose her child. Is this worth it? Is being independent more important than being married? Is being married to someone who may be faithless worth more than being alone? What role would Amal play as a divorced woman?

In the course of a few minutes and a few pages, the reader is dragged from a watching a happy wife laughing at rainbows, to watching a wife with serious suspicions about her mate.

This reflects the way such revelations occur in real life, so the impact is powerful. The message seems to be to avoid pinning ones life and happiness on one man, to avoid playing a role that depends on a weak-willed mans keeping faith.

These are three very different stories, but only one holds any hope of long term happiness. Najir has the best chance of creating a life for herself that does not depend on a mans whim. In each case, the roles imposed on the heroines, whether semi-servant, cosseted arm candy, or simply taken for granted, are hardly a bargain.

The only way out for all three seems to lie in a lonely life apart from men. If this is the aim of feminism, it is a bleak one.

As has been observed, the categories of Arab feminist writing are not fixed . These stories are definitely feminist because they focus on the women in them, and they are clearly Arab because the challenges that the women face are shaped by the Arab culture around them.

However, there is much that is common to women everywhere who think about their roles and their own sexuality. All women need to think carefully about sex and desire. These are potentially dangerous parts of life. Women all share, in the words of Magda M. Al-Nowaihi, sorrows and dreams .

Bibliography

Al-Saadawi, Nawal. The Picture. Cohen-Mor, Dalya. Arab Women Writers: An Anthology of Short Stories. Ed. Dalya Cohen-Mor. Trans. Dalya Cohen-Mor. SUNY Press, 2005. 60-64.

Al-Uthman, Layla. The Picture. Cohen-Mor, Dalya. Arab Women Writers: An Anthology of Short Stories. Ed. Dalya Cohen-Mor. Trans. Dalya Cohen-Mor. SUNY Press, 2005. 73-78.

Al-Zayyat, Latifa. The Picture. Cohen-Mor, Dalya. Arab Women Writers: An Anthology of Short Stories. Ed. Dalya Cohen-Mor. Trans. Dalya Cohen-Mor. SUNY Press, 2005. 65-72.

M. Al-Nowaihi, Magda. Resisiting Silence in Arab Womens Autobiographies. International Journal of Middle East Studies 33 (2001): 477-502.

Mendola, Tara. Where do We Go From Here? College Literature 36.3 (2009): 221-9.

Feminist Movement in Canada

Since historically mens position used to be superior to the one of women, feminist ideas have been brewing in the society for quite long. It is possible to claim that in Canada the feminist movement began since the famous statement of Angela Davis reported in 1989.

In spite of the fact that the feminism movement has been hindered and oppressed, one can say with certainty that women have achieved certain progress fighting for their rights. Thus, the government has provided special programs for the women suffering from abuse at home.

Historically, Canada was designed to be the country where the first feminist revolution was bound to happen. Since the country has witnessed certain feminist movements and feminist ideas emerging often, the idea of feminism has been formed here since the times immemorial, though it was connected then with the issues of liberalism.

Considering the feminist theories which have been suggested since then, one can see clear distinction between its aspects. Tracing the latter, it is possible to understand the essence of womens struggle. The famous Quebec movement will remain the clear-cut example of womens feminism movement.

Thus, liberal theory which the feminist ideology roots from comprises the liberal and the feminist ideas; social feminism aims at offering women the social roles which were initially designed only for men; and, finally, radical feminism suggests for women to play greater role in organizations. However, at present the social and the radical theories have fused into a single entity.

It is quite peculiar that the ideas of feminism can be intertwined with the concepts of liberal democracy rather easily. Thus, it can be considered that the liberal democracy and feminism have much in common, namely, they are both aimed at providing people with their indefeasible rights. With help of liberal democracy, feminism ideas can be accepted in the society.

Due to the active support and their own determination, a number of Canadian Women have achieved great success not only in the politics of Canada, but also all over the world. Two most splendid examples, Dr. Norma E. Walmsley and Suzanne Johnson, have participated in the Womens Tribune in Mexico.

However, a life of a Canadian woman involved in politics is a train of challenges to face. They are supposed to meet the requirements, nearing the same political responsibilities as men do, which creates certain problems. Despite the endless attempts to establish equality in politics, women are still nominated times more seldom than men are.

In addition, the Canadian culture is not ready yet to witness women as politicians. Mass media is another problem  women are still regarded as novelty by most Canadian journalists. Often women are reluctant to continue the struggle, knowing what opposition they will have to face. However, Canadian women do not despair and resort to numerous political means to fight these challenges.

It must be admitted that the life of Canadian women engaged in politics proves extremely challenging, yet they find efficient ways to prove their right for political freedom. According to the researches held, women are still eager to have equal opportunities in politics and coordinate the state together with men.

In conclusion, it would be possible to suggest that the feminist movement will progress until women have the same political and social rights as men do. One of the main reasons for feminism is not the desire to overrun men in their social position, but to gain respect in the sphere of politics.

