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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page summary and examination of Mary Lyndon Shandley’s essay “Just Marriage.” No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAshmm.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
to marry almost anyone they desire, and to end their marriage for almost no cause. Many argue that more aggressive tactics need to be made in terms of political and
social policy to strengthen the marriages in the nation, while others argue that new marriage laws need to be enacted to protect the rights of all people. The following paper
examines this issue, as it is presented in Mary Lyndon Shandleys essay "Just Marriage." The paper summarizes and examines her essay. Just Marriage Shandleys essay is neatly divided
into various sections, with her particular argument coming in the second half of the essay. In the beginning she discusses the controversy concerning marriages today, and then examines the history
of marriage in the United States and how religion plays a very important role in how we perceive marriages even today. She illustrates how men and women were given different
roles, in marriage, and in society. She then notes how during the 19th century women began to argue against the restrictive realities
in marriage. "During that time Reformers were critical, for example, of the fact that many states granted divorce only for a wifes adultery and not a husbands" (Shandley, 2003). In
addition, many men and women started becoming dissatisfied with the fact that a spouse could not dissolve a marriage because of abuse or other obvious wrongs. This was the first
real struggle for reform and it addressed the problem wherein such rules were "depriving them of essential personal liberty" (Shandley, 2003). Shandley discusses the reform during the middle of
the 20th century when women went to work and realized they should have the same rights and opportunities as men. With WWII and then the Womens Rights Movement of the
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