In the 19th century, when the impact of the recent democratic society began to spread among Americans, gender equality, women's role, and families began to transform into a distinctive culture. In the United States democracy is opening up a new belief about gender and role equality. In "American democracy", Alexis de Tocquill discusses how Americans can emphasize the role of gender rather than Europeans. Americans are aware of the important role that women and men play in the community.
But actually, there is more to say about American democracy. American democracy is a true breakthrough in understanding the whole lifestyle that fundamentally changes the way people live in the world, with democracy as a unique political form. Behind the Tokkville's interest in democracy, he understood that he played a crucial role in shaping modernity by stimulating people's perception of the accidentality of things. In the critical moment of American democratic experiments, Tokuwill succeeded in drawing out that power from its dynamic energy, so the work of these four volumes is still considered one of the wonderful work on this subject. Several sources. To Tokwil, it is not just capitalism, it is not a country that defines modern law enforcement areas. "Great democracy revolution" shows the modernity of the previous life, which he repeatedly called "nobility".
American democracy often conflicts with this paper as it has a beautiful story of prose, conscious reflex, and fragmented "open text" structure. It can be said that American democracy is a wonderful work in contemporary democratic literature, but it is very attractive and easy to think, which obviously contradicts the foolish political science currently being mainstreamed in American universities and the like It is sentences. This can be expressed in various ways. Tocquill is actively opposed to himself. He said that simple simple body language, tobacco chewing habits, and young American democracy with a simple manner showed a clear style of equality and freedom and created conscious democratic art and literature I did not foresee it. Walter Whitman's "Grass Leaf" (1855) celebrates the infinite possibilities of American democracy experiments and the power of the poet who breaks traditional words,