Feminism And Society

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This chapter discusses how gender affects and influences society, asking whether the feminist movement is in a state of abeyance. According to what I am observing via the news and social media, it is not; feminism is garnering a lot of attention and participation. The topic of gender equality is very popular in the news media right now, and state after state is legalizing marriage equality. People are becoming more outspoken about the need for gay rights and the irrational, biased nature of its prohibition. People who work in government have also displayed such stupidity and ignorance when it comes to abortion, Planned Parenthood’s services, women’s needs, the definition of rape, and the female reproductive system that the resulting outrage has spurred a seemingly sustained updraft or social movement cycle of pro-feminist politics. A state of oppression is not infinitely sustainable and the oppressive party (the GOP) is bound to lose support or have power taken away from them eventually. Like Auguste Comte says, love is one of the founding principles of a positive society; the idea behind social support is ultimately rooted in empathy or the ability to love.
There are many similarities between social movements that present themselves during a social movement cycle, and the gay rights movement is largely similar to the civil rights movement of the sixties. The arguments for/against gay equality are nearly identical to the arguments for/against Black equality, and the same thing said of gay people today used to be said about left-handed people during the middle ages. There are also many similarities between the negative images of man-beating, “bra-burning” feminists during the second wave of feminism to the images of “death panels...

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...ty, class, and race will all stem from my own personal experiences, which are and will always be contingent upon my gender, sexuality, class, race, et cetera. That is, I will only experience one flat side of a very multifaceted, multidimensional system that affects many different people, as my body is not simply a small light-skinned female vehicle for the universal human consciousness. Additionally, from an individualist perspective, I do not simply appear female; my femininity has always influenced how I view myself, how I interact with people, and how I have been treated in return. This ultimately affects my feelings and perception of what people and society are like. The subsequent formation of my particular female consciousness and way of being on earth could be classified as interactionist, since the way people see me and react to me helps me form my identity.

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