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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page essay that offers a student a guide to writing a "personal manifesto" on her life, which the writer describes in terms of her gender affects her life orientation. The writer does this within the context of discussing the student's relationship to feminism. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khfepman.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
probably more acute than that of many young women today because my heritage is Indian, not Native American, my parents are from India, which is a very conservative culture. This
factor, that is, being conservative, is primarily evident in my political views, as I am registered Republican. But, like many young women today, I am flexible in my views,
as I am also an amalgamation of multiple forces, resulting in various and sundry effects, such as my being one of the many Republicans who voted for Obama. Raised in
a conservative Indian household, but born and raised in Tampa, Florida, I love traditional activities, reading, shopping, volunteering, appreciating the outdoors and the environment, but I am also a criminology
major, with a minor in womens studies, who plans to go to law school, which is something that would have been an impossibility for women in previous eras. Noy
Thrupkaew in her 2003 essay "Daughters of the Revolution" describes how many young women do not describe themselves as feminists, yet live their lives with a feminist orientation that is
simply taken for granted. What they seem to reject, in rejecting the feminist label, is the "bra-burning, hairy-legged mage of the feminism of their mothers generation," but simultaneously they feel
entitled to "stay single, marry or cohabit...with same-sex, opposite-sex or varying partners" while setting their career sights on any profession for which they have an interest and/or talent (Thrupkaew, 2003,
p. A14). When Thrupkaew asked a University of Michigan junior what she thought of feminism, the young woman indicated that she was thankful that feminists opened doors for her,
but she did not feel that it was still relevant, as she felt that equality had, more or less, been achieved. When informed that women today make "only 76 cents"
...