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Homework:
Law, History and Feminism
Warm up: 1'36'' introduce a book, part I: list core events, record how female law position changes; Part II: records how women affect law in their own image
Time1: 3'09" wave one, seventy-five years; wave two, 1960s, 1970s …
Time2: 1'58" before wave one, women had no legal rights in English common law, but married women had legal rights in American common law because of their husbands.
Time3: 2'14" In late eighteen century and early nineteen century, women became an independent citizenship because they took internal responsibility: educating children. This change just happened in women who did not have jobs outside.
Time4: 3'27"This expression had been challenged in 1840s; the detailed requests for equality in 1848; in 1878, Susan was jailed, Virginia Minor continued to claim for vote right
Time5: in the late nineteenth century, an improvement in feminist, an organization appealed for "true womenhood", regarded women as housekeepers; the final impetus of women came in turn of new century. Women got an equal political rights as men.
Performing Gender, Race, and Class on the Campaign Trail
Time6: 9'15"
Good black and bad black; Obama looks like more feminine than his female rival;
2008 presidential election told that how people examine gender performance; three women
Part I: the background of analysis; part II: successful career of three women moved women one step toward equality in political stage. But women still have to balance feminism and masculine.
Separately depicting the success and fails of Hillary, Palin and Michelle, in order to know whether people already have accepted women as high political leaders.
If people are willing to accept women as president, there are still more questions and obstacles for women.
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