Determined Fighting To Achieve

Printed/hand-painted on rize paper.

Size “Small – Printed”: approx. 30 cm x 40 cm

Size “Large – Printed”: approx. 60 cm x 80 cm

Size “Large – Hand-painted”: approx. 60 cm x 80 cm (shipped free of charge by EMS – Express Mail Service)

SKU: N/A

$ 35$ 229

$ 95
$ 35
$ 229

The Vietnam War, also known as the Second Indochina War, lasted from 1956 to 1975. In 1967, with the Vietnam War well under way, the Communist Party’s Central Committee in North Vietnam passed resolution 153. This resolution passed formal job quotas, requiring women to hold a minimum of 35% of all jobs and 50-70% of job in the educational sector. They passed this resolution because, with so many Vietnamese men away at war, they needed more women to support the economy. A similar infiltration occurred in the political arena, where the “percentage of women on people’s councils, the major administrative bodies, increased at the provincial, district, and commune levels from 22.8, 20.8, and 16.5 percent in 1965 to 34.8, 40.0, and 40.9 percent by 1972.” Although this was the greatest involvement of women in the political sphere in Vietnam’s history, men maintained their hold on leadership positions across the board, not only in the political arena. When the war ended, female involvement decreased, actually sinking below its pre-war involvement rates.

Additional information

Size

Small (printed), Large (printed), Large (hand-painted)