Feminism and the Women’s Rights Movement

Tenk at jenter får lære det samme som gutter og velge de samme yrkene. Jenter får til og med bestemme over egen kropp! Vel, noe annet ville vært helt utenkelig for oss. Men at jenter skulle få samme muligheter og behandling som gutter, skjedde ikke av seg selv.

Accessibility icon Feminism and the Women’s Rights Movement

Women stand up

From the end of the 18th century and into the 19th century, Europe experienced some big changes. New, modern ideas about freedom and equality started to spread, and technological developments raced forward. It changed many aspects of Europeans’ lives, as ordinary people started to gain greater freedom and more power. But not for women.

Their standing in society was as it always had been – she was the man’s property, and her task was to bear children. As women watched the developments taking place outside their kitchen windows, several began to protest against this injustice. They did not want to be excluded from this new and modern world that their men were living in.

This is how the women’s movement started, something that is now a worldwide phenomenon. This movement fought and still fights for feminism. In this article we will focus on five key areas for the movement within Norway.

Forrige avsnitt

1 / 2

Neste avsnitt
Kvinnedag tog i Washington DC i 2018
Kvinnedag tog i Washington DC i 2018

Schooling

Girls did not get the same education as the boys, nor were they allowed to move forward on to higher education. Secondary schools were divided into boys’ schools and girls’ schools. Eventually, the boys’ schools started to allow girls to attend. In Norway, the pioneer school Ragna Nielsen was the first school that had education for boys and girls together, all the way up to higher levels. It was strange at the time that a woman would be running a school with both boys and girls. Cecilie Thoresen was the first female university student in Norway. She started her university career in 1882 at the University of Oslo. Today, there are actually more girls than boys studying at colleges and universities.

Portrait of Ragna Nielsen. ⮕

Portrett av Ragna Nielsen
Papirbakgrunn 8
Papirbakgrunn 8

Marriage

A woman was not allowed to choose her own future, and it was expected that she would marry a suitable man that her family had chosen for her. As a married woman, the man ruled over her in every way. For example, the man would decide on the children, her money and if she was to take on any work outside of the home. Society was based on the wife staying at home and the man making the decisions. This age-old tradition was extremely difficult to break, and only at the end of the 19th century did married women gain the right to control their own income.

Camilla Collett published the novel ‘The Amtmann’s daughters’ in 1854. The story is based around Sofie, who is living in an unhappy ‘marriage of convenience.’ This was a fight for women being able to show and accept their feelings, and also being able to have a love-life. The novel angered and excited readers, and fired up the debate around marriage. The book was in many ways a forewarning of the women’s liberation that was to come.

Forrige avsnitt

1 / 2

Neste avsnitt
Portrett av Camilla Collett i 1893
Portrett av Camilla Collett i 1893

Work

At the start of the 19th century, many young, unmarried women worked as dressmakers or maids. Later, as industrialisation took off, many women started to work in factories, in offices and as nurses. No matter what work they did, their salaries were always lower than that of men’s salaries – normally only about half.

In the matchstick factories in Oslo, the working conditions were dreadful, and many women worked here for very low salaries. Also, the work itself was dangerous, since the phosphorus that the matches were made from could lead to poisoning. Teeth and skin rotted away, and something as simple as soap and water to wash away the phosphorus was nowhere to be found. In the end, the ‘matchstick ladies’ went on strike, and got a good level of support from the community. People were shocked by the horrible conditions that the women were working in, and for such low salaries. This was the start of a rebellion that would later change and improve the working conditions for many women and men.

Forrige avsnitt

1 / 2

Neste avsnitt
Kvinner jobber på fabrikk
Kvinner jobber på fabrikk

Body

Beyond the role of having children for their husbands, women were not supposed to have a sexual life. Girls and women were supposed to be innocent, keep their legs together and behave modestly. That meant wearing long dresses and certainly not having many sexual partners. Women who were seen as ‘loose’ and ‘strong-willed’ were often labelled, and banished from society with serious consequences. At the same time, men were able to pretty much do as they wished in terms of sexual partners and women’s bodies. They could have several relationships and go to prostitutes. Prostitution, which is the sale of sexual services, has continued to keep women oppressed.

“Both pornography and prostitution are the sale of the female body, and express a view of women that both maintains and strengthens the oppression of women”, Unni Rustad said in an interview for the Kvinnefront magazine in 1980. The right to control one’s own body has long been a major cause of struggle for the women’s movement. Today, it is a crime to buy sex, but not to sell sex in Norway. Owning your own body and believing that you are good enough, is also part of this fight, which is something that is still going on today. Amongst other things, feminists fight to accept the female form as it is; skin, hair and the natural shape, not just as something that men desire.

Forrige avsnitt

1 / 2

Neste avsnitt
Kvinnekroppen i neonlys
Kvinnekroppen i neonlys

Suffrage

Voting in democratic elections was still quite a new idea at the start of the 19th century, and not even all men had the right to vote. You had to be over 25 and come from the higher class of society. At the very end of the century, all men over the age of 25 were given the right to vote. This was called universal suffrage, but not for the poorest.

Women’s suffrage was still a ridiculous and terrifying thought. But there were some women who couldn’t get this crazy thought out of their heads. As the rights for men were expanded, protests from women became louder. Women wanted to be able to vote on the same basis as men. By this time, women had already gained more rights and benefits in society, such as being able to study, work and run a shop. They were contributing to society, and the demand for the right to be a part and influence pushed them forward.

Finally, in 1913 it was decided that women would be allowed to vote on the same terms as men. This was thanks to a group of people that would not settle for ‘no’. Norway became one of the first countries in the world to allow women to vote.

Forrige avsnitt

1 / 3

Neste avsnitt
Stortingsvalg, muligens Drammen, Buskerud, 1909. Ved dette valget kunne kvinner fra borgerskapet og middelklassen avgi stemme for første gang
Stortingsvalg, muligens Drammen, Buskerud, 1909. Ved dette valget kunne kvinner fra borgerskapet og middelklassen avgi stemme for første gang

Feminism today

In Norway today, girls and women have freedom and opportunities to make decisions about their own lives. We have come a really long way in 200 years. Norway is actually one of the most equal countries in the world. Well done! And thank you, feminists!

Although many of the battles have already been won, it doesn’t mean that the feminist movement is dead. It is actually rising with more strength.

Equality must be defended, again and again, and feminism is gaining more and more supporters. An example of this is the #metoo movement, which showed that girls and women are still experiencing sexual harassment and abuse of power. More and more people are realising that feminism is actually beneficial to all of humanity, because feminists fight for all people to have equal rights and opportunities regardless of their gender.

Forrige avsnitt

1 / 2

Neste avsnitt
Kvinnedagen markering
Kvinnedagen markering

Sources:

  • Buregren, Sassa og Lindell, Elin: Feminisme pågår
    Omnipax. Oslo 2017.
     

Media Rights:

    1. Mobilus In Mobili (CC BY-SA 2.0)
    2. Getty Images / Asta Nørregaard (CC BY-SA 3.0 NO)
    3. Getty Images / Johan Gørbitz (CC BY-SA 3.0)
    4. Getty Images
    5. Getty Images
    6. Anders Beer Wilse / Norsk Folkemuseum
    7. GGAADD (CC BY-SA 2.0)