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  • Essay / Importance of women in society - 1920

    Women have been a base and center of interest for a very long time. However, it is only in recent decades that its value and importance have been recognized and women have been seen as occupying an important human place in society. Before this change in the universal macho approach and in the view of women within the framework of the patriarchal economy, the man for an entire century reigned and ruled over women, treating them as his property. Men did not perceive or even recognize the need to understand her, but simply took women for granted. As a result, women had no identity, uniqueness and individuality of their own, virtually no economic independence and virtually no opportunity to realize their ambitions. Even today, in many places, no effort is made to address the issue of women from an appropriate perspective, to study the place of women in the family, in the community or in society, or to give her its place in the social order. To this day, some women are trampled by male chauvinism and repressed by patriarchy. Throughout history, women have always been considered subordinate and secondary to men. Centuries ago, women realized they needed to take a stand and began fighting for equal rights. In the early 1600s, French women began holding salons where educated and knowledgeable women could interact evenly or equally with men. Women's rights movements were also influenced by the Revolutionary War and the French Revolution in the late 1700s. Then, in the 1800s, women began to fight harder to gain equal rights. The incident that brought significant change in feminism was when Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth and Cady Stanton were deprived and deprived of seats at the World Anti-Slavery Convent...... middle of paper...... othesis of a reader who gives a new and innovative perspective to a given text. Feminist criticism focuses its attention on images, descriptions, and stereotypes of women in literature, omissions, misconceptions, and false impressions about women, and gaps in male-constructed literary history. Ezra Ben, a prominent writer and she was not included in the literary canon. Women have always analyzed and interpreted the works of male authors to find out how male authors have projected female characters in a stereotypical manner and based on preconceived notion. When male authors misrepresent women in their works, readers of those works are manipulated and exploited into believing that what the male author wrote is right. Reader's understanding is affected by male writers' misrepresentation of women.