The Levittown experience, is that of a planned and organized housing alternative designed after WWII by Abraham Levitt´s firm in which people would live in residential areas in houses where they could have a standar ideal of family and upper-middle class lifestyle. There are many opinions against and for suburban life.
Among other effects, the Levittown experience of mass produced houses inevitably standarized not only the houses and suburbs general design, but also, it standarized lfestyles, creating a feeling of conformity among their residents, in which wives, for example, had to follow the expected role of tending their children and become into ideal homemakers whereas other impacts such as elder relatives having to move due to their ages or teenagers´ behaviors or the strain put on married couples do not seem to be of a great impact.
This is the reason why the closest impact of suburbia in social life is the first one,
<span>The two parts of the plot that take place in acts I and II of Macbeth are EXPOSITION and RISING ACTION
</span>Exposition - the beginning; the introduction into the story.
Rising Action - The events that progressively lead up to climax.
D.) Harry S. Truman
That excerpt was from the Truman Doctrine
Answer:
Portuguese explorers sought new sea routes to avoid the Ottoman monopoly. What economic impact did the geographic position of the Ottoman Empire have on world trade? It gained control of most land routes to East Asia.
Explanation:
The American and French Revolutions were fought several years and an ocean apart. However, they feature enough similarities that some people initially consider them “mirror struggles.” After all, there are some easy comparisons: both revolutions occurred in the later eighteenth century. Both subverted an existing, monarchical government. Finally, both created ripe conditions for constitutionalism and deep patriotism.
But dig more deeply, and you’ll find that this “same revolution, different continent” concept is not as tidy as it initially appears. Further similarities between the two revolutions are just different enough to produce profound distinctions between the two revolutions. Although most scholars believe that the two revolutions influenced one another (as well as had profound worldwide impact), each revolution is a very distinct and singular struggle for freedom, identity, and an improved way of life.
Indeed, scholars have built entire careers on this subject, and rich debate and information is available online or at your local library. However, here are a few fundamental elements shared by the revolutions, with intricate but important differences highlighted:
Causes
Both the American Revolution and the French Revolution were borne of dire economic conditions.