Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Alcoholism In The Family: How It Affects The Development Of Teenage Girls. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. The writer provides a literature review pertaining to how alcoholism impacts teenage development in girls. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCAlcFamTn.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
where her father was an abusive alcoholic. Her mother was unable to control the situation when her father went on a bender, leaving her vulnerable to physical abuse and
young Donna defenseless against her fathers verbal - and sometimes physical - advances. Donnas mother, fearful of the threats her father made if she ever were to take her
daughter and leave, was wholly unable to protect Donna from the ravages of a raging alcoholic, a person who - when sober - was a marginally caring father and husband
to begin with. As Donna grew into adolescence, she began keeping company with the school bad kids; looking for a way to rid herself of the perpetual pain associated with
hers home life, it was not long before she became entangled in the comforting effects of alcohol. The progressively downward spiral that Donna was now on made her susceptible
to an even greater extent for altercations with her father, a scenario that was built upon for years until it finally reached its apex one day when seeing her drunken
father looming over her brandishing a knife as she lay sleeping. Donna - who was sleeping off her own hangover - mustered what can be termed as an adrenaline
rush of energy and after a brief struggle, turned the knife back on her father. II. LITERATURE REVIEW Ketchum et al (2000)
discuss how growing up the child of an alcoholic parent creates a great deal of pressure to handle home front issues at a very young age. The various roles
forced upon teenage girls often make them assume responsibilities meant for adults; as a result, they assumed personality traits that reflect a combination of mascot, enabler, scapegoat, hero and an
...