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Triangle Fire (100kb) Viewing Victims At The Morgue (101kb) After Identifying A Body (106kb)

[3D] The Morgue / Feminist Analysis
 

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"Triangle Fire" and "Viewing Victims At The Morgue" shows victims of the Triangle Fire, of whom almost all were young unmarried women still living at home. The couple seen in "After Identifying A Body" were likely to have been parents or older relatives of one of the girls killed in the fire.

In 1911, working women were almost always young and unmarried because it was assumed that married women would stay home and raise children. The relatively short period of time that women spent in the workforce created a revolving door effect - the women's movement as well as the union movement found it difficult to keep membership levels steady as women workers would join and then leave within a few years.

Tension also arose because working women tended to see themselves as working class first - their concerns were to do with workplace standards and conditions. The middle class feminists, however, saw suffrage and political equality as the means to achieving the same ends.

 

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