Bibliography

Backhouse, Constance and David H. Flaherty. Challenging Times: The Womens Movement in Canada and the United States. Montreal, CA: McGill-Queens University Press, 1992.

Jaggar, Alison M. and Iris M. Young. A Companion to Feminist Philosophy. New York, NY: Wiley-Blackwell, 2000.

Macvlor, Heather. Women and Politics in Canada. Toronto, CA: University of Toronto Press, 1996.

Megyery, Kathy. Women in Canada Politics: Towards Equity in Representation. Toronto, CA: Dundurn Press, Ltd. 1991.

Newman, Stephen L. Constitutional Politics in Canada and the United States. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2004.

Pierson, Ruth and Marjorie Griffin Cohen. Canadian Womens Issues: Bold Visions. Halifax, CA: James Lorimer & Company, Ltd., 1995.

Young, Lisa. Feminists and Party Politics. British Columbia, CA: University of British Columbia Press, 2000.

Post-Feminism in the Wonder Bra Commercial

Post-feminism is a complex trend which has become a focus for researchers quite recently. The era of post-feminism is believed to start in the 1990s and it differs considerably from the times of feminism. Some call this period third wave feminism and note that it marks the change in peoples attitude towards feminism as well as womens roles (Coleman 9). Angela McRobbie also considers post-feminism as a new era in the western society. The researcher explains what post-feminism is and how it is changing the society. It is possible to trace this change through analysis of the image and text of the commercial for Wonder Bra.

When talking about feminism, people often focus on struggle against certain conventions in the society. Feminism is also associated with political and social structures which became a product of the struggle (Coleman 6). Feminists started the discourse concerning the impact females could have on the development of the society within social terrain. Lots of political and other organizations have been set up to assist women in their longing for political, scientific, business and other careers. Feminists of the 1970s spread their ideas via different sources. Importantly, media played an important role in the spread of these ideas. At the same time, media have changed feminism and marked the beginning of the post-feminist era.

Thus, McRobbie notes that media are generating images of attractive women who are aware of their sexuality (414). These women are often confident and self-sufficient (McRobbie 414). For instance, in the commercial mentioned above, Eva Herzigova is aware of her attractiveness and challenges men by revealing her sexual body. McRobbie notes that feminists fought for equality and certain independence during the era of feminism while modern women enjoy this independence in different ways (usually through their sexual independence, ability to earn money and do what they want) and take it for granted (417). McRobbie points out that post-feminism is chiding the feminist past as females are not trying to deprive themselves of femininity in order to prove the world they are equal to men (412). Feminists of the 1970s wanted to ignore numerous feminine qualities and inclinations in order to make females more empowered. However, equality is not a subject of discussion any more.

The advertisement in question shows this freedom of expressing femininity and making choices. Eva Herzigova is wearing a very seducing underwear and is inviting everyone (both men and women) to look at her body. This invitation can be regarded as a start of the new era of post-feminism when females are not meant to hide their sexuality and try to achieve results using qualities assigned to men (being aggressive, competitive and so on). Eva does not prove anything to anybody as she is free to reveal her femininity. More so, female body is not a taboo any more as Eva herself invites everybody to see her beauty (McRobbie 416). As has been mentioned above, Eva feels free and able to do what she wants with her feminity. She makes her choice.

Importantly, post-feminism is closely connected with the idea of a choice. Feminists used to strive for equality for women and men, and it was a must for a feminist to become a high achiever. Post-feminism gives women the right to choose whether they want to strive for career and/or political struggle or to be a housewife, a single and empowered woman and so on. As McRobbie puts it, post-feminism concentrates on dimensions of the popular discourses of personal choice and self-improvement (418).

The advertisement shows Evas choice and encourages other women to make their choices as well. Feminism would regard the advertisement as certain kind of exploitation of a womans body while post-feminism era gives a brand new perspective on the matter. Females are not afraid of becoming a mans toy as they feel free and empowered to do what they think is right without listening to men or other women.

In conclusion, it is possible to note that the advertisement of the Wonder Bra is a good example of major post-feminist ideas of choice and independence. It shows that women are not afraid of being feminine and can enjoy their femininity without being mocked at, insulted or oppressed. Women of the post-feminist era have the ability to choose their own path in the society. The woman can be a high-achiever, a house-wife or a sexy baby if she wants to. Females have become free and fearless to make decisions and be responsible for their choices.

Works Cited

Coleman, Jenny. An Introduction to Feminisms in a Postfeminist Age. Womens Studies Journal 23.2 (2009): 3-13. Print.

McRobbie, Angela. Post-Feminism and Popular Culture: Bridget Jones and the New Gender Regime. Media/Cultural Studies: Critical Approaches. Ed. Rhonda Hammer and Douglas Kellner. New York, NY: Peter Lang, 2009. 411-423. Print.

Radical Feminism Explains Prostitution

Introduction

Living on morally wrong earnings and exercising control over prostitutes are criminal offenses. Interestingly, at the same time as constructing prostitutes as a social class of ethically different and sexually indiscriminate women, the social critics also see them as different from other women by virtue of some type of relations that they possessed. Radical feminists see prostitution as a social problem caused by the low status of women in society and the patriarchal structure of society (Campbell and ONeill 78).

