The Women's Movement Flashcards

1
Q

During which period did the Women’s movement gain momentum?

A

During the 1960s.

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2
Q

What types of jobs did women work in?

A

Low-paid ones such as nursing, teaching, clerical and domestic work.

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3
Q

What did Eleanor Roosevelt pressure JFK into doing?

A

She made him create a Presidential Commission on the status of women in 1961 with herself as its head.

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4
Q

When was the Equal Pay Act introduced?

A

1963

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5
Q

What did the Equal Pay Act do?

A

It made it illegal to pay women less than men for the same job.

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6
Q

What was the problem with the Equal Pay Act?

A

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission was understaffed and there was little to stop employers giving different job titles to men and women doing the same activities.

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7
Q

What did the Civil Rights Act in 1964 prohibit?

A

Discrimination in employment on the basis of sex.

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8
Q

When was the contraceptive pill made available?

A

1960

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9
Q

What did the contraceptive pill allow for?

A

It made it easier for women to postpone having children while they started a career.

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10
Q

When was ‘The Feminine Mystique’ by Betty Friedan released to the public?

A

In 1963

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11
Q

What did ‘The Feminine Mystique’ do?

A

It criticised the isolation of women in the household saying that many of them felt trapped in the homemaker role.

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12
Q

What does NOW stand for?

A

National Organisation for Women.

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13
Q

How was Friedan connected to NOW?

A

She was one of the founders of it.

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14
Q

What did NOW do?

A

It was set up in 1966 to campaign for women’s legal, educational and professional equality.

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15
Q

Why did the Equal Rights Amendment fail in 1972?

A

It failed to achieve ratification by the necessary three quarters of the state.

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16
Q

Who were a part of the opposition to the ERA?

A

Women who wanted to return to traditional femininity. Conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly organised a group called ‘Stop ERA’.

17
Q

What did the Educational Amendments Act in 1972 do?

A

It forced government funded educational establishments to provide equal facilities and opportunities for both sexes.

18
Q

What else did women campaign against?

A

The objectification of women.

19
Q

How did feminists protest against the 1968 Miss America beauty pageant?

A

They crowned a sheep their own ‘Miss America’.

20
Q

What was the result of the Roe Vs Wade case?

A

The Supreme Court ruled that state laws banning abortion were unconstitutional.

21
Q

What did the Hyde Amendment in 1976 do?

A

It stopped Medicaid (the medical assistance programme for the poor) from funding abortions.

22
Q

What was the effect of the second world war on women?

A

It increased the number of working women, mass rush by women to get married and have babies yet 15 years later many of these women were extremely disillusioned.

23
Q

How were women discriminated against at work?

A

Women were almost half of the workforce in 1963 however they could still be dismissed when they married, women earned less money than men even for the same work and their jobs were low paid, part time and low level with no responsibility.

24
Q

What did Friedan say about married women?

A

That they must be helped to continue in paid employment so that they would not get bored or de-skilled.

25
Q

Why was NOW not very revolutionary?

A

The people they were fighting for did not support them, they didn’t support lesbians, they were too middle-class and white dominated and they continued to believe in marriage which some women saw as derogatory.

26
Q

What were the divisions that existed in the women’s movement?

A

Lesbians, women who didn’t support marriage, women who didn’t believe that men were the enemy and women who were targeting different things.

27
Q

What were women allowed to do in terms of the military?

A

Women were allowed to join the military however they could only work behind the front line.

28
Q

What was the women’s liberation movement?

A

It was more radical than NOW and demanded change, they burnt their bras, they demonstrated and camped out for days and they focused on the independence of women.

29
Q

What were the failures of the women’s movement?

A

The majority of women were still employed in clerical and menial work, discrimination did not end, some female lecturers were sacked for teaching female equality and there was a clause that could stop companies employing women if they could prove a man was needed.

30
Q

What was a success in the women’s movement in terms of politics?

A

Margaret Chase Smith stood for president.