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- Role of women in American cultureThe "woman's sphere" is a term used to describe the role of women in American culture. Women were said to live in a distinct "world," engaged in nurturant activities, focused on children, husbands, and family dependents1. Women's sphere was considered to be the private sphere, which dealt only with family, hence the term “private” sphere2. According to the ideology, women's "proper sphere" is the realm of domestic life, focused on childcare, housekeeping and religion3.Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.Women were said to live in a distinct "world," engaged in nurturant activities, focused on children, husbands, and family dependents. The metaphor of the "sphere" was the figure of speech, the trope, on which historians came to rely when they described women's part in American culture.faculty.uml.edu/sgallagher/separate_spheres.htmAs we have talked about in class, the women’s sphere was actually considered to be the private sphere whereas a synonym for the men’s sphere was the public sphere. Women as it was clearly stated already, were restricted to just domestic roles inside the house that dealt only with family, hence the term “private” sphere.sites.temple.edu/womenushist/tag/separate-spheres/Women's "proper sphere", according to the ideology, is the realm of domestic life, focused on childcare, housekeeping and religion.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Separate_spheres
The Emergence of "Women's Sphere" [ushistory.org]
WEBWomen's virtue was as much a hallmark of Victorian society as materialism. As long as women functioned flawlessly within the domestic sphere and never ventured from it, women were held in reverence by …
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Revolutionary Changes and Limitations: Women …
WEB13e. Revolutionary Changes and Limitations: Women. Playwright, essayist and poet, Judith Sargent Murray (1751-1820) is considered one of the first public champions of women's rights in the U.S. The Revolutionary …
The Equal Rights Amendment [ushistory.org]
WEB57c. The Equal Rights Amendment. As founder of the National Women's Party, Alice Paul first introduced the Equal Rights Amendment to Congress in 1923. Paul would work for the passage of the ERA until her death in …
The Emergence of "Women's Sphere" [ushistory.org]
"Republican Motherhood" [ushistory.org]
Jeffersonian Ideology [ushistory.org]
Religious Revival [ushistory.org]
New Roles for White Women [ushistory.org]
26b. Experiments with Utopia - US History
The New Right [ushistory.org]
Modern Feminism [ushistory.org]
Harriet Beecher Stowe — Uncle Tom's Cabin [ushistory.org]
Puritan Life [ushistory.org]
Domestic and International Politics [ushistory.org]
The Roosevelt Corollary and Latin America [ushistory.org]
Political Experience [ushistory.org]
42c. Women's Suffrage at Last - US History
The Fight for Reproductive Rights [ushistory.org]
Old Values vs. New Values [ushistory.org]
The Plantation & Chivalry [ushistory.org]
A Time of Malaise [ushistory.org]
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