When discussing a proposed structure of prostitution, radical feminists recommend that young prostitutes should be remanded at an early stage in their working career in order to permit a full social report to be submitted. Prostitution is a social problem that affected society and its communal life. Prostitution is considered a criminal offense because of its illegal status in society. In practice, the only way that prostitution can be practiced without committing a criminal offense is as a one-to-one agreement between two consenting adults in the private sphere. Furthermore, while the law does not regulate the exact encounters or relations between prostitutes and men, it does control other relations that prostitutes have  mainly those which are judged to be abusive of prostitutes (Campbell and ONeill 76).

Prostitution Defined

In terms of radical feminism, prostitution is a result of gender differences and a dominant role of men in society. Sanders argues that womens oppression by men is generated by

  1. a labor market that is structured on the notion of men breadwinning and women dependetoy, which leads in the exclusion of women from effective economic contribution, and
  2. the segregation of domestic and child care duties from the labor market.

Sanders supposes that female employees with few marketable skills and little training are especially disadvantaged by such social system.

For Sanders, womens oppression and segregation are created by social and economic problems in which women have limited access to economic and financial means of supporting themselves and any dependents women may have, separately from men. Consequently, some women, of need, have to find another means of earning a living. In this part of her analysis, Sanders sees prostitutes as economic class and as employees who are the same as other female workers and not different by virtue of being criminal or socially undesirable people who are part of a abnormal social culture (Sanders 44).

Matthews defines prostitution as an economic activity. Prostitutes are women workers whose choice of employment is conditioned by capitalist relations of power and who resist those relations by achieving a degree of economic independence (44). In this situation, Matthews is trying to capture the fundamental influences structuring and channeling ordinary but oppressed women in a certain direction (towards involvement in prostitution) while accepthat female workerrkers do have choices. The evident disagreement between constructing prostitutes as both the same as and different from other female employees is resolved by Matthewss explanation of the legal discrimination experienced by prostitutes (Matthews 31).

Male Oppression

Noting particularly the sex-dominant behavior, the critics emphasize dorsoventral or male mounting. The main person in a pair did percent cent of the mounting regardless of its sex (Letherby et a 31). In natural social groups made up of both sexes, the dominant role usually falls to the men because of their superior size and strength and, as an effect, critics think of dorsoventral mounting as typically masculine. Its correlation with male supremacy may help to explain the oppressed behavior frequently observed in immature persons. Later, when the sex drive has become more specific, male behavior naturally predominates.

Oppressive male approaches remain restricted for the most part to the expression of supremacy. This would support the interpretation of prostitution behavior as an admission of social weakness and a supplication to the more powerful for favors. At this time a woman that normally enjoyed high dominance assumed a secondary role. In cases where it was usual for a woman to dominate a male, oestrus caused a reversal in relative rank (Sanders 20). Radical feminists underline that somewhat different findings are reported for free-ranging rhesus women. Under these conditions, men are at all times totally dominant over prostitute women (Day 43).

During oestrus, a womans status actually rises within her own sex group. This makes it difficult for the man to maintain his dominance, and he may have to use force to bring the woman to submission. At the same time males show more broadmindedness for the women, admitting her to closer association than normally and allowing her to feed with him from small food trays. The woman seems to gain this increased tolerance both by copulating with the male and by the mutual grooming which she seems to invite during the period of sexual skin activity (Letherby et a 34).

In the study to which critics referred above, ratings on dominance as well as on sexual behavior of prostitutes are determined (Letherby et a 34). They revealed a universal tendency for the men to lead and control and for the female to follow and assume a secondary role. It is this men violence which is responsible for the atypical copulations occurring outside of oestrus. To the command of a eccentric, unfriendly, dominant man, the more timid women may acquiesce regardless of sexual stage or preference. Other experiments are specifically designed to determine the effect of oestrus on dominance status following a technique introduced by Maslow, food tidbits are offered one at a time to a pair of prostitutes.

The results time and again showed the dominant person, whether male or female, to yield priority at the food chute to a woman partner in heat. In mates, the male that is usually in control of the situation permitted his woman to take all the food in exchange for sexual favors while she was in her swelling. In the less usual cases of women dominance, it is the women that yielded privilege during heat.

Where two women are paired, the dominant one was likely to grant privilege to the secondary during the latters swelling. If the dominant parsons are receptive herself, she might encourage or permit the other to act as men. In experiments where the expectation of success was more nearly equalized for the partners by a technique of prefeeding, genital swelling was still a decided asset in the females attempt to obtain food at the chute. They enjoyed this advantage whether paired with men or other women whose ovaries had been removed (Letherby et a 56).

