Trying to identify what entirely an individual’s freedoms are is all based on the observer’s perspective. Throughout history we have seen the perspectives of how individuals understand their freedom. We have seen the perspectives from a wide range as Manuel Gamio with the Santella family, Carrie Chapman Catt, and Ida B. Wells all explain what their perspective on American Freedom really is. Although the term freedom is unclear and many people felt as it was a privilege. Gamio, Catt, and Wells had a different perspective, they often thought they had to fight for what was theirs. In explaining his perspective of American freedom Gamio took a different look. Gamio interviewed an immigrant family originally from Mexico. The family …show more content…
“Taxation without representation” Chapman-Catt as an activist brought up the fact that women had been paying billions of dollars into taxes but still lacked the American freedom of representation. With women paying these taxes and not having representation women started to question their freedoms. They were the one who taught the boys in school, the nurses in the hospital, and writing books. But they did not get the representation the men got from the government. “We are fighting for the things which we have always carried nearest to our hearts.” Woman have always had to fight for things they truly care about. Woman had to fight for the right to vote for years until 1920 when the 19th Amendment gave women the right to vote. Chapman-Catt has shown that even women born in the United States have to fight for their freedoms that that believed were …show more content…
Race came into play towards the end of the 1865 with the 15th Amendment. Ida B. Wells a southern journalist wrote about the topic of lynching. “The lynching in Memphis” Ida B Wells took story of eight African American men who had been accused of raping white women, five out of the eight were proven innocent. Three of these men were lynched, lynching is the action where a person is hung from a tree branch to hang to their death. Wells had to fight the editor of the newspaper to get her article published. Once published the southern people tried to run Wells out of the south. Wells then had to fight for her freedom of speech, although she had the right to publish the truth about these “bare lies” the southern people tried to take this right away to get it removed. Wells had to fight for her freedom to get her story published. “White men were permitted in the jail to look over imprison blacks.” White people had to look over the blacks, blacks had to fight for their freedom to be treated equally in jail as white people. Wells as the other African American in this chapter had to fight for their