Women's Rights Movement Analysis

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The women’s rights movement gave roots to the creation of new organizations that supported and encouraged the walk towards the right for women to vote. In the early 20th century two organizations were created in supporting the suffrage movement. The National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was under the leadership of Carrie Chapman Catt. In the article Reforming their World, Women in the Progressive Era stated “the NAWSA undertook campaigns to enfranchise women in individual states, and simultaneously lobbied President Wilson and Congress to pass a woman suffrage Constitutional Amendment” (para. 3). The NASWSA was constituted by millions of members, and their mission was to educate the public in bringing awareness of the women’s …show more content…
In the article The 1960s-70s American feminist movement: breaking down barriers for women, members of the feminist movement “traveled abroad to meet Vietnamese women who were against the war in that country, in an effort to build sisterly anti-war solidarity. Meanwhile, feminists with roots in the labor movement launched local groups to organize women workers, improve their working conditions, and fight for their equal rights on the job. Black feminists targeted such issues as child care, police repression, welfare, and healthcare, and founded the National Black Feminist Organization in 1973” (Para. 23). These women founded services such as rape crisis centers, women’s shelter, health clinics and many more in by providing services that would beneficial to their needs and in empowering women across the …show more content…
This conversation then ignited a convention in Seneca Falls, Eisenberg and Ruthsdotter (1998) explained the purpose for this convention was “to discuss the social, civil, and religious condition and rights of woman” (para.6). These patriotic women saw their mission to help improve the new republic in living lives as citizens. Elizabeth Stanton created the Declaration of Sentiments where she carefully underlined the areas of life where women were treated unjustly. The Declaration of Sentiments was presented in the notion of realism. Stanton put forth these social issues women faced in bring consciousness to the public; her ultimate goal was to promote social change and a better future. Stanton mentioned as her opening statement that “The history of mankind is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man toward woman, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her” (Eisenberg and Ruthsdotter,1 998). This declaration then resulted in twelve resolutions to the presented inquiries. In 1850, the first National Women’s Right convention took place attracting more than 1,000 participants both women and men. This convention was symbolic as it encouraged great leaders to join the movement in working towards women’s right to vote by means of a constitutional amendment. These women worked