In prostitutes, oestrus is responsible for readjustments in the social relationship between the genders and sexes. It would be an oversimplification to describe these changes as shifts in dominance status. In the prostitutes, although the male maintains strict dominance over the female, he allows her greater privileges than when she is not receptive. In the prostitutes the general pattern is for dominance in the food situation to be temporarily traded in for sexual accommodation.

An oestrous woman may entice her dominant mate away from the chute or, on the other hand, may funding privilege to her subordinate man presumably in return for favors. Analogous conclusions are applicable to women pairings. Oestrus affects prostitutes dominance, to be sure, but does not bear the fixed relationship to it that one might expect if the physiological factors are solely responsible. In the prostitutes, the physiological state affords a means of shifting the existing dominance status in line with the motivation uppermost at the moment. At the anthropoid level, the sociosexual relations depend on shared recognition and agreement. To the biological function of mating, companionship is added as an end in itself. As we have noted, personality differences, with all they entail in the way of compatibility or its opposite, become conspicuous.

Like married couples, prostitute mates present a variety of conjugal pictures (Day 98). Although there are as definite sex differences in behavior as in figure, independence seems more influential than fixed traits of masculinity and femininity. Many factors affect social relations and responses. Significant as are such physical characteristics as size, strength, and vigor, we should be careful not to underestimate emotional traits. In conclusion, critics may point out that within the primates, biological mechanisms are increasingly less rigid in their operation and the social influences more numerous and intricate in their effects. Personality makes its appearance, and sexual as well as other specific behaviors must be viewed in relationship to the total structure (Letherby et a 65).

The patriarchal home, the established pattern for economic as well as social reasons, offers little opportunity for independent family living, but the need for it is recognized, especially among the modern younger generation. The higher up in the social and economic scale and the more educated, the greater is the number of separate families, each with its own compound. But whether there are separate homes or not, the feeling for the large family group remains and the dominant position of the head of the family is an accepted fact.

Yet, though the traditional authority of the husband may not in general be questioned, educated women have considerable influence in family affairs and there is a growing sense of partnership in marriage which is the natural result of mutual interests through education. Social life is also reaching beyond the narrow limits of the immediate family to include the ramifications of the larger family relationship, and even the broader circle of close friends (Moghissi, 92). The degree of social intermingling varies with individual families. A number of young married couples who are quite advanced and Westernized meet regularly for small social gatherings in their homes.

These normal social groups of young married couples, though numerically negligible, represent a significant departure from the traditional social segregation required by the veil, and are an example for other liberal groups. The members are usually those who studied in Europe and America and most of them are in educational or Government service, or young business men with their wives, who may have been in the United States.

Of basic concern to educated Afghan women, as to Moslem women elsewhere, are the two related problems of polygamy and divorce. The uneducated women accept fatalistically whatever comes. The small educated minority is aware of social injustice and legal inequality, but as a whole makes no vocal protest. Some returned students seriously discuss polygamy and voice an adverse opinion (Sanders 20).

Economic Inequality

Letherby underlines that not only are prostitutes the same as other women, but that prostitution is the same as any other form of business activity. Thus, in terms of radical feminism, prostitution is activity caused by oppression and dominance of men in all legal spheres. Jeffreys idea of proposition is that this activity is like any other form of work; thus prostitution displaces the construction of social order and legal activity and replaced it with the structure of prostitutes as workers.

Letherby (12) states that the economic position and poverty descriptive model has shifted and added an additional difficulty to the types of issue that can be asked about prostitutes and prostitution and the possible answer that can be provided. Jeffreys combines this with a separation between the practice of selling sex and prostitution as a social institution, which enabled the author to raise questions about how womens involvement in prostitution is planned by the same (or similar) social, landscape and ideological activities as those structuring and conditioning all females financial participation.

Davidson (34) underlines that the close link in the chain of views about females involvement in prostitution that mens oppression and criminal subculture explanations explored is a multifaceted development in the story of prostitutes. In addition to following a radical feminist analysis, the social disorganization and criminal subculture explanations questioned (1) the exact social conditions in which participation in prostitution becomes likely, and (2) the different approaches in which prostitutes make sense of their lives in sex selling. The financial position and oppression explanatory model picked up and explored the first of these two issues and it is that expansion which is outlined by Davidson (65).

One of the more important consequences of Davidsons idea of the difference between prostitutes and other women is that little theoretical freedom is left for others to follow more elaborate and multifaceted issues about the similarities between prostitutes and other women. On the other hand, this analysis does offer some promising theoretical explanation of prostitution and its role in the patriarchal world. Of particular significance is supposition that the differences that exist between prostitutes and other women are primarily social. This explanation is maintained throughout analysis, for failure to do so would have prevented an assessment of the unique and socially specific circumstances of existence for prostitutes.

As noted above, this assumption provokes questions about the specificity of the communal processes experienced by prostitute female workers, which in turn provokes an assessment of the specific sets of practices and relationships in which prostitutes are located.

Thus an analysis that places prostitute women in their culturally and historically specific social context is enabled. Davidson (22) deals with the social conditions that influence females participation in prostitution and their personal interpretations of those conditions including oppression and gender inequality. The authors agree that patriarchal structure of community and lack of state support results in the way the women themselves look for the prostitution experience and it is this, not the objective reality of the situation, which influences their economic situation and social behavior.

