Women--Social conditions

Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
In highly industrialized as well as in developing countries, blind women constitute one of the poorest segments of the population. This thesis explores societies' attitudes towards blind women who are doubly disadvantaged, because of their disability and their gender. In many developing countries this dual discrimination affects women's access to prevention, treatment, education, rehabilitation, and employment. Disabled women are deprived of women's traditional roles of wife, home maker, and mother. This thesis also explores the cross-cultural network of local, national, and regional self-help committees blind women have begun to assemble in response to the worldwide interest in the rights of women and the disabled. The women who are active in these organizations recognize that in order to improve the status of blind women they will have to find ways to overcome the prejudices against the disabled in mainstream groups, and become an integral component of broader movements.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
This study briefly examines the legal and social
position of women in the nineteenth century, with special
attention to Virginia Woolf's own family background and to
the development of her novels, culminating in To the
Lighthouse. A survey of the critics' views of the marriage
of Mr. and Mrs. Ramsay precedes a study of the ways in
which Virginia Woolf dramatizes that marriage in itself and
its effect on other family members as well as on the
family's circle of friends. Finally, it addresses the
relationship of Mrs. Ramsay to Minta and to the artist Lily
Briscoe and the legacy of her death in women's growing
awareness of their new role with the passing of the
patriarchal family pattern.