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Catttt Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

“woman question” and “woman problem”

Do “woman question” and “woman problem” in the following text mean "the subject and issue of women's situation in the society" and do they discuss this subject positively from women's liberation assertion point of view or negatively from men's oppressive point of view.?

Context:
As Linda Nochlin has already pointed out in her famous essay of 1971, “Why have there been no great women artists?,” the “woman question” or the “woman problem” was certainly at the heart of first-wave feminism in the nineteenth century, when political philosophers like John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Engels began to analyze and question the oppression of women in modern society as ideology.

  

Top answer

red apple Do “woman question” and “woman problem” in the following text mean "the subject and issue of women's situation in the society" Yes. red apple do they discuss this subject positively from women's liberation assertion point of view or negatively from men's oppressive point of view.? You will need to read the philosophers named in order to discover that.

  • red apple Do “woman question” and “woman problem” in the following text mean "the subject and issue of women's situation in the society" Yes.
  • red apple do they discuss this subject positively from women's liberation assertion point of view or negatively from men's oppressive point of view.?
  • You will need to read the philosophers named in order to discover that.
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1 Answers
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red appleDo “woman question” and “woman problem” in the following text mean "the subject and issue of women's situation in the society"

Yes.

red appledo they discuss this subject positively from women's liberation assertion point of view or negatively from men's oppressive point of view.?

You will need to read the

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