Gender Differences

The ma,e oppression and criminal behavior provides a more complex account of womens participation in prostitution, and some of the possibilities inherent in the pathological explanations are picked up and developed. Although Campbell and ONeill (32) follow a more intricate (and more sociological) set of issues about womens involvement in prostitution, they are, however, reluctant to shed all notions of pathology. The chant of the notion of psychological deviance in what is otherwise a sociological analysis of prostitution, is partly influenced by Letherbys (87) totalising message of difference, which resulted in her failure to provide a fully social analysis of prostitution.

Men see women as a weak gender that needs control. Thus this control is achieved by objectifying the bodies of women and oppressing them. Females who become prostitutes feel a state of drifting and disconnection from community; a social rootlessness that is resulting on various social deficiencies, so that participation in prostitution offers them compensation.

Social Perception of Prostitution

Radical feminists underline that prostitutes can be seen as poor women but this explanation does not replace the conceptual differentiation between prostitutes and other women. As an alternative, one of the issues informing the three analyses was: why do all poor women not become prostitutes? This issue opens the theoretical gap for questions about the moral differences between prostitutes and other women, which in turn created the circumstances for an increasingly intricate body of knowledge about sex workers. Therefore prostitutes failure to conform to expected behaviors, according to the social structure of gender roles in society, must be evidence of their difference and their social oppression (Matthews 65).

Brooks-Gordon (31) states that conception of distinction structures a concomitant origin of similarity between prostitutes and other women, ultimately prostitutes are presented as completely different from other women in all-aspects of their community lives. In terms of radical feminism, this building of difference is combined in Brooks-Gordons text with the removal of the separation line she drew earlier between prostitutes and prostitution: prostitute women became synonymous with their subcultural location.

Having discussed symbol of prostitutes as different from other women by virtue of their oppression and segregation prior to their involvement in prostitution and their subcultural location afterwards, it is essential to note that, inconsistently, the author also sees prostitutions as being the same as other women. As noted above, the hypothesis that all people are forever searching for ways of belonging permitted her to invoke a normalizing argument whereby prostitutes are normal social actors embedded in deviant social networks (Brooks-Gordon 65). By radical feminists, prostitutes are also depicted as the same as other women because they occupy a social culture that exists in tandem with normal society.

For Day (41), the prostitute social culture is not different (in the sense of radically distinct and separate) from normal community, but only a refraction from normal society. This conceptualization of the social culture position of prostitutes is not unique to Day (42). Many of the explanations of deviance that have highlighted the social culture position of females have represented deviant social culture as existing either in opposition culture, whereby the principles and norms that guide women behavior and actions are a response against mainstream culture, or in tandem with mainstream culture, whereby the social norms and values are a vague mirror-image of mainstream norms and principles.

The oppression of women and criminal subculture explanatory model focuses on womens relationship to, and position in, the wider community to explain their involvement in prostitution. Issues are asked about the extent to which female workers are segregated, or cut off, from legitimate or acceptable communal relationships and institutions, and attention is focused on the degree to which they may have fallen through what are perceived as normal, constraining social groups and relations such as the family or employment.

In addressing what it means to be a sex worker, integration and engagement in illegal and often illegal relations and institutions is stressed so that the degree of involvement in, for instance, a criminal subculture, can be mentioned. In its ideal type, the community dislocation and criminal behavior model posits a social problem, whereby involvement in prostitution is seen as the result of subtle and complex social segregation.

Thus, for instance, prostitute women are seen as belonging to and committed to a normative society that makes their involvement in prostitution virtually inevitable. Klingers (16) analysis is a long description of the various social practices that females who become prostitutes go through and the environments they occupy, and how those practices and environments guide and channel them into low classes. By examining those practices the social researcher can uncover Klingers construction of prostitutes as social satellites.

By radical feminism, prostitution is seen as constituting two particular evils: a problem of public annoyance and a problem of community sexual health. Hence prostitutes are seen as the objects of both criminal justice (through arrest, conviction and the imposition of fines) and sexual and community health interference (educating them in terms of their high-risk practices). The circumstances that make these interventions promising are structured and underpinned by the fact that current authorized framework constitutes prostitute females as unlike other women by virtue of their supposedly diverse sexual principles and morals and by the assumed threat that prostitutes bodies and lifestyle pose to the general community.

Campbell and ONeill (41) underline that understanding of prostitutes is constituted within the spaces created by other theories, and thus the issues that can be asked about womens involvement in prostitution and the explanations that can be provided have become increasingly complicated and detailed. For instance, conceiving of sex workers as different and low social class because they inhabit a criminal community a gap that makes issues and explanations about the specificity of the different social processes experienced by prostitute women rather more complex.

Radical feminists reject the idea of mental differences but see prostitution as social and economic oppression only. It is the body of sociological and criminological literature on position, furthermore, that provides the basis for assumption that sex workers are indeed both different from and the same as ordinary women.

