Gender Roles in the Aztec Civilization

Examine the role of gender, and/ sexuality in this society. To the extent that your sources and the length of the paper allow it, you may examine the relationship of gender//sexuality to several different aspects of this society, such as politics, economics, family structure, or religion.
Statement of significance: summary of why it is important to understand the workings of gender / sexuality in the society you have chosen. Why should world historians be interested in this research? Thinking about this question will help you to frame your research so that it will be interesting and understandable for the reader.
Statement of geographic and chronological scope: Explain briefly what time period and geographic region you will focus on. What kind of society existed in this time and place? Was it an agricultural or pastoral society? Was it urbanized? Was it a unified state or a collection of tribes or villages or small polities (“city-states”) that shared cultural and political traditions? What were the main cultural and political influences on the society? What were the key features of its religious practices? Of its economy? Thinking about these questions will help you to decide which aspects of gender and sexuality are most important and interesting in the society you have chosen.
Research questions: Come up with three specific research questions to help serve as the focus of your inquiry. The questions should be related to each other in some way (so that they will help you produce a coherent argument) and should help you get at role of gender and/ sexuality in the society (so that you will stay on topic). What roles did men and women have in religious life
Bibliography: For this phase of the project, you need to locate at least six sources. At least one of these should be a scholarly monograph, and one should be an article in a scholarly journal. Some use of online sources is permitted, but you should not rely entirely on the web for your research, and you should be using web resources that are scholarly, and if possible, peer-reviewed. If there is a primary source pertinent to your topic in the textbook, you should list it here and include it in your analysis in the final paper.
Final Draft: Your final draft should be written as an argument that answers your research questions, with an introduction that frames your argument, a body organized in paragraphs that presents and analyzes your evidence, and a conclusion that sums up your argument. It is best to state your thesis up front. Your paper should be double-spaced, plus parenthetical citations and a bibliography.

Edit your work. Once you have a rough draft, figure out how to pull it together tightly with an overall argument. Then rework your introduction, conclusion, and paragraph theses to make your argument more tight and coherent.

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