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Search results 641 - 650 of 2219 matching essays
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641: Loss Of Innocence
The setting for Montana 1948 is a small rural community where the pioneer family about which the tale evolves controls the law and the medicine. The plot for Montana 1948 is mixed with racial tension, sexual abuse and murder. The Hayden family is torn between justice and loyalty in this novel. The setting for Sons and Lovers is near a coal and iron field of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire in a small ... the time. Uncle Frank assaulted Marie when she went in for an appointment with a doctor. The people of the town realized what uncle Frank was doing and they were going to charge him with sexual assault. Subsequently he killed Marie Little Soldier to remove any possibility of her testifying against him. To hide Uncle Frank's guilt Wesley locked Uncle Frank in the food cellar of the farm. Uncle Frank ... examples of the inevitability of a loss of innocence. Both novels had characters that lost their view of the world as being a fair place. Every character lost their innocence in some way whether by sexual abuse, suicide or power struggles in a family. Similar situations to those described in the novels happen in our daily life. Examples of this in our world are all around us. One example would ...
642: Women Executives
... secretary at business meetings, they have been prevented from moving up the ladder because of male attitudes towards women and they believed they are paid less than men of equal ability. Many corporate environments tolerate sexual harassment which intimidates and demoralizes women executives. However, many women hesitate to speak out, fearing it will jeopardize their careers. In conclusion, many women have been discouraged from going to the top by a set of ...
643: Women In The Labour Force
... family. Which was the reason of their low wages to disapprove of women working. This traditions reflected their wages and the positions people were willing to offer to women. Working women experience problems such as sexual harassment and being fired because of pregnancy. Most of the people want to correct the unequal treatment of women in the work force and make it equal for everyone. Some of the methods which can be ...
644: Effects Of Social Pressure On
... their daughters. For example, some mothers indicated that women who do not have circumcision are not good cooks and are not clean! Despite the fact that most of these interviewed women do not experience any sexual pleasure, the insisted that they are going to do the same thing to their daughters. They explained that by doing so, they can keep traditions. This research is yet another example of how social pressure can be a negative pressure. Those women do not mind giving up their sexual pleasure because they cannot oppose the social pressure exerted on them. Schlenker, Philips, Bioneicki & Schlenker (1995) indicated that social pressure could produce social anxiety, which can eventually lead to a decrement in performance. To translate ... B.W. (1968). Effect of Social Pressure on Concept Identification. Journal of Educational Psychology, 59(4), 302-08. Asali, A., Khamaysi, N., et al (1995). Ritual Female Genital Surgery Among Bedouins in Israel. Archives of Sexual Behavior,24(5), 571-75. Brickman, P., Linsemmier, J.A.W., McCareins, A.G. (1976). Performance Enhancement by Relevant Success and Irrelevant Failure. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 33(2), 149-60. Frith, ...
645: Women In The Labour Force
... family. Which was the reason of their low wages to disapprove of women working. This traditions reflected their wages and the positions people were willing to offer to women. Working women experience problems such as sexual harassment and being fired because of pregnancy. Most of the people want to correct the unequal treatment of women in the work force and make it equal for everyone. Some of the methods which can be ...
646: Child Protecetive Services
... is: Basically, the more serious the case, the more likely the report. For example, the surveyed professionals reported over 85 percent of the fatal or serious physical abuse cases they saw, 72 percent of the sexual abuse cases, and 60 percent of the moderate physical abuse cases. They only reported 15 percent of the educational neglect cases they saw, 24 percent of the emotional neglect cases, and 25 percent of the ... privacy to protect helpless children. But in seeking to protect children, it's easy to ignore investigations of unfounded reports. This is a unjustified violation of parental rights. Few reports are made maliciously. Studies of sexual abuse reports, for example, suggest that, at most, from 4 to 10 percent of these reports are knowingly false. Many involve situations in which the person reporting, in a well-intentioned effort to protect a ... because of insufficient time and overburdened caseloads, all four workers failed to pay attention to a whole lot of obvious warning signals: Jeffrey's mother had broken her parole for an earlier conviction of child sexual abuse, she had a past record of beating Jeffrey's older sister, and she had a history of crack addiction and past involvement with violent boyfriends. Shifting positions The emotionally charged desire to "do ...