Certainly the sex workers discussed above are described with the purpose of exploring how they make sense of the contradiction that has been the central point of scholastic work on prostitution, that is, their being both different from and similar to other females. Prostitutes are not located within the restraining and constraining relations and institutions that lock non-prostitute women into legitimate community and into regular and accepted practices and ways of behaving. Females who become prostitutes live outside mainstream community. In this respect Letherby (31) constructs prostitutes as different from non-prostitute women by virtue and as a result of inequalities and gender differences existed in modern society.

In sum, radial feminists have an impact on consciousness and self-identity of prostitutes. The importance of feminist movement is that it helps women to overcome old traditions and adopt a life style, start education and enter workforce. At the same time that equal opportunity policies are beginning to be implemented, many policy-makers and activists are questioning the extent to which equal opportunity policy is an effective strategy for reducing the wage gap.

Instead, it is being suggested that equal opportunity policy needs to be supplemented by other policies specifically designed to attack that problem head-on. Once a female involves in prostitution a process of stabilization occurs. The female worker finds a sense of embeddedness and belonging that was before impossible: Prostitutes become normal, if abnormal, members of community in that they are hooked into specific and deviant social organizations and structures.

References

Brooks-Gordon, B. The Price of Sex: Prostitution, Policy and Society. Willan Publishing, 2006.

Campbell, R., ONeill, Sex work Now. Willan Publishing, 2006.

Day, S. On the Game: Women and Sex Work (Anthropology, Culture and Society). Pluto Press, 2007.

Davidson, J. Prostitution, Power and Freedom. The University of Michigan Press, 1999.

Jeffreys, Sh. The Idea of Prostitution. Spinifex Press, 1997.

Klinger, K. Prostitution Humanism and a Womans Choice. The Humanist, 63, 2003: 16-18.

Leuchtag, A. Human Rights Sex Trafficking and Prostitution. The Humanist, 63, 2003: 10-12.

Letherby, G. et al. Sex as Crime? Willan Publishing, 2009.

Matthews, R. Prostitution, Politics and Policy. Routledge-Cavendish; 1 edition, 2008.

Sanders, T. Paying for Pleasure: Men Who Buy Sex. Willan Publishing; illustrated edition edition, 2008.

Delia and Jig as the Feminist Women Characters

Sweat and Hills Like White Elephants are stories about women who are entirely different from each other. Although they have complicated relationships with their husbands, both girls find the strength to survive. This paper aims to describe why Delia and Jig are dynamic characters and name the circumstances that create conflict for Delia ad Jig.

Both women have a dynamic character, even though they are both feminine and gentle. Jig first patiently listens to her husbands statements that abortion is not a big thing. But then the reader notices that Jig can object to her husband. Jig uses sarcasm quite cleverly to present to him how cold and cruel he is to her (Hemingway 10). Delia, too, at first does not show resistance to her abusive husband Sykes, but one day she tells him that she will not tolerate him anymore in her house.

The main circumstance that antagonizes Jig is the addiction of the American to an idle lifestyle. An expression of this idleness is his love of absinthe, as evidenced by the thrill with which the American speaks about the drink (Hemingway 11). At the end of the story, he goes to a bar to drink a glass of Anis Del Toro before he and Jig board the train to Madrid.

As for Delia, her husband Sykes tries to turn her life into a nightmare, self-asserting at the expense of his wife. One day he brings a snake into the house, which is an expression of his hatred for Delia (Hurston 28). However, by coincidence, the snake attacks Sykes, and he dies from her bite. Delia, frightened by the cries of her husband, realizes that the doctors will not have enough time to save him (Hurston 33). Another thing complicating Delias life is hard work, symbolized by a huge basket of dirty laundry, which she has to wash for weeks on end, as if she is a washer.

Thus, it was described why Delia and Jig are dynamic characters, and the circumstances that create conflict for Delia and Jig were named. They are ready to confront their husbands, and it proves that their characters are dynamic. At the same time, values hostile to Jig are symbolized with Anis Del Toro, and objects that complicate the life of Delia are a snake and piles of dirty linen.

Works Cited

Hemingway, Ernest. Hills like white elephants. Men without women (1927).

Hurston, Zora Neale. Sweat. Rutgers University Press, 1997.

Social Science and Sexuality: Aspects of Feminism

Introduction

The life of human beings on this Earth has always been a very complicated matter. This has been so due to some factors  natural, physical, psychological, and others. From the initial stages of its existence, mankind tried to structure relations between human beings and between their small and large groups. Some scientists believe that mankind was formed only after the first pre-historic society appeared.

They say that before living in a state from people lived in a wild form of existence which was the reason why the construction of society was necessary. People wanted to have some security, some guarantee that their property will remain theirs tomorrow and no one will come and take it, as well as their lives, away. Either according to this theory, the theory of a social agreement, or according to Darwins evolutionary theory, the formation of the society was an inevitable stage of human development (Baird, 2001).

