Women in Media
Essay title: Women in Media
Women In Media
The media is a powerful force in shaping how Americans perceive womens roles in national politics. Until the early 1990s, this media was limited to television, radio, and newspapers. With the advent of the personal computer, new tools have evolved such as instantaneous reporting on each major networks internet sites (ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, and Fox News), streaming video (Googles YouTube), and the blog (a contraction of the term “web log”). Unfortunately, much of the media uses these tools to demean females and help gain political advantage for their male counterparts.
In 1920, the 19th Amendment to the Constitution was passed and women were finally granted the right to vote. With the successful end of the womens suffrage movement, women were satisfied with their role in politics as being a vote caster, assisting with a local grassroots campaign, or the occasional party convention delegate. The traditional role of the woman was as a homemaker, house cleaner, and caretaker for children and husbands; they were polite and motherly. Quiet and unspoken. Reserved and reticent. Then came the social upheaval of the 1960s and 70s that stemmed