Its an area of heavy rainfall. The temperature is cold in January (44 fahrenheit). The trees are all evergreen coniferous trees. It also has huntable game.…
I think it is absolutely revolting that the sexual revolution of the late 1960s and early 1970s placed a double standard on men and women. The double standard implied that females were supposed to be as modest as possible and remain chaste till marriage. In the meantime, standards for boys were merely the opposite. It seemed to be this rule didn't pose for buys, if anything they were being encouraged to not be chaste. Lisa LeClair was attempting to change these rules for women. What really triggered LeClair was the colleges unspoken endorsement to the double standard on rules of girls dormitories. LeClair can even recall being in her dorm by 9:30 and watching her boyfriend walk away into freedom. LeClair states “I can still see the image,”…
Daisy and Jordan Baker are both presented as the “flapper” type women from the 1920s. This was seen as very up-to-date and fashionable, showing a new kind of sexual appeal from the previously almost powerless women. As they are both shown from the reader’s first introduction…
In the film, ‘All About Eve’, Joseph Mankiewicz presents a world of contradictory standards between the forces of a man and a woman that transcends back in 1950s, where women, such as Eve Harrington, are conceive as cold-blooded and merciless as they pursue differently from the society’s expectations, by the means of chasing their ruthless ambition. To an extent, Eve’s immoral actions is what may have influenced us, audience, to dislike Eve. However, Eve reconstructed her own identity with the heavy pressures coming from the society, Eve only wanted to find that sense of belonging and to be adored by everyone, and she find that the ‘theatre’ is a place that she can call hers. Furthermore, the conservative attitude of society on gender roles during the 1950s may also have an effect on the audience’s hatred on Eve. This film highlights the inequitable roles of being a woman and how men are treated differently by the society.…
Understanding the general components that comprise a business feasibility study will help you in organizing and researching your own study. The resources here will help answer the questions - What IS a feasibility study? However, in terms of format, please be sure to follow the steps outlined in the Student Guide to the MSA Capstone Project, Part 1: The Research Proposal and the Research Project.…
Intended for the enjoyment of the present-day youth generation, the 2007 comedy film Knocked Up deals with more than just comedic issues. Technically introduced as a romantic comedy, this film serves more to its comedic orientation. With awkward romance and stoner mannerisms, the laughs are plentiful for the intentional audience of Knocked Up. However, as the audience is served its fill of laughter, issues are presented that rarely grace the silver screen. The director of this film, Judd Apatow, utilizes his dominion and influence over the audience to introduce the dominant ideology of Knocked Up. As seen in his previous film, The 40 Year Old Virgin, it is evident that the good guy can get the girl and in doing so may come along some unexpected complications. Apatow’s use of comedy in this media context to present such complications leads the audience to conclude that they too should adapt to his alternative approach to unplanned pregnancies in this present day.…
Even her broken dream - to be an actress - suggests that she is attempting to break from the conventional sphere of the woman; no matter how naive her dream, it is essentially a working woman's dream, not a housewife's. Her appearance and her dream harken back to the earlier 'good times' of the 'Roaring '20s', when women won the right to vote and began entering the workforce, and were able to begin openly acknowledging their sexual desires: yet, ten years later, this same liberality is used to beat women down and pin them as the cause of Depression. Her clothing, then, perhaps, is a sign of the…
Mean Girls is an excellent artifact, worthy of investigation in the way that it shows how we expect teenage girls to act, but also how difficult it is for them to refrain from acting that way. When using the Marxist perspective, we begin by identifying the subject positions, as models or anti-models. Mean Girls provides clear subject positions about the models – characters that viewers are encouraged to want to be like, and the anti-models – characters that viewers are encouraged to no want to be like. Thus, the models appear to be “The Plastics”, a group composed of the three teenage girls Regina George, Gretchen Wieners and Karen Smith. By analyzing “The Plastics”, it seems like teenage girls need to follow a specific pattern in order to be popular. That is to say, on a physical standpoint, teenage girls need to be thin, pretty, and wear tight and revealing clothes, while on a behavioral standpoint, they spend their time gossiping, partying, dating, and talking about boys, rather than focusing on their academic success. On top of the hierarchy is Regina George, and the two other “Plastics” are her subordinate. On the contrary, the anti-models, challenging the status quo and considered as abnormal or undesirable are represented by Janice and Damien. Both of them are belonging to the oppressed group, or the group that is considered as “inferior” and “subordinate” to the dominant group. Mean Girls depicts how easy it is for a dominant…
There are a few aspects of the film that I had a response to. The first is Tony (the main character) being as well dressed and having the sensitivity of a woman, this feature is also at the expense of the woman in the film who are treated very harshly and in some cases not taken seriously. Another aspect of the film that I had a response to was the lead female character’s ambitions and goals of trying to be a part of the upper class. These two aspects seem to suggest a sort of role reversal which is becoming more prevalent to American society still to this day. While the elements of innocents such as the music and dancing are a reflection of American society so are the violent elements such as the movie’s two rape scenes.…
