Women
Throughout the myriad of cultures on our planet, we find different and sometimes opposing beliefs defining the values of an ideal citizen. Among these beliefs it is difficult to isolate a single set and deem them to be superior to another. The reason for this is that they vary based on cultural tradition, religious beliefs and even the technological advancement of that particular society. Although it is more evident with multicultural belief differences, we find large contrasts within the gap of one generation in a single culture. This phenomena is exemplified in Alice Munro's "Friend of My Youth" with the relationship between the narrator and her mother. The purpose of this paper is to examine the changing beliefs of a society throughout the period of one generation. The topics whose influences provided significant changes within the last generation and which will be discussed in this paper are the following: firstly, the changing role of women and the effects of feminism on our society; secondly, the social repercussions of the religious withdrawal from family life and the secularism of our culture. Finally, the effects that technology and the age of computerization have taken on people's lifestyles will be examined.
This resistance to change is an incredible phenomenon that displays a great amount of courage and perseverance. Although this technology is directed with good intentions, we should open an eye to the potential consequences that it will have in the future. Most people's lives today in North America would not function if you took away their car and their computer. Technology is a loose term that people apply to any modern advancement. Although the doctrines of Jesus Christ have not changed for two thousand years, society as a whole has lost faith during the course of the last century. These goods and materials have facilitated the lives of humans to the greatest extent imaginable. This belief resulted in the notion that women were unfit to take part in the workforce and were better suited to stay at home and provide care for her family. Most humans have become forced to rely on modern conveniences in order to function properly in our materialistic world. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1991. Yes, we have achieved higher levels of convenience and facilitated our lifestyles considerably. Friedrich Neitzsche describes the faith of modern humanity as follows: "Modern men, with their obtuseness to all Christian nomenclature, no longer sense the gruesome superlative which lay for an antique taste in the paradoxical formula `God on the cross`. Human culture is finding itself enslaved by convenience. According to a "Woman's Forum" database, sixty-percent of women in North America are active in the workforce today. This fact alone represents the vast change that has occurred in the role of women in our society.
Common topics in this essay:
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Friedrich Neitzsche,
North America,
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University Press,
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alice munro's friend,
technology computerization,
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