Thursday, November 7, 2019
Critique of Philadelphia (the movie) essays
Critique of Philadelphia (the movie) essays    They  are  your  friends, your  sibling, your  guardian  and  your  significant  other.  They  are  your  minister, your  teacher, your  bank-teller, your  doctor, your  mail-carrier, your  roommate  and  your  congressional  representative (Mohr 1).       They  are  everywhere, even  in  your  workplace.     	Mohr, the author  of  A  More  Perfect  Union, was  referring  to  homosexuals.  Gays  and  lesbians  have  become  a  contemporary  social  issue.  For  six  years  now, the  homosexual  issue  has  been  dramatized  in  the  media.  The  issue  quickly  carried  over  into  the  workplace.  Although  the  workplace  is  becoming  the  new  frontier  in  the  battle  for  gay  rights  and  equality (Winfeld 39), gays  are  subject  to  widespread  discrimination  in  employment.  In  one  such  case, a  man  like  Andrew  Beckett  was  fired  from  a  prestigious  law  firm  because  he  was  gay  and  had  AIDS.  Imagine, if  you  can, working  for  a  law  firm  and  just  being  promoted.  You  are  a  qualified, experienced, efficient  worker.  But, you  are  also  gay  and  have  AIDS.  Since  you  are  being  plagued  by  legions, and  no  makeup  can  conceal  your  illness, you  have  no  choice  but  to  work  at  home  or  late-night  at  the  office.  Someone  unknown     to  you  discovers  your  illness  and  sexual  orientation  and  decides  to  sabotage  you.  You  have  recently  been  working  on  the  firms  most  important  case.  You  leave  a  copy  of  the  case  on  a  disk  on  your  desk.  The  following  day, it  is  nowhere  to  be  found.  A  day  later, the  disk  is  found  and  you  are  fired.  You  feel  you  were  set  to  appear  irresponsible  and  incompetent, but  you  were  really  fired  because  you  have  AIDS  and  are  gay.     	This  scenario  is  taken  from  the  box-office  hit  Philadelphia.  This  1993  drama  became  the   first  movie  to  openly  discuss  AIDS, thus...     
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