Examples of alienation in the following topics:
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- The "Reign of Witches" was a descriptive catchphrase used by Democratic-Republicans to criticize the Federalist Alien and Sedition Acts.
- "The Reign of Witches" is a termed used by Democrat-Republicans to describe the Federalist party and John Adams after the passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts.
- Hence, Jefferson, Madison, and other Democratic-Republicans combatted the Alien and Sedtion acts by mobilizing widespread party support during the1800 election campagin and defending those persecuted under the legislation.
- The Alien and Sedition Acts were four bills passed in 1798 by the Federalists in the 5th United States Congress, in the midst of the French Revolution and the undeclared naval war with France, the Quasi-War.
- The Alien and Sedition Acts were codified attempts by the Federalists to protect the United States from the anarchy of the French Revolution and from those seditious elements seeking to undermine the federal government.
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- The Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 were a series of laws that aimed to outlaw speech that was critical of the government.
- The Alien Act authorized the president to deport any resident alien considered "dangerous to the peace and safety of the United States."
- The Alien Enemies Act authorized the president to apprehend and deport resident aliens if their home countries were at war with the United States.
- The most controversial arrest made under the Alien and Sedition Acts was of a member of Congress.
- While the Alien and Sedition Acts were left largely unenforced after 1800, the Alien Act was later used to justify the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and the Supreme Court was grappling with the constitutionality of the Sedition Acts as late as the 1960s.
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- Here, Marx contends that alienation is endemic in any system based on capitalism.
- Marx refers to this as being alienated from one's work, and as such one's self.
- Tönnies's work shifted from conceiving of alienation in economic terms to thinking of alienation in social terms.
- However, many of Marx's predecessors focused on the social consequences of alienation where Marx emphasized the economic causes for alienation.
- Thus, the reorientation to social alienation did not represent a break in thinking on alienation, just a shift to new directions.
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- In the concept's most important use, it refers to the social alienation of people from aspects of their "human nature. " Marx believed that alienation is a systematic result of capitalism.
- The first is the alienation of the worker from the work he produced, or from the product of his labor.
- The second is the alienation of the worker from working, or from the act of producing itself.
- When the bourgeoisie interferes with or impedes any of these natural tendencies, the worker is alienated.
- Analyze Marx's theory of alienation in terms of the four types of alienation and their implications for workers
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- From this objectification comes alienation.
- The common worker is led to believe that he or she is a replaceable tool, and is alienated to the point of extreme discontent.
- Capitalism utilizes our tendency towards religion as a tool or ideological state apparatus to justify this alienation.
- Marx viewed social alienation as the heart of social inequality .
- The antithesis to this alienation is freedom.
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- When the worker monitoring the caramel no longer sees how his work contributes to the larger product, he is said to be alienated from his labor.
- He described the process of specialization as alienation.
- In his view, workers become more and more specialized, and their work becomes more and more repetitive, until eventually they are completely alienated from the production process.
- Examine how the division of labor can lead to alienation and less satisfaction in the workforce
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- Marx himself did not write about deviant behavior specifically, but he wrote about alienation amongst the proletariat, as well as between the proletariat and the finished product, which causes conflict, and thus deviant behavior.
- Alienation is the systemic result of living in a socially stratified society, because being a mechanistic part of a social class alienates a person from his or her humanity.
- In a capitalist society, the worker's alienation from his and her humanity occurs because the worker can only express labor, a fundamental social aspect of personal individuality, through a privately owned system of industrial production in which each worker is an instrument, a thing, not a person.
- The nineteeth-century German intellectual Karl Marx identified and described the alienation that afflict the worker under capitalism.
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- As a result, the proletariat is alienated from the fruits of its labor – they do not own the products they produce, only their labor power.
- But the alienation from the results of their production is just one component of the alienation Marx proposed.
- In addition to the alienation from the results of production, the proletariat is also alienated from each other under capitalism.
- Capitalists alienate the proletariat from each other by forcing them to compete for limited job opportunities.
- While Marx did have a solution to the problem of alienation, he seldom discussed it in detail.
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- This decision, however, alienated him from many Federalists, hurt his popularity with the American public, and played an important role in his defeat in reelection.
- The Alien and Sedition Acts were four bills passed in 1798 by the Federalists in the fifth U.S.
- After the passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts, Democratic-Republicans began to use the term "the reign of witches" to describe the Federalist party and John Adams.
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- The alien landed the spaceship.
- (“The alien” is
the subject and “the spaceship” is the direct object.)
- The spaceship was steered by the alien.
- (“The
spaceship” is the subject and “the alien” is the object.)