Respond to one of the following questions based on today's readings.
“Hidden Injuries of Sex”:
1. Why were some young women ambivalent about the sexual revolution? What questions did it raise about the importance of biological differences between men and women? In your own life, how important do you think biological differences are? To what extent do you think gender roles are socially constructed?
“The Male Sexual Revolution”:
1. How did the sexual revolution change SDS and women’s relationship to it? How did the problems in the world of the “establishment” creep into the student movement?
2. How did the sexual revolution affect African American women differently from white women? How did some of these women respond?
3. How have attitudes today been shaped by the sexual revolution? Do you think men and women are more equal today in terms of sexual relationships? Has society become more accepting of people’s choices about sexuality, whatever they may be?
“The Faked Orgasm”:
1. Why was the issue of women’s sexual pleasure important to the women’s movement?
2. How important was it to challenge prevailing myths about women’s sexuality? Why did women see a connection between faked pleasure and sexual exploitation? What are your reactions to this connection?
3. What were some controversies surrounding sex within the women’s movement? What are your reactions to these controversies? What do you think women should have been focusing on?
“When Abortion Was a Crime”:
1. Why was abortion such a central issue to the women’s movement? Why was did they find it
important to “speak out” about this issue? Why does it continue to be so controversial? (This may seem to be a silly question, but remember, it isn’t very controversial in much of the world, e.g., many countries in Europe).
“Death in the Spectacle”:
1. This selection implicitly and explicitly voices many of the concerns Rosen talks about. How does the author here understand alienation? How does it come about?
2. Why does the author think that women are “sexually schizophrenic”? Do you agree that society is full of images and narratives that represent the sexual domination of women? Do you agree that this produces the effects the author says it does? What are your overall reactions to the author’s analysis?
I think that some young women were ambivalent about the sexual revolution because they had never experienced this type of reform. Before the movement, a woman was not give the type of freedom we now see today. If a woman were to get pregnant there was nothing she could do, because abortions weren't legal. And at that time if a women was taking birth control she was seen as some what of a whore. There was and in my opinion, still is a huge double standard for men and women. I think that even after the movement there are still a large about of prejudices about women that exist. Gender roles are still seen through family lives and with the types of jobs that many women are given. There are of course exceptions to this stereotype, but I think that it is no where gone from our society and I do not know if I will ever fully go away.