• Research Paper on:
    Reaction Paper on Sara Davidson's Loose Change

    Number of Pages: 5

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    Sara Davidson's Loose Change is the focus of this reaction paper consisting of five pages. There are no other sources listed.

    Name of Research Paper File: JR7_RAloose.rtf

    Buy This Research Paper »

     

    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    struggles for womens rights, and the struggle for overall freedoms, even sexual freedoms, seem to constantly spring up in the media. One book that has lasted quite some time is  "Loose Change" by Sara Davidson. This particular book is a story of Saras experiences along with the experiences of two of her friends in time and place of change. In  the following paper we present a reaction paper, from the perspective of this writer, as it relates to Sara Davidsons "Loose Change." Loose Change As mentioned, there is perhaps  book after book which depicts the experiences of one individual or another during the 1960s. But, there truly seems to be very little in the way of womens books, or  books that present the reader with experiences of women during this time. Or, if there are books they are not necessarily personal accounts, but rather sociological studies of the experiences  of women in the 1960s. This is what makes Davidsons book unique and engaging. It is a personal story of Sara and two of her friends. It speaks to the  reader of their own friendships and their own experiences during chaotic and exploratory times. Putting aside the fact that the book centers on the changes in the 1960s as  experienced by these women, the book is truly a very intricate look at women during a time when women were just coming out into the public with their own cries  of freedom. For the most part, as it relates to Davidsons book, this freedom is primarily social and sexual. These women feel they have a chance to branch out and  experience life in a way that their mothers never could have imagined. With drugs, relationships that were freely sexual, and the entire world open to the idea of love, 

    Back to Research Paper Results