History, asked by hruthikhruthikshetty, 9 months ago

Survey on women liberation
Interview woman of different generation eg, your grand mother, mother, sister, friends and discuss the hardship woman have been facing from decades. List some revolt lead by women in history

Answers

Answered by lekshmis624
2

Answer:

Women have made significant contributions to science from the earliest times. Historians with an interest in gender and science have illuminated the scientific endeavors and accomplishments of women, the barriers they have faced, and the strategies implemented to have their work peer-reviewed and accepted in major scientific journals and other publications. The historical, critical and sociological study of these issues has become an academic discipline in its own right.

The involvement of women in the field of medicine occurred in several early civilizations, and the study of natural philosophy in ancient Greece was open to women. Women contributed to the proto-science of alchemy in the first or second centuries AD. During the Middle Ages, convents were an important place of education for women, and some of these communities provided opportunities for women to contribute to scholarly research. While the eleventh century saw the emergence of the first universities, women were, for the most part, excluded from university education.[1] Outside academia, botany was clearly the science that benefitted most from contributions of women in early modern times.[2] The attitude to educating women in medical fields in Italy appears to have been more liberal than in other places. The first known woman to earn a university chair in a scientific field of studies, was eighteenth-century Italian scientist, Laura Bassi.

Although gender roles were largely defined in the eighteenth century, women experienced great advances in science. During the nineteenth century, women were excluded from most formal scientific education, but they began to be admitted into learned societies during this period. In the later nineteenth century, the rise of the women's college provided jobs for women scientists and opportunities for education.

Marie Curie, a physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on radioactive decay, was the first woman to receive a Nobel Prize in Physics and became the first person to receive a second Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Forty women have been awarded the Nobel Prize between 1901 and 2010. Seventeen women have been awarded the Nobel Prize in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine.[3]

Explanation:

Mark as brain list

Answered by cweetypie528
2

Answer:

Introduction:

The Women’s Liberation Movement, beginning approximately in 1968 and continuing through 1982, was a

fundamentally life-changing phenomenon that changed the way women thought about themselves and the way they

were treated in all facets of American society. Growing out of the major movements of the 1950’s and 1960’s, the

modern women’s movement was a natural development in the wave of societal change that encompassed civil

rights causes for multiple minority groups and the activist efforts to end the Vietnam War.

Women were involved in all of these causes, just as they were important participants in the 19th century

abolitionist movement. Like those early pioneers of women’s rights of the 19th century, women in the 1960’s

found that they were treated as second-class citizens within those high-minded activist communities. Movement

women were often relegated to menial tasks while men of the counterculture made most the decisions, did most of

the writing, and participated in most of the public actions. Women saw other oppressed peoples in America being

liberated, saw parallels with their own lives, and started to wonder what about liberation for themselves.

Betty Friedan’s 1963 ground-breaking tome, The Feminine Mystique, an expose on the dissatisfaction of roles

women were largely boxed into in post-war America, planted the initial seeds for a reevaluation of how women

saw themselves and how society shaped their sense of self. Activist women gradually separated themselves from

the New Left and formed their own Women’s Liberation Movement. Through innovative experiments in

consciousness-raising groups and writings about feminist thought, women activists raised a host of new causes that

radically altered the way women perceived themselves and the ways society treated them.

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