"All the sons who live in the 1940's" In this article, I will study about "all sons", the life of the 1940s before and after the war, how it affects various types of people . People who serve war and who are at home. I will also learn about life, such as how families prosper in postwar dramas. I will also explore different families and see how they live and deal with the war impact.
I compiled everything as the second biography I read in my life, and as a review course in American history. The son of the wilderness: The life of John Muir was written by a well educated woman in the mid-1940s. The author quotes Mr. Muir and other letters in this book and offers an additional course to translate the old Scots translations. As I mentioned earlier, I am never a qualified source of recommendations on person attributes. But if you do not go anywhere, you may want to suggest a more modern book for more casual readers.
In this book, the book I chose in the report of the book "The Fact of Women and Job Change" is divided into various sections on the employees of women published from 1940 to 1996. Definition of an elite rule means whether a talent is held above, regardless of where it is, either male or female (Nichols, 1996.p.ix). The author also mentioned about sexual harassment and gender discrimination in the beginning.
In the 1940s, the role and expectation of women in society had changed rapidly. In the past, the voice of a woman in a community is small, just having a child in the house, a good housewife and a wife. In the 1940 's, the lives of women are expanding, men by war differ, some people stood to occupy the position of men. Not only the men also war, the war is as great as establishing a woman who received a women's party (WAC) and emergency service volunteers (WAVES) in 1942. After these organizations were approved, Congress granted permission to send women to the US Navy. Go back to the state government, the factory women, the role of labor intensive work, will be the focus of the entertainment community. In 1943, the National Women's Professional Baseball League was founded. In 1945, Eleanor Roosevelt became the representative of the newly-formed United Nations. Through the 1940s, the number of women in the labor force increased by 25-35%.