Thesis

As soon as the society was established, at first in its simple forms, then in more complicated ones, people felt the desire to study the phenomena and the processes that take place in the society they live in. Firstly, philosophy dealt with it but in the middle of the 19th century, social science was established as the separate branch of science that deals exclusively with social events and processes (Bozon, 1996). One of the processes it deals with is the interrelation between society and sexuality during the development of mankind. This topic has several main points and we are going to consider them in this essay.

They are gender issues, i. e. the problem of equal rights for men and women, the role of women in social and cultural life and the struggle for the shift of this role, feminism, as well as the rights of people with different sexual orientations, i. e. gays, and lesbians. The major claims of social science in the past, and they remain one of the basic ones in it, were that ideas that society is a place where all people of different races, sexes, religions, and preferences can live with equal rights, obligations. and possibilities. Thus, the main controversies of the interrelations between the concepts of sexuality and social science are derived from its main claims.

In reality, there was no equality in the past until people who were discriminated against started fighting for their rights. In modern society, social science also deals with the problems of social discrimination based on different biological and social factors. So, this is the main issue in respect of the correlation between social science and the concept of sexuality.

Women in Early Societies

Social science tries to trace the development of the phenomena of sexuality in the history of human society. It studies all stages of the development of society and it is now evident that human society is moving towards the equality of rights of both sexes. But it has not always been so and history presents a great area for work in this direction. At the beginning of the social life of human beings, the rights of women were considerably higher than the rights of men.

In numerous pre-historic societies there very often were cases when women were heads of certain social groups, clans, and tribes. This phenomenon was called to be a matriarchy, and although the cases are very rare nowadays, it still exists in some countries or tribes whose development remains at the level of the pre-historic people. In times of matriarchy, women ruled the society, participated in wars. and decided political affairs which then started being considered as the mans work (Braizer, 2001).

There was no need for the struggle for equal rights because they were equal and men did not protest against the then state of things. The cult of a woman was very strong as the humans of early societies understood that life is given by a woman and this is the basic reason why women can be superior to the opposite sex (Voss, 2007).

Middle Ages and Religion

But with time the situation started changing and males acquired more and more power in society. This shift began in the period of the Middle Ages when religion acquired great power over peoples minds and lives. If in the pre-historic period the spiritual basis of human existence consisted in different myths they created and believed in, then in the epoch of Christianity beliefs changed to a single religion that became dominant.

In the pre-historic myths, the role of women was great. They were Goddesses, powers of nature, even the Earth itself was thought of as a female being because it gave birth to everything in the world. Religion, on the contrary, limited the role of a woman to a housewife that had no right to participate in the social, political, or cultural life of the society. Thus, beginning from that time, the role of a woman was so limited that men were considered to be the only rightful members of the society while women were thought of as their parts that have no rights for independent existence. Christianity, of course, did not deny that women give birth to all people and made it the basis for its ideology, but then women were put into such limits that can not be called humane. According to the religious beliefs, the main ideas of a woman were obedience, submissiveness, humility, and other phenomena of the same kind.

This meant that women should not participate in mens activities which do not always presuppose the above-mentioned values. In Islamic countries, the state of things became even worse as women were not even allowed to show their faces in the presence of men other than their husbands. Despite this fact, in many cultures and religions women play very significantly, sometimes even fundamental roles, for example, the Blessed Virgin Mary in Christianity or the cult of a woman as a keeper of the house and the family in Hinduism.

In India, it is common to display respect to women according to religious tradition, but in real life women seldom see their husbands before their weddings. They can not make decisions and any manifestation of disobedience to parents or husband is unimaginable there. The picture was the same in the Moslem countries, as well as in Christian societies, but recently the situation has changed for the better (Weston, 1998).

Feminism

But have you ever asked yourself a question as to why the situation changes? To my mind, the answer is simple  women started struggling for their rights and, in addition, a lot of men have understood that women must have equal rights with them. The struggle for the equality of rights for women in comparison to men was called the feminist movement, although the name came much later than the essence of the movement was developed.

Already in times of Reformation in the 16th century, women claimed the equality of rights because they saw that the power of religion was weakening. The voices became louder during the 17  18th centuries when several significant events took place, the main important among them being The Great French Revolution that proclaimed equality and freedom for everybody. Nevertheless, the basis of the feminist movement was established in the 19th century in the USA and the United Kingdom of Northern Ireland and Great Britain. The catalyst for feminism was the movement for the right for women to vote at elections in Great Britain.

Then the idea of equal rights in all spheres of social life appeared and was developed by the three waves of feminism. But some other scholars tend to claim that another reason for feminism was the industrial revolution in the world. As far as the development of technology presented more working places and more opportunities for men, they were taken away from the houses to earn money and feed families. Meanwhile, women were to face great amounts of housework and were bound to it for their whole lives. It is no wonder, that such a state of things did not satisfy women and they started to form movements that later became known as feminism (Weston, 1998).

