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Essay needed for WS2010 Introduction to Women’s Studies The purpose of a cultural analysis essay (based on historical artifacts) is to demonstrate in writing your ability to think critically about specific historical evidence (primary sources), usually written artifacts such as literature, letters and other first person accounts, and legal/political documents or visual artifacts such as art, advertisements and other media. Your writing should demonstrate your ability to understand and appreciate the selected historical artifacts and to apply major concepts and interpretive approaches from Women’s Studies to those artifacts. The best essays will address the social and cultural dynamics that influenced or shaped the creation of the specific artifact(s). A cultural analysis essay is ; your writing should aim to provide analytical and interpretive thought that is not immediately evident in the historical artifacts themselves. Select from our course textbook* and develop a focused cultural analysis based on of the following five topics: 1. How does the intersection of gender and economic or social class inform the construction or creation of visual or written artifacts from a specific historical period? 2. How does the intersection of gender and ethnicity, “race,” or national origin inform the construction or creation of visual or written artifacts from a specific historical period? 3. How are attitudes and approaches to gender expressed differently across the generations? (Please select artifacts that are at least 50 years apart.) 4. How are attitudes and approaches to gender represented differently in diverse geographic regions within the United States (e.g. North-South; East Coast-Western territories)? 5. How have specific male historical figures contributed to and/or productively informed women’s rights movements in the United States and what does this reveal about the construction of gender in our culture? Cultural Analysis Essays should be composed to college-level standards of grammar and organization; your essay should be well developed with supporting evidence from both the artifact(s) at the focus of your analysis and relevant scholarly sources. Strong written analysis includes the following: · A specific introduction that provides relevant, contextual background of the focus artifact or artifacts, · A clear statement of the overall interpretation to be offered in the essay, such as through a purpose statement or thesis, · A consistent interpretive focus on the features of the primary sources, the artifacts themselves: What do they express? What does this expression mean? How, specifically, is this expression conveyed? Why might the original author/creator have chosen to produce this specific artifact in this way (and for whom)? · An awareness of both the intentional, obvious features of the artifacts and the unconscious, unintentional or culturally influenced aspects of the artifacts, such a biases or other historically-informed values and beliefs, · A concluding analysis that suggests the larger significance of the artifact(s) for its originating context as well as our own time, and · Precisely documented quotations or evidence from the primary sources (the artifacts) as well as secondary sources (research) via MLA format; at least two (but no more than five in an essay of this length) relevant secondary sources should be referenced. 4-6 pages Course text book Through Women’s Eyes, Combined Volume: An American story with Documents, 3Rd Edition. No plagiarism and budget of $30 needed by 10 Aug 18