Role of Women in Freedom Struggle Essay

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    During the medieval period women were limited in life choices. They are either to be marry off by their father or to be a priestess. Marriage was a contract between two families and that women were treated as objects. They were to be the perfect maidens and “the emblem of all man 's strivings for self-perfection and self-fulfillment-for his ‘joye’ and ‘solas’ (Hanning, 580).” In the Canterbury Tales, Wife of Bath’s character presents a different perspective of what the audience believe a…

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    The post-Independence, postcolonial narratives work out the constructs of the nation and analyze its text The dis¬courses or narratives written then and later address the issues of the 'new' nation-mapping of territorial spaces, the re¬grouping of communities, peoples, cultures, languages into a homogenous identity of being Indian and belonging to India. Within this text of national identity runs the sub-text of centrality and marginality. The schemes of the nation include or exclude people,…

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    Literature Against Oppression Freedom of being who you are and acceptance is something that people with blessing overlook, and people without it strive to attain. Throughout American literature and history, problems of injustice have always been present. Sadly, many just accept that the fact that they are detested by society, very few know how to fight against it. The community has a way of creating a variety of oppression groups, American Literature being no exception, such as race and gender…

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    that women held during the 1980’s as well as depicts a difference between a traditional route to motherhood and a non-traditional route to motherhood. In the 1980’s, women were expected to continue to take care of the home and children regardless if they worked or not. Women’s education was on the rise since they wanted to pursue more fulfilling career. “By 1984, 49% of undergraduate college degrees… 49% of all master’s degrees and about 33% of all doctoral degrees… were being awarded to women”…

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    populace. All were expected to adhere to their designated societal role – men the workers, women the caregivers. In A Doll’s House, Henrik Ibsen probes the problems of the roles assigned to women in a male-oriented society. For women, their sharply defined roles did not allow for individuality, forcing them to sacrifice their identity in order to fit into society. A Doll’s House assess the dichotomy between who women are and who women are expected to be. Ibsen’s characters serve as a reflection…

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    therefore, "most women throughout history have been enslaved by men" (1).Until recent times, women have been deprived of being involved in the political, cultural and religious institutions. They were deprived of owning property or inheriting lands and wealth. Since ancient times until the twentieth century, "some cultures practiced what anthropologists have called ritual widow murder" (1).To illustrate, women used to commit suicide shortly after the death of their husbands. In addition, Women…

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    incoming eclipse by his father. When Omovo follows a mysterious veiled women into the woods, he witnesses the realities of war, which altered his whole Childhood and his understanding of political realities such as war. “Boys and Girls” takes place in Jubilee, Ontario, Canada in a small village, where the protagonist is a teenage girl who begins finding her true identity, however due to her race and her gender, she struggles to express her goals and cravings in her life due to social realities.…

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    were two prominent Americans to struggle against racism, discrimination and they too had to suffer quite a lot for Black emancipation. Martin is considered was an African-American leader and human rights activist who demanded an end to racial discrimination against blacks in 1964. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and was the youngest to hold it. Assassinated on April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King was one of the most important figures who fought for freedom and human rights. Luther founded the…

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    needs. And this is exactly what Jane Austen depicts the society in the past; there wasn’t really a choice in life. It’s either you marry and live a better life or wait for love and struggle with debt. In Susan Morgan’s study of the novel (1975), “Pride and Prejudice explores the special question of the meaning of freedom, given the premise which Jane Austen assumes throughout her fiction, that the relation between a character and public reality is at once problematic and necessary” (2). We see…

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    Personal fulfillment can not be attributed to genes and is not stagnant, constantly evolving with the human race and the advancement of individuals in their desire to unearth the part of themselves that society has buried. Every individual is destined for something different, knit together for a unique purpose. All dealt our own deck of cards, it is up to every individual to decide whether they will fold or continue to play the game. Woven into a variety of stories, clues on how to to obtain…

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