Saturday, July 20, 2019
Eva Duarte Peron (Evita) Essay -- Argentina History Latin America Evit
Eva Duarte Peron (Evita)       Thesis: Her experience as a member of the lower class who overcame poverty and her belief in bringing justice to the poor made everything that she did for the people of Argentina possible.      Eva Peron      'Mi vida por Peron!' ('My life for Peron!') [Evita]    cried a thousand times before the roaring crowds, and    then she died. There are parallels that could be    drawn between her life and the lives of other    obsessively ambitious women who have forced their way    through poverty and fame.but instead popular memory    finds parallels between Evita's life and the lives of    the saints, because she did it all for someone else.    (Guillermoprieto 100)    From Colonel Juan Peron's election in 1946 until her death from cancer    in 1952, Eva Duarte de Peron greatly altered the lives of the Argentine    people. Knowing from her childhood what it was like to belong to the    lower class population of Argentina, she felt she had the inside    connection to making conditions better for her "descamisados," or    "shirtless ones." Her experience as a member of the lower class who    overcame poverty and her belief in bringing justice to the poor made    everything she did for the people of Argentina possible.    Social injustice was everywhere in Argentina. It was too much for Eva    to bear, so she decided to take action (Peron 12). Eva Duarte met her    opportunity to work for the government when an earthquake destroyed most        of the city of San Juan on January 15, 1944. She helped take    collections for the needy (To Be I). Later, she chose to work in the    Secretariat of Labor and Social Welfare. In this department she was    able to meet many people and hear all of their stories and problems    (Peron 71). She was especially interested in the lower class, the    working class of Argentines. Coming from a family among the working    class, she knew what they were going through. She had a special    understanding of the working class and felt comfortable working with    them to improve their situation (79). Eva considered each worker that    came into her office a friend, and she was a loyal friend to each of    them (81). In all of this, her main purpose was to give justice to the    poor.    In 1945 she married Colonel Juan Peron, who became Argentina's president        in 1946 (Taylor 39). Eva helped him a great d...              ...ood education. She gave Argentine    women the right to vote and a place to go while beginning their career.    She gave the orphans a home and the elderly a place to retire. All of    these things she did without expecting anything in return. The only    thing she desired was the love of her people and of Peron.      Works Cited    Guillermoprieto, Alma. "Little Eva." The New Yorker 2 December 1996:98+    Larson, Dolane. "Evita's Legacy." Evita Peron Historical Research Foundation. 10 January 1997.  http://www.evitaperon.org/legacy/ (2 April 1999).    Mc Henry, Robert, ed. "Eva Peron." The New Encyclopedia Britannica: Macropaedia. 1993 ed.    [Peron, Eva.] evita by evita: Eva Duarte Peron Tells Her Own Story. Redwood City, CA: Proteus Publishing Co., Inc., 1978.    Taylor, J.M. Eva Peron: The Myths of a Woman. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1979.    To Be Evita. Part I. Trans. Dolane Larson. Evita Peron Historical Research Foundation. April, 1997.  http://evitaperon.org/biography/part1.html (9 April 1999).    To Be Evita. Part II. Trans. Dolane Larson. Evita Peron Historical Research Foundation. April, 1997.  http://evitaperon.org/biography/part2.html (9 April 1999).                         
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