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“The Women’s Movement”

“The Women’s Movement”. Jo Freeman. History of Women’s Movement. 1970: Most scholars dismissed the Complaints Women Ferris (1971), for example, suggested there was no identifiable socio-economic reasons why women would be discontent in the 1970s. Scholars were asking the wrong questions.

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“The Women’s Movement”

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  1. “The Women’s Movement” Jo Freeman

  2. History of Women’s Movement 1970: Most scholars dismissed the Complaints Women Ferris (1971), for example, suggested there was no identifiable socio-economic reasons why women would be discontent in the 1970s. Scholars were asking the wrong questions.

  3. History of Women’s Movement Structural Preconditions for the Development of SM Study of Women’s movement must be concerned with structural preconditions for the development of SM. Key Questions: Where did the people who made up the original organizing cadre come from? How did they come together? How did they come to share a similar view of the world?

  4. Development of the Women’s Movement Three Propositions: Proposition 1: Need an Pre-existing Communication Networks Proposition 2: This network must be Co-optable to the ideas of the emerging SM Proposition 3: With a Co-optable comm. network, two other conditions must be meet: a. A crisis galvanizes the network into action. b. One or more persons begin organizing a new organization or disseminating a new idea.

  5. Origins of Women’s Movement Origins of Women’s Movement: Freeman identifies the Origins and Structure of the Women’s Movement in the following two traditions: 1) Reform: Women Rights 2) Radical: Women’s Liberation Generational and Organization Differences Each Tradition (or Branch) had its own style of organization.

  6. Origins of Women’s Movement Older and Younger Branches of Women’s Movement Older Branch: OB Core Organization: NOW: National Org of Women Programs: focus on legal and economic issues Organization: traditional, formal: elected officers, board of directors, bylaws, etc. Structure: top-down lacked a mass base.

  7. Origins of Women’s Movement Older and Younger Branches of Women’s Movement Younger Branch: YB Core Organization: no real centralized national organization. Programs: more confrontational Organization: prides itself on the lack of organization, “communication was haphazard” Structure: saw structure as inherently conservative, and leaders as Elitist endorsed a “policy of ‘structurelessness.”

  8. Origins of Women’s Movement Origin of Branches: Older Branch OB: 1961 President’s Commission on the Status of Women, and resulting 50 state commissions. State Commissions State comms. did three things to promote WM: 1) Brought women together 2) Highlighted gender discrimination 3) Promoted a sense that change was possible

  9. Origins of Women’s Movement Origin of Branches: Older Branch Other factors that helped organize the OB of WM: 1) 1963 publication of Feminine Mystique 2) Inclusion if “sex” provision to Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act

  10. Origins of Women’s Movement Origin of Branches: Older Branch YB: originated in politics and tactics of the Civil Rights, New Left and Anti-War movements. Radical Left Community and YB: Radical community provided communication network, and ideas/analysis for women’s inequality.

  11. Origins of Women’s Movement Four Elements Helped WLM Form 1) Preexisting Communication Network: OB: Presidential comms, state comms, YB: radical community (Black power, Civil Rights, New Left, Anti-War) 2) Co-Optablity OB: Presidential Comm and State Comms were a co-optable comm. Network for NOW since it immersed women in the details of women’s inequality… YB: “The atmosphere of questioning, confrontation” and freedom that defined the “radical community” exposed the contradictions of male authority.

  12. Origins of Women’s Movement Four Elements Helped WLM Form 3) Crisis OB: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) failure to enforce Title VII, and state comms would not push for it either provoked the creation of NOW. YB: Explicit hostility of New Left men to women attempts to organize. 4) Role of the Organizer

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