647: Censorship On The Internet
... help our children learn how to deal with the information on the Internet and then allow them to expose themselves to it already having previous education. Kids need a way to discover their selves as sexual people. One would think that with all of the diseases out there that a parent would rather their child experiment with sex over the Internet instead of learning the hard way with other kids. People ... teenagers explore their sexuality with out embarrassment. If kids go into the real world with more exposure to sex, when thrown into a relationship they will be more knowledgeable, than curious. A kid can discover sexual identity by themselves with out all the pressures having a physical relationship. If we teach our children about cyberporn and cybersex, then they can use it to their advantage as an educational experience (Rafter A3 ... in a world where self-expression was stifled and sex was once again a taboo topic. As far as the censorship of cyberporn’s effect on sex and pornography could take two different paths: either sexual behavior would increase, or it would slowly become more conservative. Many strippers and hookers have turned to the net as a form of safe sex and in result of that sex became more popular ...
648: Porn on the Internet
... is a short story that is written by whoever created the site. This story is not the typical bedtime story mothers read to their children prior going to sleep. This story bluntly describes an indecent sexual encounter between several men and women. "The young Pornography woman lay on her Pornography lover, her hips rising and falling, her gypsy-tanned ass swelling out…" (1). Following the story, the child is then given ... preview page. However, this does not really stop a curious child from continuing further into the site. After "CLICK HERE" is clicked on, before or after the rules were read, there are pictures of detailed sexual material. There is a woman, who is about in her middle twenties, posing with her bare legs open exposing everything, her nipples pointing upward, and her mouth wide open. Below that picture is a man ... of nothing. An age limit or a credit card is not needed in this case. This is why mothers need to act quickly in order for their children not to be exposed to such intense sexual acts where men and women degrade themselves. A child's innocence can be ripped from him or her by just a click of the mouse. Just by witnessing lewd pictures of nauseous acts of ...
649: Why Mitchell V Wisconsin Sucke
... the United State Supreme Court upheld Wisconsin¹s penalty enhancement law, which imposes harsher sentences on criminals who ³intentionally select the person against whom the crime...is committed..because of the race, religion, color, disability, sexual orientation, national origin or ancestry of that person.² Chief Justice Rehnquist deliverd the opinion of the unanimous Court. This paper argues against the decision, and will attempt to prove the unconstitutionality of such penalty enhancement ... Defemation League in response to a rising tide of hate-related violent crimes (Cacas, 33). Figures released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation show that 7,684 hate crimes motivated by race, religion, ethnicity, and sexual orientation were reported in 1993, up from 6,623 the previous year. Of those crimes in 1993, 62 percent were racially motivated (Cacas, 32). Certainly, this is a problem the nation must address. Unfortunately, the ... with penalty enhancement laws such as Wisconsin¹s, is classifying and prosecuting an incident as hate-motivated (Cacas, 33). At what point can we be certain the victim was selected based on race, religion, or sexual orientation? Another more pressing problem is police unwillingness to investigate a crime as hate-motivated (Cacas, 33). Certainly, the difficulting in determining whether a crime is hate-motivated is one of the reasons police ...
650: Manet Painting
... was not until Manet returned to France that he reveled the true extent of his relationships with these girls, and confessed to the fact that they allowed his time there to be served in relative sexual promiscuity. But, why should such behavior, which it must be noted, would have been considered as being quite normal for a gentleman such as Manet, be such an intrinsic facet in the determination of his ... enabled him to have identified himself with this female character more easily, even to the point where he appears to feel a certain kinship with those women, who, like himself suffered the repercussions of their sexual behavior, and thus were tainted for life. The question of the true intellectualism behind Manet¹s complex composition of this painting, in terms of social and personal relevance, must be raised, as, for such a ... when one considers the moral climate of Nineteenth century Europe (albeit, hypocritical to modern sensibilities), one can identify that the controversial subject matter that Manet has centered this piece around, and his questioning of the sexual degradation that women were subject to as a result of male dominated fiance, would have been controversial to the point were a contemporary audience would have automatically dismissed it, choosing to believe that the ...


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