Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Rubin/Intimate Strangers. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page analysis of the book Intimate Strangers: Men and Women Together by Lillian B. Rubin. The writer demonstrates how Rubin uses a Freudian perspective to explore the reasons behind traditional gender role identification and how this impacts with changed societal expectations. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_90rubin.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
from a Freudian standpoint that emphasizes the importance and significance of primary relationships within an individuals original nuclear family. From this Freudian standpoint, the author explores the reasons behind
traditional gender role identification and how this impacts with changed societal expectations. Throughout the work, Rubin supports her arguments primarily from the first-hand statements of people in therapy, although she
does supplement this with applicable quotes from professional literature. Rubin states that the "central task" of her work is to demonstrate how certain "characteristics of male and female personality
come into being, why they persist, and how they affect the basic issues of our relations with each other" (12). She succeeds admirably in all three of her major goals.
She begins by explaining the origins of gender role identification. In so doing, Rubin offers a Freudian explanation that sees gender identification beginning with the primary relationship that an
individual forms with his or her mother. As Rubin points out the image of "mother" plays a powerful role in infancy and childhood. She writes that it is an image
that dominates this early period and that it is the first image that people "internalize" as they begin to "know and experience the world" (48). In order to become
individuals in their own right, every child must make the psychological break with their mother that establishes their own ego boundaries. This process is intrinsically different for girls and boys.
According to Rubin, it not only is the beginning of gender role identification, but it also forms the basis for different perspectives on life, in general, and specifically with communication.
Separating from mother is difficult for a girl because they are the same gender. Rubin writes that this makes it "harder for her or her mother to know where one
...