Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Elisabeth Badinter's "Fausse Route" - Differential Approach To Understanding The Gender War. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. There is no secret that men and women are extraordinarily diverse creatures when compared from a multitude of angles; with perhaps the only aspect of similarity being their humanness, the male and female gender share little in the way of thoughts, emotions, physicality or virtually anything else. Feminists argue quite the opposite is true, claiming men and women are much more alike than people care to admit, however, women continue to be oppressed within patriarchal dominance. Elisabeth Badinter, author of Fausse Route, herself is a self-proclaimed feminist of a different sort, contends that women have no more been victimized by their male counterparts than have men sought to victimize them; instead, the author claims women themselves are to blame for the place they hold – and have long held – within society due to their inability to strike out and seize their autonomy. In short, Badinter credits – or blames – the elements of nature versus nurture in the differential sense to explain why the gender war continues to rage in the contemporary global society. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCFausseRt.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
similarity being their humanness, the male and female gender share little in the way of thoughts, emotions, physicality or virtually anything else. Feminists argue quite the opposite is true,
claiming men and women are much more alike than people care to admit, however, women continue to be oppressed within patriarchal dominance. Elisabeth Badinter, author of Fausse Route, herself
is a self-proclaimed feminist of a different sort, contends that women have no more been victimized by their male counterparts than have men sought to victimize them; instead, the author
claims women themselves are to blame for the place they hold - and have long held - within society due to their inability to strike out and seize their autonomy.
In short, Badinter credits - or blames - the elements of nature versus nurture in the differential sense to explain why the gender war continues to rage in the
contemporary global society. II. NATURE VERSUS NURTURE The aspects that make men and women different go far beyond the physical realm; indeed, male and female perspective on just about
everything reflects an opposing viewpoint that challenges the fundamental nature of human existence. Nary a single component of life is looked upon the same from the differential stance of
a man or a woman, and it is because of this very distinct - if not wholly natural - separation that the male and female genders react so diversely to
the same thing. Being that Badinter (2003) agrees with "the intensification of sexual stereotypes during childhood" (Audet, 2003), it is easy to support
her perspective by virtue of the nature versus nurture point of view. In essence, the author is recognizing the obvious differential approach parents have when raising their children and
...