Monday, October 18, 2010

You Better Not Slow Me Down

Summary:



Within Rodger Streitmatter’s book Mightier Than the Sword Streitmatter talks about several points in time that he believes shaped or were shaped by journalism; one of them being women’s suffrage.  Streitmatter talks briefly about the woman and how she is perceived by the public.  How she is “confined” to a specific role in society.  The Women’s Rights Movement began to break through this confinement, out of this mold, so that women can be more than just a “hand to help.”  Streitmatter discussed how many of the leaders of the movement, such as Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, or Lucretia Mott took advantage of publications, such as journals, to get their message out to the public.  Although the amount of “subscribers” they had might have been low compared to those journals published by males the women realized it wasn’t about the number of people who were receiving their publication.  The publications connected women from all over the country and all walks of life during a time when mass transportation didn’t exist.  A women’s rights lecture or convention might only gather a dozen or so people but reach several so many more.  A publication would inform a woman of nationwide activities, offered her arguments to use in her own community, and reinforced her own feelings in the movement.  Streitmatter didn’t just connect the good aspects of the Women’s Rights Movement to journalism.  There were many male writers who would constantly bash those who stood in the spotlight.  They wrote about what a woman should look like and where a woman’s place is in society.  They would even attack specific women in the movement, such as Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, commenting on their looks, marital status, and demeanor.  But we all know that the women win in the end, well more specifically 1920.  But Susan B. Anthony once said, “If the men own the paper—that is, if the men control the management of the paper—then the women who write for these papers much echo the sentiment of these men.  And if they do not do that, their heads are cut off.”

Sufferin' Till Suffrage




I think the main reason why I chose this chapter, Slowing the Momentum for Women’s Rights, is because I think it’s SO important for our generation to vote.  To be a part of the change in the government.  We live in a democratic country so why shouldn’t we take advantage of that??  I also thought that as a woman, the fact that at one point in time in this country it wasn’t possible for women to vote is just preposterous.  So if I get to comment about how I feel about it, all the better.

Friday, October 15, 2010

My First Voting Experience

November 4, 2008.  Cortlandt Manor, NY.  I was only eight months past 18 and probably the MOST influential presidential election was looming over me.  I am not one to read the newspaper or watch the daily news.  Don’t get me wrong, I don’t live under a rock… I knew that there was the possiblity of a black man being voted as the President.  But did I know what he stood for?  Nope.  My mom told me briefly his plans to change healthcare and I had heard him speak a handful of times.  But as a new voter did I really know enough to choose who I wanted to run my country.  Did I even really care.
But this was more than just being a fresh-eyed voter.  As a woman thousands of women before me had toiled and  fought for me to be stand behind that curtain, stand at that poll, and make a difference in the choice of the leaders of tomorrow.  That is one of the main reasons I made the effort to even vote once I was eligible to vote.  How could I let down those who worked so hard to allow me to  have a hand in choosing  the 44th, like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
Everyone always likes to share who they voted for with each other but throughout my whole life whenever my mother voted and I asked who she voted for she always kept it a secret.  So I’ve decided to start my own tradition and not tell anyone.  So you’ll never know…
Photograph taken at Obama speech: Photographer unkown http://www.portlandart.net/archives/2009/04/interview_with_4.html
 Source Unkown: Picture taken from http://glorymountainministries.com/external.html