Dr. Mcgerr good afternoon. Here we go. Hope you are doing well. This is almost too nice a day for education. I have a Staggering Number of powerpoint slides for this. Get your bets down now on whether i can get through them or not. Ill omit my customary professor humor, about the ncaa tournament, for example. Thats how serious this is. Lets think for a minute, though, about where were situated, what were working on here. In this last third of the course that we started last week, were dealing with the postrevolutionary era. Weve built this idea that something radical and transformative happened to music in the 1960s. Weve worked hard over the course of several weeks to establish those ideas. And we cant leave it, though, just as a kind of baby boomer nostalgia for the days that were. What weve been trying to deal with is this sense of pervasive disappointment, that the revolution somehow ended in the early 1970s. The popular music became a disappointment, aesthetically, politically. Th
American history tv programs at cspan. Org history. As we leave world war ii and legislation that gave women a permanent part of the military, we are we wait a few short years, and we are faced with war on the korean peninsula. There was such a concern that it would be a world war, like world war ii was, that we recalled people to service, to be sure we had people in place to be part of this war. And many of them were women as well. For the first time. It didnt turn out that way we needed that many. But at any rate, most of the women who served in korea on the ground were army nurses. It was a horrendous situation. They would barely get established and set up a hospital. And they would have to move. We have one diary from a woman, a nurse who talked about setting up a hospital in an abandoned school. It was dirty. And it it was hot. But they needed to close the windows because rats crawled up the outside of buildings. So those were the conditions under which these women served. Long ho
Good morning, everyone. Good morning. Come, please give me give me any just a little bit more. Good morning, everyone. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you again. My name is delano squires. Im a Research Fellow here in a divorce for life, religion and family. Im extremely excited to serve as moderator for panel on reaction. Our sucks in the market so were going to talk about a lot of things about what it means to be a woman today as the meaning of sex and preferences rapidly shift each technological development. Let let me just read a really quick description to sort of set up our discussion today. So womens liberation was the result of human moral progress than an effect of the material concept of the industrial revolution. Weve now left the industrial era for the age of air, biotech and all pervasive computing. As a result, technology liberating us from natural limits, embodied differences. Although this shift benefits a small class of successful professional women, it also makes it easie
Create an industry that creates more opportunity and equity for everyone for real. And thats thats my thing. Thanks for thank yourachel shte. Author of four books and many articles essays and reviews. Her current book is Betty Friedan and magnificent disruptor. She teaches at the Theater School at Depaul University and our moderator is. Gioia diliberto the author of seven books, three historical novels and four biographies and a play. Her writing, which focuses on womens, has been praised for combining rich storytelling and literary grace with deep research to provide to bring alive worlds as varied as jazz, age, paris and century chicago ballet epic paris and disco manhattan. Her books have been translated into several languages and. She has been a judge for prominent literary contests as a journalist, georgia has written for many publications, including New York Times, the wall street journal, the chicago tribune, the los angeles times, the smithsonian and town and country and excuse
Create an industry that creates more opportunity and equity for everyone for real. And thats thats my thing. Thanks for thank yourachel shte. Author of four books and many articles essays and reviews. Her current book is Betty Friedan and magnificent disruptor. She teaches at the Theater School at Depaul University and our moderator is. Gioia diliberto the author of seven books, three historical novels and four biographies and a play. Her writing, which focuses on womens, has been praised for combining rich storytelling and literary grace with deep research to provide to bring alive worlds as varied as jazz, age, paris and century chicago ballet epic paris and disco manhattan. Her books have been translated into several languages and. She has been a judge for prominent literary contests as a journalist, georgia has written for many publications, including New York Times, the wall street journal, the chicago tribune, the los angeles times, the smithsonian and town and country and excuse