Please finish the Part 1 and Part 2 Part 1 Read the short essay…

Question Answered step-by-step Please finish the Part 1 and Part 2 Part 1 Read the short essay… Please finish the Part 1 and Part 2Part 1Read the short essay about “Rosie the Riveter” at https://www.loc.gov/rr/program/journey/rosie-transcript.htmlThen select and watch one of the four oral history videos of real-life Rosie the Riveters (Alexander, Ellis, Crary, or Murphy);https://depts.washington.edu/civilr/alexander.htm (Alexander)summarize the essay, “Rosie the Riveter” and provide your own analysis of the Rosie the Riveter poster;summarize the oral history video you watched, being sure to point out the name of the woman whose oral history video you watched, what she did for work, and what her experience with working at Boeing was like; anddraw some conclusions about whether you think wartime work was liberating for women, what complications women faced in wartime work, and why you think women faced discrimination in wartime work.Part 2Read the summaries and analyses from the other students;Select one student to respond to and comment on:How the oral history video they watched about either supports the conclusions you drew in your first post or contradicts them, being sure to explain why you believe that is the case; andCompare the experience of women working during World War II to the experiences of women you have learned about this quarter so far.Peer’s idea:Rosie the Riveter represents the women who helped in the war. Instead of Rosie being a woman who would help at home or do similar jobs, Rosie was a strong independent woman who represented strength. This empowered many women through all the symbolism such as how she wore clothes typically worn by men. Many women who made the leap into the workforce felt that their lives were completely changed and that they would never want to go back to being a housewife. I agree with the essay as I feel that this poster certainly empowered many women to feel that they could help and realize that being independent is also being strong. With the words “we can do it”, it unites women.  The video I watched was about a woman named Arlene Crary. Crary moved to Seattle and soon applied for a job at Boeing when here husband told her he heard they were hiring. She would receive training and work on B-17s and B-29s. Soon after accepting this job her husband would be drafted. As she was left all alone to care for her two children, Crary would move back to her hometown of Madison, Wisconsin. The working conditions while she worked for Boeing weren’t the best as she lived in a hotel transformed into living quarters. I think that war time work was certainly liberating for women. This was certainly a large change but everything was changing because of the war so it was less of a big deal to men which helped. Some of the complications women faced was discrimination in the work force and things like how much they got paid. I think they faced discrimination because men felt threatened by an independent woman as they had been told their whole lives that they were the independent ones. Now on the same level I am sure they felt threatened.  History US History HIST MISC Share QuestionEmailCopy link Comments (0)