• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Towards a Feminine/Feminist/Female Discourse of Virginia Woolf
Towards a Feminine/Feminist/Female Discourse of Virginia Woolf

Hysteria, Feminism, and Gender Revisited
Hysteria, Feminism, and Gender Revisited

... Charles Bernheimer suggests that “Freud invented psychoanalysis between 1895 and 1900 on the basis of his clinical experience with hysterical patients, nearly all of them women” (1). To think about this experience another way, while hysteria was reframed with reference to new laws and was new in pr ...
Margaret Sanger:Eugenics vs Feminism
Margaret Sanger:Eugenics vs Feminism

... “Unfit” parents are referred to as individuals who have transmittable diseases, are poor, unemployed, sick, diseased, mentally handicap, physically handicap, and feebleminded. Franks also finds in important to define the term “unfit” as evils of the world, that Sanger’s planned to eliminate through ...
The Tuskegee Flash and the Slender Harlem Stroker
The Tuskegee Flash and the Slender Harlem Stroker

... field versus tennis. During Coachman’s career, the sport of track and field remained a decidedly masculine endeavor. While women first began competing in the 1920s and initially enjoyed popularity, physical education leaders soon began criticizing female participation in the sport, positing that the ...
GPAF COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIP PROPOSAL FORM
GPAF COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIP PROPOSAL FORM

... Feedback/learning was used in the design, working with a larger number of villages and also introducing new elements. Beneficiary/stakeholder feedback has been a constant and useful process. A 2013 larger scale needs assessment led to the first development of this proposal; positive learning outcome ...
Word doc - The Open University
Word doc - The Open University

... as Eric Trudgill notes, as having ‘a solid foundation deep in the ancient past,’ and remaining timeless and stable while the historical and political world was constantly in flux (Trudgill 1976: 41). The idea of the home as stable and timeless fixed it, and with it the Victorian woman, outside histo ...
“A Sea Captain in Her Own Right”: Navigating the Feminist Thought
“A Sea Captain in Her Own Right”: Navigating the Feminist Thought

... saw them finally as a means to effect a broader cultural transformation and a larger social reform. She held that women should and must enter the public sphere and have the vote because their moral perspective was needed to clean up the corrupt (masculine) world of politics. Only on the basis of edu ...
Jessie Fauset`s Plum Bun and the City`s Transformative Potential
Jessie Fauset`s Plum Bun and the City`s Transformative Potential

... Wilson’s framework is particularly useful for reading Plum Bun since Fauset explicitly examines the liberating potential of urban life for her protagonist. From the moment Angela is introduced to the reader, she articulates her desire to live without the narrowness of the suburb or small town: “Fre ...
Are There Feminist Research Methods
Are There Feminist Research Methods

... share a common core approach in their research (=a shared feminist methodology). This feminist methodology, they propose, “is distinctive [from mainstream research] to the extent that it is shaped by feminist theory, politics, and ethics and is grounded in women’s experience.” 15 What makes a partic ...
Lesson: Feminist Perspectives and International Relations Paper
Lesson: Feminist Perspectives and International Relations Paper

... International Relations has continued without any reference to gender. The standard view of tracing the origin of feminism in International Relations to the early 1980s among the feminist in IR and the other scholars of IR is to adopt a myopic view of the early intellectual and activism of feminism ...
Feminist Theory
Feminist Theory

... easily incorporated into mainstream sociological thinking. The following example from Lorber (2006) illustrates this claim: Everyone knows that women and men of the corporation are treated differently, but the implication is that this occurs because women and men are biologically different, not beca ...
Gender and Art: A Focus on Sarah Lucas
Gender and Art: A Focus on Sarah Lucas

... female and transcends into an individual’s inner identity. Gender is a factor that defines the sense of self. Even when gender may explain the sense of self or the individual’s identity, gender roles may sometimes be reflective of the connotations held by society, rather than the individual’s commut ...
A Garland of Feminist Reflections: Forty Years of Religious Exploration
A Garland of Feminist Reflections: Forty Years of Religious Exploration

... any religious situation, however dominant one sex or the other may be, they both represent modes of the human” (60). This paradigm shift, she argues, is necessary and profound, although preliminary. It removes the center-periphery dynamic of men and women as represented in research as well as the in ...
Read the introduction
Read the introduction

