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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Expectations of gender and class structure have long carved out predetermined paths for those within global communities, not the least of which includes assigned roles of masculinity/femininity and hierarchy of social status that serves to stratifying social structure in such a way that reflects a definitive separation of economic, political, societal and gender position. Theodore Dreiser had an eye-catching way to blur those otherwise rigid boundaries within the context of his literary works, setting many a Victorian-era reader on edge with strong, independent female protagonists and weak-willed, passive males who defied such stringency. Carrie, Drouet and Hurstwood represent this switch of social and gender standards in Dreiser's Sister Carrie as they continuously struggle with their own meager lots in life while at the same time strive to find solace in their own inadequacies. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCsiscarr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
status that serves to stratifying social structure in such a way that reflects a definitive separation of economic, political, societal and gender position. Theodore Dreiser had an eye-catching way
to blur those otherwise rigid boundaries within the context of his literary works, setting many a Victorian-era reader on edge with strong, independent female protagonists and weak-willed, passive males who
defied such stringency. Carrie, Drouet and Hurstwood represent this switch of social and gender standards in Dreisers Sister Carrie as they continuously struggle with their own meager lots in
life while at the same time strive to find solace in their own inadequacies. Carries and Hurstwoods movement in opposite social and economic directions draws attention to the erosion
of Victorian assumptions about proper male versus female "spheres," a belief system that regulated many aspects of middle- and upper-class white American life (Eby, 2001).
Issues of class and gender in late nineteenth-century America were as unyielding as a century old oak tree; those who attempted to sidestep such conventionalism were doomed
to receive a rash of contempt from the townspeople. Carrie Meeber quickly fell into this reality as she earnestly pursued a life of independence and material possessions as a
way to shed the discomfort of her less-than-copious upbringing. While Dreiser sought to illustrate the social/gender inequity of a decidedly intolerant and patriarchal country, he did so by giving
his female characters a greater sense of masculinity while allotting his males a feminine frailty. Dreisers primary point was to espouse how the complexities inherent to identity - including but
not limited to social, gender, political and cultural - are clearly in response to the construct of patriarchy. The author strategically illustrated how there are aspects of an individuals
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