The suffragette movement gained strength in America after black men got the vote (though most southern black men were effectively disenfranchised by literacy laws, the poll tax, threats and intimidation etc). Just as, in the UK, the movement grew when working class men got the vote. In both countries there was great resentment amongst upper class women that men of inferior social status could vote, when they couldn't. It spurred them on to greater efforts. The abolition movement was the movement to abolish slavery.
In “The Wife of His Youth” by Charles W. Chesnutt, there were many stereotypical views on race and gender in the lives of Mr. Ryder and Eliza Jane. In the nineteenth century, every man’s goal was to be successful and the “breadwinner” of the family. However, not every man had the chance to start out big, for Mr. Ryder, he started as Sam Taylor. Sam Taylor was a freeborn slave, where he worked in a plantation as an apprentice and had no source of education. Eventually, the plantation owner wanted to sell him for more money as a slave, but Sam Taylor didn’t want to live the life of a slave.
Abraham Lincoln Came into presidency with a lot on his plate, he wanted to reunite the north and the south and to put in place the emancipation proclamation. He knew what was good for the union and had his own opinion on slavery which was against it. Lincoln was fighting for a new birth of freedom not just reuniting the union. The south depended on slaves on the plantation, that’s how they were maintaining since they did not have to pay the slaves. The North with all the industrial business had a total different way of life and can see how they totally disagreed with the way slaves were being used and treated.
That’s why I agree with the prosecuting argument of the American dream that Minorities, and women, were discriminated against. First off, minority men and women, like Book T. Washington, were oppressed daily by the majority. Slavery was once a very popular mindset of this country, however today we look upon it as cruelty. Book T. Washington was born into slavery and felt the white man oppressing him most of his life. He fought back and gave speeches against such oppression against him and his people.
Many died to hands of whites for their participation in these rebellions. Whites of the Southern states tried hard to keep slavery the way it was but with the steady growing number of free educated blacks in the Northern states grew the desire for slaves to obtain the same. In the North, blacks were able to obtain an education, work as well as own their own stores. Eventually, Abraham Lincoln got into office and many Southern Whites believed he sided on the abolishment of slavery so they made their states separate from that of the Northern portion of the United States. Lincoln supported the Union, which were the Northern States which held free blacks, and gave the Confederate States an ultimatum to join back with the Union or war will begin.
Jefferson owned slaves and Franklin, for most of his life, adamantly believed that African Americans were lesser. b.) But, quite unlike the mainstream ideals of their time, both men held strong ideals of equality. Franklin did at the end of his life reverse his ideas about African Americans, and dedicated many of his later years to equality for blacks. Jefferson also believed slavery to be an atrocious blot on the face of America.
His family tried their best to mold him into a better man in order to survive the later years to come. Wright had to realize the harsh realities of the consequences of being a black man in the early 1900s. In that time, many blacks were tortured for the simple fact that they were not white. Black people experienced much violence. Jim Crow Laws promoted the idea that blacks were naturally mediocre to blacks in all important ways, including intelligence, morality, and civilized behavior.
African Americans were segregated from the whites and also Women had no rights because Men were seen as the alpha male. The obstacles of the two would probably fit into the race and gender of how America was back in the twentieth century. African Americans were always hard to be put in society in the 1900’s because of slavery. Even though slavery had ended in the 1950’s, they were still not accepted into society. The northern parts of the United States accepted African Americans, and many try to escape to the north to try to get employed and leave the racial segregation in the south.
In comparison, America has been stratified through history through the acts of feminism. Decades ago women were not allowed to work, eat, or even leave the home. All men were given power to control the family’s needs. In today’s stratified society women still seem to have less power than men. The male’s perspective and contributions are considered more valuable, resulting in the silencing and marginalization of the woman.
Definition of Inequality The American Declaration of Independence proclaims that “all men are created equal” yet, throughout the years people in America have not treated each other completely equal. Inequality has been a common issue toward people since the beginning of human history. There are the historical and current issues of division amongst social classes and the fight for women’s rights. Slavery in the United States turned into the brutal rise of discrimination of African Americans, especially evident during the Civil Rights movement. Inequality is defined just by society’s means of who holds power and how they use it to their advantage.