Compare the manifesto drafted by olympe gouges with the declarationof rights of man and citizen.
Answers
Answer:
Woman has the right to mount the scaffold; she must equally have the right to mount the rostrum” wrote Olympe de Gouges in 1791 in the best known of her writings The Rights of Woman (often referenced as The Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen), two years before she would be the third woman beheaded during France’s Reign of Terror. The only woman executed for her political writings during the French Revolution, she refused to toe the revolutionary party line in France that was calling for Louis XVI’s death (particularly evident in her pamphlet Les Trois Urnes, ou le Salut de la Patrie [The Three Ballot Boxes, or the Welfare of the Nation, 1793). Simone de Beauvoir recognizes her, in Le Deuxième sexe [The Second Sex] (1949 [1953]), as one of the few women in history who “protested against their harsh destiny.” Favorably described by commentators alternately as a stateswoman, a femme philosophe, an artist, a political analyst, and an activist, she can be considered all of these but not without some qualification. While contradictions abound in her writings, she never wavered in her belief in the right to free speech and in its role in social and political critique.
Give at least 3 tangible goods produces by business firm?Toprovethat
heisnotjoking,heshowsthetickettoGrandpaJoe,
whosuddenlyjumpsoutofhisbedandstarts
dancing.Mr.Bucketreturnshomeafteralongdayof
shovelingsnow.Thefamilyexplainsthe
unbelievablesituationtohim.Charliegiveshimthe
ticket,andMr.Bucketreadsitaloudtoeveryoneelse.
Basicallyitsaysthathechildrenwillvisitthefactory
andtheycanalsoseehisinventionsandwillgo
homewithalifetimesupplyofgoodies.Theyhaveto
goonFebruary1,whichisthefollowingday.
GrandpaJoewantstogowithCharlie.Justthen
thereisaknockonthedoorandaswarmof
newspapermanappearswhowanttoseethelucky
childwhohasfoundthelastGoldenTicket.Charlieburstsintothehouseandyellsforhismother.
Inalotofexcitementheexplainstoherhowhe
foundthefinalgoldenticket.Distinguishing between companies according to whether they market services or goods has only limited utility. A more useful way to make the same distinction is to change the words we use. Instead of speaking of services and goods, we should speak of intangibles and tangibles. Everybody sells intangibles in the marketplace, no matter what is produced in the factory.
The usefulness of the distinction becomes apparent when we consider the question of how the marketing of intangibles differs from the marketing of tangibles. While some of the differences might seem obvious, it is apparent that, along with their differences, there are important commonalities between the marketing of intangibles and tangibles.
Put in terms of our new vocabulary, a key area of similarity in the marketing of intangibles and tangibles revolves around the degree of intangibility inherent in both. Marketing is concerned with getting and keeping customers. The degree of product intangibility has its greatest effect in the process of trying to get customers. When it comes to holding on to customers—to keeping them—highly intangible products run into very special problems.
First, this article identifies aspects of intangibility that affect sales appeal of both intangible and tangible products. And, next, it considers the special difficulties sellers of intangibles face in retaining customers.