Modern Times blurred the modernized social norms and expectations pertaining to gender roles and rules that were associated with the first half of the twentieth century. The two primary characters of the film, the male tramp and the female gamin, were each characterized with gender specific qualities and characteristics that purposefully contradicted each character’s sex. Essentially there was a gendered role-reversal between the man and the woman throughout most of the film. At first it would seem that the film was advocating for such innovation and authenticity. However, the film ultimately concluded that the pursuit of such authenticity, through non-traditional gender roles and rules, was sure to result in chaos and dysfunction.…
In the drama Trifles, Susan Glaspell uses actions, characters, settings, objects as symbols to show the reader that men did not appreciate women and women at that time period did not have any freedom and happiness. In the drama, when Mr. Peters, Mr. Hale, Mrs. Peter and Mrs. Hale enter the kitchen of the Wright household, their conversations and their actions show that men do not appreciate women. For example, County Attorney says, “And yet. For all their worries, what would we do without the ladies? Dirty towels! Not much of a housekeeper, would you say, ladies” (1228). Mrs. Hale answers “There’s a great deal of work to be done on a farm,” (1228). County Attorney says, “To be sure. And yet I know there are some Dickson County farm houses which do not have such roller towels,” (1228). This dialogue shows the man do not appreciate women at all, Mrs. Hale try to show how much work women has to do in a day and from County Attorney words, it shows men just thought women should be a housekeeper. Finally, in the drama Trifles, women are not portrayed as happy and free. When the women, Mrs. Peter and Mrs. Hale, gather up the quilting material, they discover a fancy little box. Inside, wrapped in silk, is a dead canary and its neck has been wrung. The importance is that Minnie’s husband did not like the canary’s beautiful song. The canary is a symbol of his wife’s desire for freedom and happiness, so Mr. Wright busted the cage door and strangled the bird. In Trifles, the writer Susan Glaspell uses character’s conversation and their action throughout the drama to show reader that men did not appreciate women and the canary is a symbol of Mrs. Wright’s past as her freedom and her happiness.…
Firstly, the protagonist is a young adult working as a checker in a grocery store A&P. The location of this store is “right in the middle of the town, and surrounded by two banks and the congregational church and the newspaper store and three real-estate offices, an appropriate symbol for the mass ethic of a consumer-conditioned society” (quoted in Porter, M 1155). Basically, as one resident of the village, Sammy is like his neighbors not used to see anything different from the conservative concept. However, as a young boy, not merely does not he disgust at their so-called informal dress, but he is captivated by the three girls’ sexually attractive appearance. Quite immature, when the three girls walk into his eyesight, Sammy stands in the third checking slot “with my hand on a box of HiHo crackers trying to remember if I rang it up or not” (Updike 765). At first he is shocked, but after that he gazes at the appearance of “Queenie”, a name Sammy uses to call one of the girls to himself, especially spotlighting on her uncovered abdomen for he narrates that “her belly was still pretty pale” (Updike 766).…
John Stahl’s 1945 ‘Leave Her to Heaven’ is a beautiful and intelligent example of classic Hollywood cinema that transcends the bounds of storytelling and offers something not only narratively captivating, but deeply meaningful. The film does not shy away from making interesting social commentary. At the time it was produced in the United States in 1945, the very fabric of American society was changing rapidly. Through the advent of consumerist advertising and the unprecedented necessity for them to work, women began to question their place in this quickly evolving culture.…
The setting of this movie is at a prestigious all boys' high school called Welton. Many prominent schools around the country up to the 1950s still did not allow girls into their institutions at that time, but how quickly this has changed within the last half century. Nearly all schools are co-educational now, which in a large part is the result of how gender roles change so rapidly in our society. Now there are even debates going on about whether there should be a difference when we use the terms "sex" and "gender." We can probably call this gender divide back then as sexism, or the exploitation of one sex by the other for a personal agenda. It wasn't that women were getting taken advantage of literally but it was the fact that they did not have the right to the same education facilities as the men of the country, and thus they are confined to jobs that are within the home/family.…
In the seventeenth century, sexism was leading this era. Women were not thought of very highly and were often taken advantage of. Till this day there are still sexist comments being targeted towards women. This social issue in society plays a large role, which dictates the opinions and views of when perceiving a gender .In the novel, The Colour Purple there is a very sexist setting, causing frequent beatings, the stereotypes based on African American women, and the thoughts and feelings towards them. Throughout this novel many different strong women are mistreated, the strongest of them all being – Cellie. Sexism played a large part in women’s lives, as they were judged upon a woman’s beauty, clothing and children. When young Cellie was sold and married to an older man, she did not know the devastating events that her life would bring. Cellies husband makes her cook, clean, take care of his kids, shave him and have sexual intercourse with him. Cellie accepted the stereotypes that were presented to her and she was obligated to think that the way she was treated was acceptable “When a women marry she spose to keep a decent house and family” p47. When Cellie says this she is sharing her thoughts on how a married woman should act and her place in the home. This forces Cellie to be prejudice and think that all…