Evita Peron In 1949 the most familiar scene in Argentina was held almost every day at the Labor Bureau in Buenos Aires. Under the glare of the camera light, former radio stars and movie actresses, now the most influential women in South America, enter her office through a group of admirers, poor women and children. President Juan Peron's wife Evita Peron will sit on her desk and start her political campaign with her husband, one of Peronism's great ceremonies.
Women have gone far away, and once respected by believers. Evita Pyron's life is like a romantic novel drama, a story of a young and poor illegal girl who escaped from the cruelty and poverty of his hometown and became a big city friend. The movie stars fought to the peak by the inheritance of men and married the President of her country, died only at the age of 33 (Harbinson 154), Eva was born and spent in Argentina's illegal town . The essence of the discussion is to explore the power of Eva Luna and A Doll's House in two articles, Isabel Allende and Henrik Ibsen, with Eva Luna and A Doll's House where various people dominate others. But this force comes from shape, different roles are used for different purposes, the way the character is implemented varies with these different qualities, some people succeed, others fail To do.
Evaporon was the first woman in Argentina from 1946 to 1952. Evaporon or "Evita" became a powerful politician with great support among poor, working-class members. She influenced millions of people by helping the poor and gave women the right to vote. For her supporters, she is a saint who works to overcome poverty and wrongdoing. For her critics (national army and bourgeoisie) she is a controversial figure in Argentina's political center.
This is a close-up of a balcony where Evita Perone preached the gospel to the poor and helpless people in Argentina. My guided tour asked about Evita's heritage in her Argentina and her idea. This is a hybrid package (is not it always?). Evita and her husband are working to help the poor and oppressed people, but they are also paternalism and authoritarian. Evita's father was a wealthy man, but he got another family and threw away his family when she was one. Due to poverty, she wanted to leave Buenos Aires at the age of fifteen and become an actor. Back then, Buenos Aires was considered to be Paris in South America. She served as President of Argentina three times in 1946, married to the older Juan Pelon who finished his last term in the 1970s and thus rose to become political power. Evita died of cancer at the age of 33