Thursday, November 28, 2019
Lizanne de Beer, 2014120162 Essays (445 words) - Womens Rights
  Lizanne   de Beer, 2014120162       ENGL 3728: SEMINAR   - INTERRACIAL ADOPTION       Mrs Hanta Henning       14 August 2017            Opinion piece: Does feminism have a place in the world?       All types of feminism are concerned with improving the lives of women. All feminists are also committed to analysing women's present position in the world and trying to understand its causes in   order to improve it. W   ithin this common understanding of the importance of feminist knowledge, there is much room for considerable (and constant) disagreement. Such disagreement is not only about the means through which the position of women is improved, but also about   what   such improvement would be.        In the sixties, feminists began to question various images, representations, ideas and presumptions traditional theories have developed about women and the feminine. To begin with, feminists directed their attention to patriarchal discourses, those which were   either openly hostile or   aggressive about women, or those which had nothing at all to say about women. Femin   ists seemed majorly preoccupied with the inclusion of women in those spheres from which they have been excluded - they were trying to create representations which would enable women to be regarded as men's equals. Issues of direct relevance to women's lives - the family, sexuality, the private' and domestic sphere - were to be included, in some instances for the very first time, as a relevant and worthy object of intellectual and political concern.        While problematic and   in the long run   impossible, the aspiration towards equality between men and women was and   is   nevertheless politically and historically necessary. Without such attempts, women cannot que   stion the   inevitability of women's second-class status as citizens, subjects and sexual beings. The aim of feminism and equality serves as a political, and perhaps as an experiential, prerequisite to the more far-reaching struggles directed towards female   autonomy   - that is, to women's right to political, social, economic and intellectual self-determination.   This seems probably the most striking shift in feminist politics since its revival in the 60s.        As women are constantly trying to strengthen their identity, their roles become increasingly more flexible. Instead of defining them as narrow, traditional ways, women begin to interpret more broadly roles, bonds with o   thers, and expectations. Because of feminists, women no longer feel obligated, as did our ancestors, to undertake certain responsibilities such as marriage or child-bearing. Our freedom rests in our ability to   choose   the values we designate as the most sacred.      Women must honour   the values of their new   convictions   about gender by preventing former restrictive values from reappearing and   exercising   influence in their lives - and therefore, feminism will   always   have a place in this world.    
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