Log One: Societies’ double standards Taylor Swift has grown to be a global superstar and household name. Swift wrote and released her first, self-titled album âTaylor Swiftâ when she was just sixteen years old and has amassed an empire since then. In 2019, Swift realised her much anticipated seventh studio album, âLoverâ. This brings us to the theme of Log One: double standards within society. âThe Manâ is the fourth track on Swiftâs album âLoverâ with the songâs underlying theme...
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In 1792, Mary Wollstonecraft manufactured A Vindication of the Rights of Woman to enforce the idea of equal education for women within the minds of males and other intellectuals of her time period. She stresses the variances between men and women are solely caused by the drastic differences in education. During the eighteenth century, women are ineffectively taught because their education is only sought out to create ideal wives and mothers. Anything beyond that is seen as unnecessary since they...
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Romanticism emerged in Europe towards the late 18th century, and is referred to as an âartistic, literary and intellectual movementâ, that opposed many societal aspects such as family, government, and monarchical that were apparent during the Enlightenment period. This era created an atmosphere booming with ideas surrounding freedom, liberty and equality. However, these ideas appeared to be futile for women as they were not entitled to the same human rights as their counterparts were. Hence, female advocates argued that for...
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A Vindication of the Rights of Woman should be understood within the context of the Enlightenment as a movement containing complex and often contradictory political, religious, and philosophical implications. The most famous definition of the Enlightenment, though very late in the movement, comes in Immanuel Kantâs essay, âWhat is Enlightenment?â: âEnlightenment is manâs emergence from his self-incurred immaturity. Immaturity is the inability to use oneâs own understanding without the guidance of anotherâ. For Kant, whose work Wollstonecraft very likely knew...
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During the Romantic Era nature was used as a model for writers to base their writings as well as their beliefs of off. Nature is described through their poetry as representing the best and properly ordered aspect of things. Also, nature is the representation of sincerity, equality and perfection. In nature everything that is alive has the same and equal opportunities to strive and prosper, it is one equal balance. Nature is full of emotion, this is important because many...
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Women over centuries have been painted with the brush of kind, gentle, and innocent, as if they are trapped in childhood. Even though these are not bad descriptive words, they are not faltering either, they take away from their potential. Wollstonecraft addresses concerns with the depiction of women, as these artificial objects that men possess. She does this in her book A vindication of the Rights of Women, which is the follow up book to Vindication of the Rights of...
3 Pages
1460 Words
A Womanâs Place Women have experienced hardships since the beginning of time. Society has always placed certain standards upon women which, despite many attempts to remove them, will never go away. Many artists have found inspiration in such hardships and utilized them as their muse within their works. Writers, such as Mary Wollstonecraft and Jane Austen, often touched on the topic of womenâs rights in an attempt to help bring light to the inequalities amongst men and women. However, despite...
2 Pages
684 Words
In 1792, Mary Wollstonecraft manufactured A Vindication of the Rights of Woman to enforce the idea of equal education for women within the minds of males and other intellectuals of her time period. She stressed the variances between men and women are solely caused by the drastic differences in education. During the eighteenth century, women were ineffectively taught because their education is only sought out to create ideal wives and mothers. Anything beyond that was seen as unnecessary since they...
2 Pages
991 Words