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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
19 pages in length. The structure of a family is not unlike a tree whose branches depend upon the root system for continued growth; without the required nutrients to help build that solid foundation of roots, the tree as a whole – as well as individual components comprising the entire tree – cannot develop to its maximum potential. Therefore, family composition plays off each individual member, which serves to bend and twist the entire structure in various directions and ways that are sometimes beneficial to the family's overall growth yet other times detrimental and stagnating. Understanding individual components of the family system provides a significantly better realization of how and why such structure is intrinsically interrelated. Bibliography lists 16 sources.
Page Count:
19 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCFamSys.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a whole - as well as individual components comprising the entire tree - cannot develop to its maximum potential. Therefore, family composition plays off each individual member, which serves
to bend and twist the entire structure in various directions and ways that are sometimes beneficial to the familys overall growth yet other times detrimental and stagnating. Understanding individual
components of the family system provides a significantly better realization of how and why such structure is intrinsically interrelated. II. MARITAL The institution of marriage has witnessed myriad modifications
throughout the years, not the least of which includes an almost mandatory tradition to an outright rebellion against what some believed was nothing more than a master/slave contract. Now
that the twenty-first century is upon us, it is safe to say that marriage once again reflects a positive connotation of cohabitation, credited for the most part with religious and
cultural specifications. In order to appreciate the progression of marriage through the years, it is important to understand how it existed in the
past. The concept that men have long been entitled to inherent privileges in marriage, while women have had to earn their place in the same state of matrimony, is
the clear implication in Mary Astells Some Reflections Upon Marriage. Asserting feminist views about the vast differences that have historically existed between the role men and women play in
relationships, Astell (1970) contends the fairer sex has routinely been victimized by society merely because of gender. Astell (1970) is perplexed by the
grossly incongruent capacity of man and wife as they once existed within the institution of marriage. She wonders why women have expected - and received - only the short
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