This document discusses the changes in women's roles and lives in the early 20th century. It touches on topics like marriage, divorce, contraception, abortion, family sizes, women's independence, equal voting rights, fashion, sexuality, and the influence of urbanization and mass media. Overall, it describes a significant shift where women gained more personal freedom and independence, and their roles and power in society changed.
A presentation for Women Studies 101. Explains the significance of four 20th century American women. Those women are Margaret Sanger, Rosa Parks, Debbie Harry, and Sally Ride.
In the early 20th century, women in Western societies began rethinking their traditional roles at home and demanding greater rights and access to public life. They sought higher education, new professions, economic independence, and the right to vote. By the 1920s, some women gained suffrage and began entering male-dominated fields during World War I, though pay disparities remained. Women also had more opportunities for education, comprised an increasing share of university graduates, and adopted simpler fashions and hairstyles suited to the modern, working woman. They pursued new hobbies, activities, and social customs outside the domestic sphere as ideas of feminism and women's empowerment progressed throughout the century.
The document provides biographical information on 20 influential women from various fields including literature, civil rights activism, science, and politics. It includes details on their dates of birth and important life events. Many were pioneers and firsts in their respective areas as the first female vice presidential candidate, first African American woman in space, and others.
The document provides an overview of literary modernism in the early 20th century. It defines modernism as an international movement characterized by experimentation with form and a rejection of absolute knowledge. The document lists some key dates and developments in modernist literature, painting, music, and thought. It discusses some of the major themes, techniques, and influential figures of modernism, including a rejection of tradition, focus on individual experience, and interest in the unconscious and primitive cultures.
This document discusses the changes in women's roles and lives in the early 20th century. It touches on topics like marriage, divorce, contraception, abortion, family sizes, women's independence, equal voting rights, fashion, sexuality, and the influence of urbanization and mass media. Overall, it describes a significant shift where women gained more personal freedom and independence, and their roles and power in society changed.
A presentation for Women Studies 101. Explains the significance of four 20th century American women. Those women are Margaret Sanger, Rosa Parks, Debbie Harry, and Sally Ride.
In the early 20th century, women in Western societies began rethinking their traditional roles at home and demanding greater rights and access to public life. They sought higher education, new professions, economic independence, and the right to vote. By the 1920s, some women gained suffrage and began entering male-dominated fields during World War I, though pay disparities remained. Women also had more opportunities for education, comprised an increasing share of university graduates, and adopted simpler fashions and hairstyles suited to the modern, working woman. They pursued new hobbies, activities, and social customs outside the domestic sphere as ideas of feminism and women's empowerment progressed throughout the century.
The document provides biographical information on 20 influential women from various fields including literature, civil rights activism, science, and politics. It includes details on their dates of birth and important life events. Many were pioneers and firsts in their respective areas as the first female vice presidential candidate, first African American woman in space, and others.
The document provides an overview of literary modernism in the early 20th century. It defines modernism as an international movement characterized by experimentation with form and a rejection of absolute knowledge. The document lists some key dates and developments in modernist literature, painting, music, and thought. It discusses some of the major themes, techniques, and influential figures of modernism, including a rejection of tradition, focus on individual experience, and interest in the unconscious and primitive cultures.
21. Theycatnotnotthe cinema.
The is is high. friends.
She are not good
It in black.
- The cat is black. Is the cat black?
- John and Bob are good Are they good
friends. friends?
- My mother is in the Is she in the cinema?
cinema.
Is the hospital a high
- The hospital is a high building?
building.
22. 1)You are happy. (?) 1)Betsy is my friend
弌亟亠仍舒亶亠 仗亠亟仍仂亢亠仆亳 仂亳舒亠仍仆仄亳 (-)
(-)
亳仍亳 于仂仗仂亳亠仍仆仄亳 (?).
2)I am eleven. (-)
3)They are from 2)Youre students.
England. (?) (?)
4)A dog is white. (-) 3)Its their car. (-)
5)Mike is your 4)Nick is in the 4th
brother. (?) form. (?)
6)My parents are 5)Jane is sad. (-)
doctors. (-) 6)My parents are in
the museum. (-)