Working mothers should, indeed, be given special privileges. In a typical two-parent household, at least one parent is capable of becoming the sole breadwinner, while the other parent looks for the child or children. In the case of a working mother, she must care for both her family and her job.
Hello. Your question is incomplete, which makes it impossible for it to be answered. However, I will try to help you in the best possible way.
The labor rate refers to the price of an employee, that is, it refers to the price that will be paid for the work of that employee in relation to the time of work that he or she will perform. The rate of employment, on the other hand, refers to the number of people who have a job within a population. In the case of the question above, the rate of employment charged to a company must be proportional to its ability to pay a fair wage to contracted employees. In this case, to answer your question, it would be necessary to first know the labor rate that a company can promote, so that it is possible to determine the rate of employment that will be demanded. This labor rate, will depend on the defined budget, the expenses and the time of work that will be required of each worker presented by the company.
In Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, the story takes place in a town called Holcomb. Right from the beginning of the book, we know that Holcomb is a small and somewhat boring place. The author describes it as a ''a lonesome area.
Woolf states that is difficult that genius is produced by uneducated people, such as women in Shakespeare's time were, and such the worker class is today. If a person doesn't have the chance to study, to practise, to get experience at the chosen craft, it is impossible that becomes a genius. Geniosity is not a gift but something that can be achieved by study and practise.
Women in Shakespeare's time didn't have a chance to become genius, they had to work ward for other people, their families first or their husbands when the time came. A woman "born with a great gift in the sixteenth century would certainly have gone crazed, shot herself, or ended her days in some lonely cottage outside the village, half witch, half wizard, feared and mocked at." To pursue her dream would have been "doing a violence to herself", to make themselves face rejection and mockery on and on and on wold make anybody ill, physically or psychologically. And if they managed to survive and write, "looking at the shelf where there are no plays by women, her work would have gone unsigned".