Intersectionality Research Paper

Words: 473
Pages: 2

Intersectionality affects the status of women in the U.S. in many ways, and one way I can describe it is in my own experience with intersectionality. I am both a woman and a part of an ethnic minority, Mexicans. In Mexican culture, at least in my experience, men are highly valued, so much so that mothers will often state that it is a blessing to raise boys and a curse to raise girls. It is so much easier to raise men and raising girls is just too difficult. In my own experience, I was expected to raise myself and my younger sister while my mother berated me and wished that I were a boy instead of a girl. She helped my aunt raise her two sons until she started working when I was 7, while neglecting my sister and me. Outside of the household I grew up in, I found it difficult to get jobs and for people …show more content…
I often wonder if the person who sexually harassed me was a man. Would my assistant manager have done something? Or would the results be the same? It was interesting to read about intersectionality in the book and see its example of intersectionality, referring to the 2017 Women’s March and how many women of many different backgrounds came out to participate (Shaefer, 2021, p. 329). It’s comforting to see how women tend to look out for one another, regardless of ethnicity or background. When it comes to how intersectionality affects women globally, the book brings up many issues that Japanese women face. For example, Japanese women couldn’t vote until after World War II; they earn only 70% of what men earn, and only 2.5% of Japanese women are managers in Japanese companies (Shaefer, 2021 p. 331). Earlier, I brought up my identity as Mexican and how men are highly valued in Mexican culture. I also wanted to express how, a lot of the time, women have to be submissive to