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Why....
I've never realised how useless this part of the forum is until now
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It's about time you found that out :wink:
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phew, thank God... my keyboard DOES work after all good job I came to the testing board! |
Especially considering that you can use the preview-function to check if your pics, colors etc. show up :wink: You don't need a whole forum for that...
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Yes, but this forum makes testing all the more fun and convienent too!! :D :wink:
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Plus it's a place where you can let off some steam if needed... :wink: To post just something totally stupid, pointless or meaningless... :lol:
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Can i join ?
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The "Why" topic is now the "post anything you like topic" |
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I'm sad... :cry:
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I'm melancholy.
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* lazy |
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Oh well - since this is the useless information thread, you'll all be happy to know that tonight I have only been working until 3 am... let's see if i can beat the record again tomorrow! Good night |
I came from a barbecue :roll:
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Hope the barbecue was good!!! |
... and now I've just woken up
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I don't have time to speak to you :)
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i have work to do today ... :( lots and lots of work... dinner first and then I'm stuck in this big library for a couple of hours, and then I'd best start writing it... if anyone wants to help this is my question (and it's for the whole of Europe in the 19th century (up to 1914): How effective were feminist movements in increasing the status of women? |
Early communists believed the "woman question" was secondary to the revolution. Restructuring class relations would inevitably lead to the emancipation of women, and thus any separate focus on the issue was a waste of time and effort. Measures were passed from above, by the state, to ensure equality of women in the work place and in society. However, as Einhorn perceptively indicates, this legislation emancipated women as workers, and not as citizens. There was no emancipation of social roles; women were simply required to add to their existing burdens: in addition to wives and mothers, they were to become workers and active communists (the "triple burden"). Social structures and mentalities remained unchanged within the family, and the nuclear family was transmorgrified into the socialist family. Today, in reaction to this past, women who cannot reject the primary "job" of wife and mother, are only too happy (in many cases) to cast off the extraneous responsibilities "imposed" upon them by the previous regime. Thus many East European women desire today to leave employment and politics to the men, to divide responsibilities between the public sphere — capitalism and politics (male), and the private sphere — home and family (female).
There is also increasing identification between feminism and state socialism (as gender-equality laws were initially enacted in most of these countries by the communists), and of socialism as "emasculating" the male population. According to Einhorn, men and women felt forced out of their "natural" roles, into new (and foreign) areas of responsibility and action by state socialism. Pre-1989 legislation has been completely rejected, irrespective of any intrinsic merit. Instead, the appeal is to 19th century nationalism, to an idealized era when women were not yet citizens, and instead stayed home and "made babies for the nation." An era of exclusionary and ethnic citizenship, but a time when men and women could know, and feel secure in, their social roles. Women's movements that do exist today are often explicitly anti-feminist. However there has been some mobilization, particularly in Poland and the former German Democratic Republic, over access to abortion. The opposition of the Polish Catholic Church and the Federal German Government has coalesced women around this issue. Einhorn believes that more attacks on women's citizenship rights in these countries are inevitable, but that when women feel their reproductive rights and employment opportunities to be truly personally threatened (especially in a period of economic difficulty), they will begin to fight to protect themselves as citizens |
:shock: at Choc...
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That's excellent. It's too late for my essay but I will try to squeeze some of it in as examples 'looking to the future' Anyone else want to do anything? If everyone did a paragraph I could just cut and paste and get an early night... :D Tom |
You know, Finland was the first country in Europe (and the second in the world, after New Zealand) to give women the right to vote. :D
Go Finland!!! :D Besides. Our president is an atheist who has an adult child with a man she wasn't married to, and at the time of her election for President was "living in sin" with the man she is now married to (not the father of her child).... There's women's right movement for you :lol: |
Dunno whats going on here, but I just wanna say that the burning of the bras movement - was a serious fire hazard :twisted:
Not that we were complaining at the time :wink: |
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Yeah - Apparently it was i the 60's or something......
I bet the guys were lining both sides of the street :D |
Since this is my pointless thread
I've just finished my essay 2 AM ish - which is good for me... due in at 9 am tomorrow so I'm happy with that... means little sleep though and since the last 4 days have been like this i'm completely zombified how's everyone elses days been? |
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I have my tutorial in 30 minutes and then I can rest briefly for today, but then the next 6 days are going to be like this last week; staying up till 3 am each day working (I'd like to point out that if i was efficient i wouldn't need to stay up so late, but i generally don't start work until 4pm, do a couple of hours and then start at about 10pm |
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Best of luck!!! :D |
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1st thing I'd like to stress I'm a rocker and not a true Oxbridge student but my friend is going for some sort of standing committee today in the elections and if he gets it he can arrange the guest speakers (ie the same position that enabled people in 2001 to get JBJ to do a talk)... and so through him I can drop names for him to enquire about... so if he gets it and if you hear in the news in the next year or so that Paul McCartney, Brian May etc have done talks it will be because of me!! :wink: |
this whole forum should be scrapped
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:shock: no :o
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I is tired. :o (read: spammer)
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ei hyvä :? :wink:
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