Jacob Riis studied how Americans lived in the city during the reconstruction period. He specifically tried to reveal the horrors that resided in the tenements of New York. He uses vivid imagery and multiple other strategies to show more privileged Americans how so many impoverished people lived. Thanks to his efforts, there was a movement toward better living conditions in cities all around the United States. Riis was a newspaper reporter who began working on the effects of the industrial revolution…
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261 Professor Ruddy 6 February 2014 Word Count: 1,132 A Reflection on "How the Other Half Lives" The author of "How the Other Half Lives", Jacob Riis, inscribes on the deplorable living conditions of the Progressive Era from a first-person perspective. Riis is an immigrant, police reporter, photojournalist and most importantly: a innovator and social reformer, who tells a very captivating yet atrocious experience of the lower class life in New York City beginning in the 19th century. Migration…
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economy. During this time there was corruption, such as strikes, unfair strategies within businessmen, monopolies, horizontal and vertical integration and the conditions for immigrants. The Progressive Period was the time period of reform, with the antitrust movement, muckrakers, the wisconsin idea, the hull house, and the pendleton civil service act. The Gilded Age and Progressive Period are time periods in the United States and both had many beneficial and unbeneficial factors but are different…
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basic attitudes behind progressive movements: - Anger over the excesses of industrial capitalism and urban growth - Emphasized social cohesion and common bonds to understand modern society - Against social Darwinism - Felt citizens needed to intervene to improve social conditions - Progressives offered a combination of social justice and social control Women Spearhead Reform - Many middle class women supported the settlement house movement - Reformers such as Jane Addams…
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period in history when Progressives exposed corruption in the government and social structure. Millions of Americans organized associations to come up with solutions to the many problems that almost everyone was facing, and many of these problems were staring American women right in the face. Women took on very many big roles, they created many different organizations to help ones in need. They helped change the social structure for women and by doing so, made them able to receive major support in…
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purpose and intent of art has changed with time. Different artists make their art to appeal to different audiences and for different purposes. One factor that has remained constant throughout art history, however, is the goals of artists to engage in social and political commentary about the environment around them. This trend can be seen in the artistic style of Barbara Kruger in the modern era. Barbara Kruger is an American conceptual artist that specializes in the use of photographs mixed with traditional…
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Social Issues Prohibition - Prohibition was a period of nearly fourteen years of U.S. history in which the manufacture, transportation, and sale of liquor was made illegal. After the American Revolution, drinking was very popular. To battle this, a number of societies were organized as part of a new temperance movement which attempted to advise against people from becoming intoxicated. At first, these organizations pushed composure but after several decades, the movement's focus changed to complete…
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One of the causes of the progressive movement was the negative impact of industrialization that led to impoverished working conditions, rapid urbanization and a lack of planning led to horrific housing and filthy living conditions in the city. In the book “How the Other Half Lives” by Jacob Riis showed the terrible living conditions in New York city slums, exposing the slums to the Upper and middle class of New York in form of photo journalism. Which generated a debate among politicians which helped…
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monopolies until 1890, with the Sherman Anti-trust act that prohibited trusts. However, not all the owners of big businesses had an evil intent with their influence. For example, Carnegie believed in charity and that wealth comes with a responsibility of social obligation, as he explains in Document E. Big corporations…
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From the 1880s to the 1920s, two great forces stimulated the age of reform politics in America. Populists in the late nineteenth century focused on improving the lives of small farmers, and eventually took part in politics to reform the government and put more power in the hands of the people. In the early twentieth century, Progressives sought to better the lives of poor people in America, and enact social and political reform that would decrease corruption in businesses and the government. Although…
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