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3 February, 13:45

Based on this clip, do you think all women agreed on how to bring about change and gain the right to vote? A) What does that tell you about the women's rights movement?

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  1. 3 February, 14:00
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    This question does not include the clip. However, it is possible to give an approximate answer without it.

    Based on historical research and accounts from that period, not all women agreed on how to bring about change and gain the right to vote. Some women believed that this was necessary for women to achieve, while others did not give it a lot of importance. Moreover, some women believed this needed to be achieved through the use of peaceful or legal methods, while others believe that protests, activism or even violence were better strategies.

    What this tells us about the women's rights movement is that it was never a completely uniform movement. Within it, there were many different types of women with many different opinions and ideas. Moreover, it also tells us that women within the movement did not always know what the best way to proceed was.
  2. 3 February, 17:12
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    A. Based on the content of the clip " The Historic Women's Suffrage March on Washington - Mitchelle Mehrten, all women did not agree on how to bring about change and gain the right to vote.

    B. What does that tell you about the women's rights movement?

    It tells me that the women's rights movement were characterised by strategic plans and controversies. The women's right movement was inundated by racism. The white women discriminated against the black women in joint march struggles for their suffrage. It is really unfortunate!

    Explanation:

    A. Based on the content of the clip " The Historic Women's Suffrage March on Washington - Mitchelle Mehrten, all women did not agree on how to bring about change and gain the right to vote. The women's suffrage movement was headed by Inez Milholland - The activist for women suffrage. she was popularly known as the woman on white Horse. In a planned march for women's liberation in Washington DC, for constitutional amendments to vote, Alice Paul appealed to women from the all-white background including those who were racists. She actively discouraged African-American activists and organisations from participating. Alice stated that those who did so should march in the back.

    Unbelievably, in the upturn of history, Baranett refuted Alice's direction that the Black women could not be made visible in a national movement. On the day of the march, Ida Bell's Wells Baranett, a ground-breaking Investigative Journalist refused to march in the back and proudly marched in the front with other White activists. She was also joined in the parade by the 22 founding members of Delta, Sigma & Theta Sorority (an organisation formed by Female students of Howard University, Washington Dc, 1867) with the National Association for the Advancement of the Black People (NAACP 1909) led by Mary Church Terrell.

    In these ways and many more ways, black women persevered the deep hostilities by the White women in the movement under great political and physical risks.

    B. What does that tell you about the women's rights movement?

    It tells me that the women's rights movement were characterised by strategic plans and controversies. The women's right movement was inundated by racism. The white women discriminated against the black women in joint march struggles for their suffrage. The liberation of the women's movement was viewed by the White women as their exclusive reserves. The White women wanted their names alone to go down in history as the race that fought for the liberation of women and the realisation of their long-denied suffrage. It is really unfortunate, that even in a common denial and enslavement, there were intra-denials among agitators. What a messy cess-pool!
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