Difference between revisions of "Week 5 Questions/Comments-327 11"

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(Thomas Paine Admits Women Have Some Rights)
(Excellency in Our Sex by Judith Sargent Murray, 1790)
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I really liked the line "was this activity properly directed, what beneficial effects would follow. Is the needle and kitchen sufficient to employ the operations of a soul thus organized? I should conceive not. Nay, it is a truth that those very departments leave the intelligent principle vacant, and at liberty for speculation. Are we deficient in reason?" (page 135) because it exhibited that women thought about the same things that we, as women, today think about them.  Really, it is a lot nicer to think about women wondering about their status than to accept it unwillingly or on religious basis.  I know this is probably not the case for most women, but probably for educated ones this was the case.  Too bad not every woman was Judith Sargent Murray or Abigail Adams. --Sara S.
 
I really liked the line "was this activity properly directed, what beneficial effects would follow. Is the needle and kitchen sufficient to employ the operations of a soul thus organized? I should conceive not. Nay, it is a truth that those very departments leave the intelligent principle vacant, and at liberty for speculation. Are we deficient in reason?" (page 135) because it exhibited that women thought about the same things that we, as women, today think about them.  Really, it is a lot nicer to think about women wondering about their status than to accept it unwillingly or on religious basis.  I know this is probably not the case for most women, but probably for educated ones this was the case.  Too bad not every woman was Judith Sargent Murray or Abigail Adams. --Sara S.
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It was really clever of the author to bring God and religion into the argument to show how women and men are equal. Obviously, what she writes about "...our souls are equal to yours; the same breath of God animates, enlivens and invigorates us..." This is an undeniable fact that no one can really argue too much.  -Aqsa Z.
  
 
== A Carolina Patriot by Eliza Wilkinson, 1782 ==
 
== A Carolina Patriot by Eliza Wilkinson, 1782 ==

Revision as of 04:54, 28 September 2011