America’s successes and failures in developing a pluralistic multi-cultural society by 1945

Answer the question : What were America’s successes and failures in developing a pluralistic multi-cultural society by 1945? Be sure to address at least two of the following three groups: Italian Americans, American Jews, and Asian Americans.

Must use all the links as sources & cite them on separate reference page

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/revisiting-japanese-internment-75th-anniversary

https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2015/03/16/393284680/in-hawaii-a-wwii-internment-camp-named-national-monument#:~:text=The%20Honouliuli%20internment%20camp%2C%20not,including%20hundreds%20of%20Japanese%2DAmericans.

womens roles in society

This week provides a “grab bag” of social institutions where women have traditionally encountered strictly-defined roles: the family, media, arts, education, religion, even language. Refer to at least three learning resources assigned for this week in your response to this topic:

FIRST, in a paragraph or two, discuss what connects the expectations of women in all of the learning resources this week. Are there any common threads despite the differences in the various resources and the institutions they present?

Second: 

Discuss what needs to change to see equality in one or more of the institutions presented in this week’s learning resources. How will we know if it has been achieved? In addition to referring to the learning resources, include specific examples from history, the news, the media, or your own life. Remember to consider intersectional identity in your response.

Use APA parenthetical citations in your text and include a reference list at the end of your post. When you refer to and/or discuss any resources, you need to include a citation for that source, such as: (Braincraft, 2015).  For more information on APA style, go to: https://sites.umgc.edu/library/libhow/apa_examples.cfm

Learning resources:

Marriage Protest of Lucy Stone and Henry Blackwell
https://www.thoughtco.com/marriage-protest-lucy-stone-henry-blackwell-3529568

The New Sexism
http://content.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1972425,00.html

The Dinner Party by Judy Chicago at The Brooklyn Museum
https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/home

collage education should be free for all citizens

need it for a persuasive speech with 3 main reasons

    The student will prepare a speech with a persuasive focus.
    The student will identify a topic for persuasion: a value, attitude, belief, or policy.
    The student will use credibility, logic, and emotion to state their case.
    The students speech will be convincing to the audience.

Looking at the Symposium with a queer theoretical view

Purpose

The purpose of this assignment is to articulate a response to one point you found to be subject to criticism.

Texts

Platos The Symposium
Eve Sedgwick “Epistemology of the Closet”
Judith Butler “Imitation and Gender Insubordination”
Topic

In his Symposium, Plato images a glittering array of Greek artists, thinkers, and leaders dedicating their time to praise the god Eros. In Greek thought, eros did not just mean sexual passion but included any of the bodily desires such as hunger and thirst. However, the men at this drinking party are largely concerned with sexual passion. They also celebrate pederasty besides homosexuality. Athenian culture had developed a social system that encouraged relations between younger and older men, with which Plato disagreed. In The Symposium, Plato will wrestle with Eross power, subdue it, and put it in the service of virtue.

Writing Assignment

Using a Gender Studies or Queer theoretical framework, respond critically to the following:

What can we learn from The Symposium

if we apply a Gender Studies or Queer Theoretical framework?

Directions

Please type three pages of double-spaced
Times New Roman
12-point font
One-inch margins
Include an original title
Include quotes so that I can identify what specific words or ideas you are responding to
Quote from both Plato and Sedgwick or Butler
Tips

Responding critically means you look closely at logic, rhetoric, theory, metaphor, analogies, symbols, language, gender, structures, opinions, beliefs, feelings, the mind, the setting (the context), the culture, and any other linguistically charged letter, word, or phrase to analyze a specific word, phrase, topic, sentence, paragraph, speech, dialogue, quote, or short passage.

Begin by introducing the author, the title of the text, and a summary of what you think the overall meaning of the text is.
Then, as you move into the body of your reader response narrow your focus to the point you found interesting in The Symposium.
Remember to provide specific evidence from the text; dont rely on routine responses (i.e. avoid saying or repeating that you found this point interesting without telling me why.
And when you explain why one or two points are interesting, take your time to develop your ideas.
Dont assume your reader will believe you if you just explain why something is interesting in a few words.