[지식채널e] Weekly focus on ‘Women’s Day’ on March 8th… The hidden secret of gender equality in a country that is good for women to travel alone

by times news cr

2024-03-24 23:53:58

Three episodes of ‘Knowledge Channel e’ in the first week of March will be broadcast on EBS1TV at 12:15 pm on the 4th (Monday), 6th (Wednesday), and 7th (Thursday).

March 8, ‘Women’s Day’, was first created in 1910 and was officially designated as International Women’s Day by the United Nations in 1975. Focusing on women who have protected their rights regardless of social, economic, and political fields, <지식채널e>will be broadcasting three episodes on the theme of women in the first week of March. It covers the hidden secrets of gender equality in a country that is good for women to travel alone, the story of the female scientist Franklin and the Nobel Prize, and the story of novelist Jane Austen who dreamed of independent love for women.

[박00 여행기] March 4th (Monday)
“Where is the safest place for a woman to travel alone?”

According to a survey by Travel News in 2023, 92.4% of respondents responded that they intend to travel abroad within the next year. A time to travel where you can broaden your horizons and take time to reflect on yourself. So where should you choose your travel destination?

“Where is the safest place for a woman to travel alone?” The British BBC provided an answer. Rwanda, United Arab Emirates, Slovenia, Japan, and Norway were selected as the best countries for women to travel alone. As a result of referring to the Women’s Peace and Security Index and the Gender Gap Index, the five selected countries were selected as countries where women are not only safe but also men and women are equal.

South Korea could not be included in the ranking due to 19.1% of women entering parliament, 75% of women’s awareness of community safety, and 105th place in the gender gap index.

In celebration of Women’s Day (March 8th) week, Monday the 4th at 12:15 PM, EBS 1TV <지식채널e> The ‘Park 00 Travel Story’ episode tells the story of the hidden secret of gender equality in a country that is great for traveling.

[기승전사랑] Wednesday, March 6
“Jane Austen, the inside story of love”

In 18th-century British society, women had few opportunities for economic activity. The reality is that property is also unconditionally inherited by men. In the end, many women had no choice but to aim for a stable life by ‘marrying a good man.’ but <오만과 편견>Jane Austen, the author of , was different. If she was unhappy in her marriage, she thought it would be better to be ‘happily single’…

Jane Austen, ranked second after Shakespeare in a survey of the best writers of the past thousand years (BBC survey)! As a master of romance novels, whose masterpieces are still loved to this day, what was Jane’s actual love life like? How was the love he desired reflected in the novel?

From her intense first love at the age of 20 to a chance encounter with a gentleman on the beach and a proposal from a wealthy younger man, several fateful encounters occurred in Jane Austen’s life. In fact, Jane Austen’s love life is very similar to the situation of the main characters in the novels she wrote… The characters in the novel bicker due to differences in personality and values, but eventually fall in love with each other and end in a happy ending of marriage. However, unlike her novels, Jane did not get married, but created her own happy ending.

To celebrate Women’s Day (March 8), Wednesday the 6th at 12:15 PM, EBS 1TV <지식채널e> In the ‘Love Before It Happens’ episode, it tells the story of Jane Austen, a writer who dreamed of ‘a woman’s independent love.’

[도둑맞은 노벨상의 진실] March 7th (Thursday)
“Franklin, is she a victim of the Nobel Prize being stolen?”

There is a story about discovering the ‘DNA double helix structure’, a legend of 20th century science. Behind the great discoveries that earned three scientists the Nobel Prize, there was a forgotten female scientist. Rosalind Franklin is a biologist who played a decisive role in uncovering the ‘secret of life.’

Franklin was a person who played a key role in taking the ‘X-ray diffraction photograph’, also known as ‘photograph 51’, which allowed us to understand the structure of DNA. However, the story is widespread that she had her Nobel Prize stolen by ‘James Watson’, ‘Francis Crick’ and ‘Maurice Wilkins’ who had their photos taken of her. Is the Nobel Prize theft incident true?

Celebrating Women’s Day (March 8) week, Thursday the 7th at 12:15 p.m., EBS 1TV <지식채널e> In ‘The Truth About the Stolen Nobel Prize’, we learn about the story of Rosalind Franklin, a female scientist who left great achievements but was forgotten.

Photo by Reporter Park So-gi EBS ‘Knowledge Channel e’

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2024-03-24 23:53:58

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