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Ben R

Women in Literature - A Literary Overview - 0 views

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    This an interesting article, especially the second to last paragraph opposing what Woolf said with "These women "applied the cultural analysis of the feminists [before them] to words, sentences, and structures of language in the novel." However, Showalter criticizes their works for their androgynistic natures.For all its concern with sexual connotations and sexuality, the writing avoids actual contact with the body, disengaging from people into "a room of one's own." (Elizabeth lee)
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    This article is how one women breaks down the three periods in which women have written in, and even in the most modern one she describes how they only face "some freedom" and that true freedom may never come.
David D

Sexual Harassment Fact Sheet - 0 views

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    While this site is called feminist.org, it brings up an extremely pressing issue in society today, sexual harassment. Women may make up about half of the workforce and are not legally allowed to be discriminated against, but they still face hardships. The feeling of superiority that many men have over women leads to them sexually harass them in a number of cases that is ridiculous.
Sydney C

How Long Till Equality? - 1 views

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    Women still are not equal, nor are low wage workers. There is still a large gap in society.
Ben R

Women: are we equal now? - 0 views

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    talks about how women today are still payed less, discriminated against still oppressed in modern society.
David D

A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf - 1 views

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    This source basically describes the book, but poses the questions that were the underlying purpose of Woolf in writing it. Shows how Woolf was a pioneer in gaining women rights and that A Room of One's Own is still relevant today, "every time individual creativity comes into conflict with the demands of a very commercial world."
Ben R

Women fear workplace discrimination - 0 views

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    talks to how women are still oppressed in the workplace today.
Sydney C

Women in WWI - 0 views

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    Even though women were oppressed, they still preformed difficult tasks such as serving in the army. The workers also did all the hard jobs that no one else wanted to do, even though they were treated poorly.
Brian C

Bloom's Literary Reference Online - Print Page - 0 views

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    essay written about the theme of oppression
Sydney C

Women's Writing - 0 views

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    Tells about how women's writing has been put down for ages. Much like how anything the low wage worker does gets knocked down, women are often left unappreciated and impoverished.
Travis F

From A Room of One's Own to A Literature of Their Own - 0 views

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    A good essay written about A room of one's own
Travis F

1980s - 0 views

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    This is a list of other novels dealing with women and how they are oppressed and such.
Travis F

60 in 60: #28 - Christine de Pizan's The City of Ladies (Penguin's Great Ideas) - 0 views

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    This is the only part of this article that pertains to "A Room of One's Own" but it reinforces Virginia Woolf's main point throughout her novel. "It struck me as telling that de Pizan thinks of constructing a city of one's own much as Virginia Woolf thought of constructing a room of one's own-and, in part, for the same reason: so much of what men do imposes upon and impedes women that a natural thought is simply to find a place apart, where men's presence cannot bring to bear their baleful influence."(Jeff VanderMeer)
Willie C

A Room of One's Own - 0 views

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    "The conditions that are favourable to imaginative work are discussed, including the right relation of the sexes. Finally an attempt is made to outline the present state of affairs and to forecast what effect comparative freedom and independence will have upon women's artistic work in the future"
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    This source outlines Woolf's authorial purpose in the novel which includes to describe the limitations that one sex or social class will have when trying to do certain jobs and activities.
Willie C

Images of Enslavement and Emancipation in Virginia - 0 views

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    "By appealing to her readers' senses, Woolf liberates deep emotional responses while at the same time exposing a host of related impressions too cumbersome to discuss in full but too persuasive to ignore"
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    This source shows how Woolf's descriptions are vivid and she gets her point across using strong diction to evoke an emotional response and sell the reader on her ideas.
Connor P

Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

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    This shows how men dominate women in society which juxtaposes the bosses domination of their low class employees. The author uses words like dominate, tyrannize, choose, or reject to show the power and contol that lies in the hands of the upper classes . Therefore, Woolf and other authors like Sinclair and Steinbeck speak out against the upper class and urge the lower classes to unite and fight.
Connor P

Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

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    Virginia Woolf ties in the two classes of women and low wage workers. She understands the full comlpexity that workers esp. women are taking advantage of and used for their labor while compensated for with lousy pay. Knowing the the bosses are cheap with their money as seen in the other novels read, they know they can get away with stiffing heir employees as there are many other people wanting for jobs to open up
Vivas T

Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 1 views

  • gender inequalities are the effect of larger systems
    • Vivas T
       
      This article portrays the theme of class conflict in AROOO, which relates to the class conflict between low class workers and their superiors. This article portrays the "inequalities are the effect of larger systems", directly relating to the farmers and owners who are trapped in something larger than themselves. This quote also illustrates the motive for which rebellion takes place, in the form of writing books like AROOO or through strikes in the work force.
Connor P

Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

  • She herself lectured only to women and working-class people. She gave lectures to women students and fellow professional women, to the Workers' Education League, and to the Working Women's Cooperative Guild.
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    This quote here shows Woolf's target audience which combines not only women but also working-class people. This shows that her ideas of oppression and the need to rise up can be intertwined in both groups of people as they are completely differnet yet united by a set of beliefs. Therefore, the workrs of The Jungle, Fast Food Nation etc. can follow Woolf's principles
Vivas T

Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 0 views

  • It is the tone of a woman almost in touch with her anger, who is determined not to appear angry, who is willing herself to be calm, detached, and even charming
    • Vivas T
       
      This article illustrates a connection between low class workers and women during Virginia Woolf's time due to its description of Woolf's tone in the story. Similar to workers, women try not to "appear angry" and instead try to appear "calm, detached, and even charming". This depicts the hatred that lurks in every oppressed group, such as women and low class workers, who are not able to stand up to the great force above them.
Vivas T

Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 0 views

  • However, off the printed page, women have primarily played second-class roles, kept in place by men determined to dominate them.
    • Vivas T
       
      This article displays the similarities between women and the poor working class due to the evidence of social classes in each. In each group, there is a higher group which attempts to keeps the other group in place. This relates to women as well as the treatment of workers and the lack of ethics which businesses have due to their unreachable strength and tactics to suppress workers.
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    id have to disagree very stronly, im sorry
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