... in literary and cinematic narratives. The image of “modern woman” as an embodiment of national enlightenment implies rejection of sociocultural tradition and acceptance of the advent of modernity. The modern woman as a self, however, is torn between the given identity and a problematic reality. The ...
The Gender Gap in Art Museum Directorships
The Gender Gap in Art Museum Directorships

... Summary of Findings The purpose of the Association of Art Museum Directors is to support its members in increasing the contribution of art museums to society. — Excerpt from the Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD) Mission The art within our great museums reflects and shapes our culture. As t ...
Farewell to Gender - Virginia Review of Asian Studies
Farewell to Gender - Virginia Review of Asian Studies

... “female intimacy grounded in close mother-daughter bonds” and is “heralded as a manifesto for women” (ibid.). A Private Life, the only novel by Chen Ran, has also attracted great attention from scholars home and abroad for its display of the protagonist’s troubling growing experience, both psycholog ...
Download:The Politics of Identity for Korean Women Artists Living in
Download:The Politics of Identity for Korean Women Artists Living in

... The construction of a new identity is a vital process for immigrants given that establishing themselves in a new country and starting a new life always implies a redefinition of their position with respect to other social groups. Consequently the immigrant’s sense of self takes new directions in rel ...
View/Open
View/Open

... mostly neglected. It was feminism in the 1970s that rediscovered Woolf, reviving her as a major figure and subjecting her works to new analyses (Roe and Sellars xiv). One of these new directions in Woolf research concerns the way gender is conveyed in her works. Woolf herself grew up with the suffra ...
Chapter 12 - SAGE edge
Chapter 12 - SAGE edge

... which includes such defining social characteristics as race, class, gender, sexuality, nationality, and age. One feminist framework that has been used to explore the experiences of women in the criminal justice system is pathways research. This approach attempts to determine life experiences, partic ...
Same Plight, Different Struggle: A Comparison of Female
Same Plight, Different Struggle: A Comparison of Female

... world symbolized by her authoritative father, caring brother and passionate lover, Ophelia blindly accepted her fate as an obedient daughter, a docile sister, and a faithful worshipper. In the process of conforming to social expectations, Ophelia gradually lost her charm and self-consciousness. Unab ...
Feminist views on the English stage Women playwrights, 1990–2000 Elaine Aston
Feminist views on the English stage Women playwrights, 1990–2000 Elaine Aston

... a culture of fear and excessive political correctness. In British feminism, an example of ‘new’ styled feminism can be found in Natasha Walter’s The New Feminism, where Walter accuses ...
Situating Cyberfeminisms
Situating Cyberfeminisms

... cyberspace; that in fact women could recode, redesign, and reprogram information technology to help change the feminine condition. This is reminiscent of many of the goals of the 1970s feminist art movement and cultural feminism which worked to create new images, identities, and subjectivities for w ...
From Humanism to Gynocentrism
From Humanism to Gynocentrism

... 1. Antifeminists tend to view feminism as humanist feminism. They claim that feminists are naive or insensitive because they assume all women want to be (and can be) like men. Gynocentric feminism is been responsive to this charge. (179) 2. The attack on femininity as the problem has a class and rac ...
The tone of this short-story is anti-feminist
The tone of this short-story is anti-feminist

... organized an international conference on men´s issues and as a result, many feminists criticised the debates taken place there just like in past men´s rights activists have long been notorious in feminist circles (Stevens, 2014). One speaker of the conference supposed that women are solely accountab ...
Flirting with Uncertainty: Mutability, Metamorphosis, and
Flirting with Uncertainty: Mutability, Metamorphosis, and

... suitor, she rejects his advances. This attempt to avoid marriage is itself a potentially dangerous transgression, one that is made more so by the intervention of Circe. Circe, in love with the man that Scylla rejected, forces a transformation upon her rival. She curses the water in which Scylla bath ...
1 >

Womanhouse

Womanhouse (January 30 – February 28, 1972) was a feminist art installation and performance space organized by Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro, co-founders of the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) Feminist Art Program. Chicago, Schapiro, their students and women artists from the local community participated. Chicago and Schapiro encouraged their students to use consciousness-raising techniques to generate the content of the exhibition.Only women were allowed to view the exhibition on its first day, after which the exhibition was open to all viewers. During the exhibition's duration, it received approximately 10,000 visitors.
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report