Answered You can hire a professional tutor to get the answer.

QUESTION

I will pay for the following article Globalization and modern britain. The work is to be 7 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

I will pay for the following article Globalization and modern britain. The work is to be 7 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. The role of feminism is such a movement. It is one that has challenged long standing assertions by social and political theorists around the globe “and pointed toward alternative understandings and practices of democracy” (Eschle, 2001: 1).

The problems and possibilities involved no doubt have changed the nature of female participation in British society. The more “passive” feminist movement of the Victorian Era (Brown, 2003) has evolved into a cultural insistence on gender equality. With new power of gender, women throughout the country no longer see themselves as housewives and slaves to gender roles formerly attributed to them by the society without. Also gone are the Victorian impressions of the lady of leisure dependent upon husbands for security. The pre-war notion that women should stay in the home, be dutiful to husbands and be the primary caregivers to their children are long gone in most quarters. The modern world has caught up to Britain, and feminism has had an impact on the culture more significant than probably any other sociological movement since the late 1800s and the women’s suffrage movement.

The 1960s may have brought the pill and the sexual revolution but as the 1970s dawned equality of the sexes was still a long way off. Women could be paid less than a man for doing the same job, posts were advertised by gender and sexual harassment was an unknown term. The 1970s saw the so-called “second wave” feminist movement motivated by the determination to abolish all sexism wherever they found it. The third wave, as it is currently called, begun in the early 1990s, seeks to challenge or avoid the second waves tendency to define femininity and its focus on the educated professional woman, thus applying the feminist movement to a wider swath of women. It challenges the second waves paradigm about what is or what is not good for women. (Freeman, 2003).

Show more
LEARN MORE EFFECTIVELY AND GET BETTER GRADES!
Ask a Question