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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper highlights the ways in which colonists had to adopt in order to form human social groupings in North America. Furthermore, this paper highlights the ways in which ethnicity and class impacted life in the colonies. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_GSAdapts.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
and the population grew, human social groupings also became significant aspects of society. However, these groupings had to make a number of necessary adaptations in order to make their
ability to inhabit North America possible. Special considerations pertaining to North America were clearly a consideration since most of the inhabitants
of these areas had come from European communities (Training Through the Ages, 2004). Cultural, geographical, physical, environmental, emotional, spiritual, and many other variants created significant differences in the way
humans gathered together and socialized with one another. In many ways, life for the new colonists in this country was indeed
different and new, and could easily be referred to as a revolution of old ideas and ways (The New Social Environment, 2004). Many different factors accounted for this revolution,
ranging from varied political philosophies, to different cultural practices, to differences of religious ideals. This "revolution" centers upon the advent of industrialization and the beginning of what
is now known as technological development. However, this change extends beyond the industrial sector of society. Laslett calls this change a "revolution" because it effected radical change in the way
human beings approach all of life. Defining and describing this change precisely is not an easy task. As Laslett points out, no easily isolated "particular set of events" make up
the technological "revolution." However, even the most casual student of history can perceive a great change beginning in the latter part of the eighteenth century, accelerating and spreading in extent
in the nineteenth century, and in the process of totally transforming all of human life in the twentieth century (The New Social Environment, 2004).
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