Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Negative Impact of “Place”. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 4 page paper that provides an overview of the negative impacts of place. It is argued that place can have a negative influence socially and materially on the life of the individual. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFlit032.doc
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
differs from the next, but such a statement can have a profound impact upon ones understanding of humanity from a sociological, cultural, and even economic perspective. To a great extent,
the circumstances of ones life are determined by circumstances outside ones control, including entirely arbitrary circumstances such as the place of ones birth. This is a truth that can be
discovered not only through an appeal to factual reports of human life on earth, but also in the thematic expressions of some of humanitys greatest works of art. Indeed, by
examining such works, it is plain that ones sense of place has the capacity to exert an extreme negative influence over ones entire life, through social oppression, adverse physical conditions,
and the lure of domestic stagnation. This paragraph helps the student explore how place exerts a negative inpact through social circumstances. One of the most potent ways in which ones
place can have a negative impact in ones life is through social circumstances. Every place has its associated culture, and with that culture comes cultural norms, laws, and a prevailing
social morality that hold a powerful influence over the people living in that place. Historically, one might look at examples such as the Puritan settlements of early America; any individual
living in such a place would suffer an extreme negative impact to the quality of their life if they did not subscribe to the social edicts of Puritanism. Such truths
can be found in a variety of literary works as well; for instance, in Hawthornes "The Scarlet Letter" where Hester Prynn and Dimmesdale are made to suffer because their values
differ from the social circumstances of Puritanism, and Whartons "Ethan Frome", where the titular Frome is barred from expressing his love for Mattie because he has been conditioned by the
...