Aspects of Sexuality

In different countries the situation was also different, that is why feminism can not be treated too generic. Women in some areas demanded equal rights for men and women in the society, while others, who were radically oriented, struggled for the return of matriarchy and for the destruction of the society that, as they thought, was created by males and for males only. In these types of feminist movements, liberal and radical feminism, we can observe the picture of the relations between males and females in different cultures and see how they changed through time. In other words, we can trace how the concept of sexuality developed in societies that had different cultures and values.

For example, in the Western countries, like members of the European Union, or the United States of America, sexuality is not a very burning topic because these regions have already overcome this issue due to the democratization of their societies (Muszynski, 2000). In these countries women are recognized as rightful members of the society, they can vote at elections and be elected to the legislative or executive bodies of their countries. In some countries, women even reach the position of President. Examples of this are Germany, Great Britain, and some other countries. In Asian countries, this process is also successful, although not to such an extent as in Europe and the USA.

Asian countries not only allow women to vote but also can be ruled by women, for example, Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan or Gandhi in India. Countries of Latin America are still under the great influence of the concept of machismo, i. e. male superiority that can not be doubted. This concept also used to limit freedoms of women in Mexico, Argentina, Chile, and other countries but recently even there the progress has been noticed, as women can vote and be elected, can participate in social and cultural life without coming into conflict with the ideals of their society (Mauro, 2004).

Social Science and Motherhood

One more important point that shows the connection between social science and sexuality is the relations between women and society, and namely between the women who have children and the rest of the society. This point is so significant because the status of women with children was undeservedly low in the past. That is why social science, and its prominent representatives like Adrienne Rich, have tried to find out the reasons for such a state of things.

The breaking point of this very problem is the distortion of the importance of such a social institution as motherhood. Scholars in social science noticed this process long ago and defined its main features saying the following. Throughout the history of mankind, people did not doubt the fact that all human life was born by women and there will be no human life without women. But at the same time, society tried to lower the role of women a much as possible by different religious, cultural, and even political means. By this, the role of a woman who gives birth to life was reduced to being a housekeeper.

Thus, the institution of motherhood, instead of being a pride for every woman, became a phenomenon that limited womens possibilities in human society. Women with children had to stay at home and take care of their babies. They did not have any chance to work or to be involved in any kind of social work or political activities. Even in recent years, the institution of motherhood has been more like a disadvantage for a woman who tries to find a job, than a thing that will make her proud. According to the laws, the employers that hire women who have children have to provide those women with certain benefits, parental leaves, and special care for their children.

As far as this involves quite high levels of expenses, the employers prefer not to have in their staff women with children or pregnant women. Furthermore, if a woman working in a company becomes pregnant, the employers prefer to fire her and hire another worker instead than pay for all the expenses that her motherhood could involve.

Or, as Sharon Hays exemplifies it, if a woman has to take care of her child in hospital while there are some assignments that she must fulfill at work, the employers do not understand the priority of a child to the work and either implement certain sanctions and fines against this woman or fire her at all (Hays, 2006). So, these are the main points of connection between social science and sexuality with which feminists and social activists are fighting to bring genuine equality in human society (Weston, 1998).

Homosexuals and Lesbians

Having considered the interrelation between social science and sexuality as the relationships between two sexes, we must not forget about the relations that can occur between the representatives of the same sex, i. e. homosexual relations whether between men or between women. This issue is one of the main concerns of social science nowadays, as far as this kind of relationship occurs more and more often in the modern society which strives for equality of rights, freedoms, and preferences (Baird, 2001). This point was also important in the past as it influenced considerably the social life of these people as well as the people they were surrounded by.

Different social conflicts occurred because the people with different sexual orientations wanted equal rights with those who are heterosexuals, and as a result, certain progress was achieved in this respect (Munk, 1998).

In the past, homosexual relations were prohibited by law in many countries, for example in the USSR or Great Britain. Criminal cases were filed against homosexuals and lesbians, and they had either to go to jail or hide their relations thus creating a layer of the society that was in a hidden conflict with the state power and with the bulk of that very society (Moore, 2001). But recently, there have been certain improvements for homosexual people. In many countries, social movements for the equal rights of homosexuals appeared, and as a result of their activity, they got more freedoms and rights in society. Nowadays, homosexual marriages are allowed legally in many countries. Besides, a homosexual can not only participate in social life but also become a politician and influence all aspects of the life of society.

Conclusion

To conclude, the aim of it was to study the relation of social science and sexuality in all its aspect and to find out the reasons for this or that kind of events that take place in the society concerning the phenomenon of sexuality. We managed to achieve the set goals in this research essay and see how sexuality developed together with the development of human society on the whole. We considered the historic stages of social development and sexuality and the issues connected with it. We can see now, that the situation with the quality of rights for both sexes, as well as for those with different sexual orientations changed drastically over the past few years.

Social science deals with the issues of society and sexuality as one of its aspects. Social science is a great science that studies the most important for humans  the development of the largest social institution, society, in all aspects and tries to explain some current or past events to predict the development of the society in the future.

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