Were unfulfilled in their traditional roles.
In "The Feminine Mystique", Betty Friedan argued that the unhappiness many women experienced was due to living in a society which forced them to be subservient to men. "The Feminine Mystique" is the male created ideal that women try to confirm to despite feeling unfulfilled.
lacked awareness of the extent of poverty
That parris argued with the farmers who are upset because the cows of people who are jailled are wandering around town
No, Shakespeare lived in XVI century, and computers were invented in XX century. It could be argued that Shakespeare had a computer in his head - he certainly had a prodigious memory.
Decide if willy Loman is a tragic hero....... or ....... when writing a claim that can be argued
Suburban women were unfulfilled in their traditional roles.
Betty Friedan argued in The Feminine Mystique that suburban women were experiencing a sense of dissatisfaction and emptiness due to societal expectations that confined them to traditional roles as homemakers and caretakers, which she termed "The Problem That Has No Name." She believed that these women were searching for fulfillment beyond their domestic duties and were facing a crisis of identity and purpose.
Opportunities to gain power in society
Opportunities to gain power in society.
In "The Feminine Mystique", Betty Friedan argued that the unhappiness many women experienced was due to living in a society which forced them to be subservient to men. "The Feminine Mystique" is the male created ideal that women try to confirm to despite feeling unfulfilled.
In "The Feminine Mystique," Betty Friedan argued that suburban women in the 1950s and 1960s were trapped in a stifling domesticity that limited their potential and fulfillment. She described the "problem that has no name," highlighting the dissatisfaction many women felt despite living in affluent households. Friedan emphasized that societal expectations confined women to roles as wives and mothers, undermining their aspirations for education, careers, and personal identity. Her work sparked a significant conversation about women's rights and paved the way for the feminist movement.
opportunities to gain power in society
Betty Friedan's "The Feminine Mystique" was not primarily aimed at reviving labor militancy among working-class women; rather, it focused on the dissatisfaction of middle-class women in the 1950s and 1960s who were confined to domestic roles. Friedan argued that societal pressures and the idealization of suburban domesticity limited women's potential and fulfillment. Her work sparked a broader feminist movement that sought to address gender equality, workplace rights, and women's liberation, influencing various social and political changes. While it acknowledged the struggles of working-class women, its central message was more about challenging the cultural norms that oppressed all women.
Betty Friedan argued in The Feminine Mystique that suburban women were unfulfilled in their traditional roles.
martin luther argued that the ?
Hamilton Hume and William Hovell, the first to travel overland from Sydney to Port Phillip, constantly argued about their achievements, ideas and accomplishments. They argued during their expedition; they argued after their expedition; they argued virtually up until the day they died.
The antifederalist argued about the constition