in America Book Review If she did not make plasma deposits twice a week at a donation center in Tennessee, Jessica Compton and her family would have no income. Modonna Harris and her teenage daughter Brianna, in Chicago, have gone for days with nothing to eat other than spoiled milk. The Harris and Compton families’ stories are just two accounts of devastating poverty documented in sociology professors Kathryn Edin and H. Luke Shaefer’s book, “$2.00 a Day: Living on Almost Nothing in America.” After…
Words 1776 - Pages 8
photograph is ‘an image that can embody a complete thought or an entire story; a series of photographs can shape a narrative or make an argument. Words tap the ideas that the visual holds and carries them further’ (Spirn, 2008: xi) Lange was a documentarian photographer who through image defined the effects of the American Depression of the 1930’s. Her photographs described a narrative so powerful; it sent a message all over the world. The objective and aim of this analysis is to define Lange’s…
Words 2594 - Pages 11
The Great Gatsby is written by Fitzgerald and is a modern narrative that comments on various themes in modern society such as power, betrayal, justice and the American dream. With the multiple themes in the story, none is more developed than the overt class warfare developed the polarity between the poor, the rich and also new money, old money. Published in 1922, it takes place in a period which some historians regard as the end of the industrial revolution and the start of postwar economic growth…
Words 1025 - Pages 5
“The Great Gatsby and the Good American Life.” Jay Gatsby, Editor Harold Bloom, Chelsea House Publications, 2004, pp. 125. 125-135. 125-135. Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. Collier Books, 1992. http://www.collierbooks.com/collier-books/. Fussel, Edwin S. “Fitzgerald’s Brave New World.” Jay Gatsby, Editor Harold Bloom, Chelsea House Publications, 2004, pp. 113-117. 7-11. The. Hilgart, John. The. The Great Gatsby's Aesthetics of Non-Identity." Arizona…
Words 1517 - Pages 7
From chapter 17's reading, I learned a tremendous amount about exactly how business owners treated children laborers and immigrant employees in the 19th and early 20th century. I learned a great deal of the businesses that worked children and immigrants, as well as the effects that it had on them. This topic gave me the opportunity to put an abundance of thought into child labor and immigrant employees in today society. The use of child labor and immigrant workers was predominate during the…
Words 1066 - Pages 5
“Water for Elephants,” Sara Gruen’s lightweight page turner about a Depression-era traveling circus, would appear to be a vehicle ready-made for a prestigious family movie on the order of “Seabiscuit.” With its star attraction, a gentle elephant named Rosie who understands Polish, the novel belongs to the John Irving school of semi-serious whimsy with allegorical overtones. The primary draw for Water for Elephants is the pairing of Reese Witherspoon and Robert Pattinson (ignore the ten year age…
Words 2107 - Pages 9
propaganda, which helped a struggling United States in ending the Great Depression. Manufacturing was increased by over three hundred percent and production increased by about twenty-five percent. This allowed the U.S. to produce more goods than any other country, a factor that helped them win the war and become a world superpower. The amount of government intervention during the war also changed the role of the federal government in America…
Words 1178 - Pages 5
Throughout the quarter, we have explored a number of poetic works that deal with themes of loneliness and isolation. Claudia Rankine’s Citizen explores the feelings of being discriminated against as a black person in the United States. Patricia Lockwood’s “Rape Joke” poem concerns rape joke culture and discusses the otherness and madness of being a victim of rape. Fred Moten’s “Block Chapel” refers to the fun, fancy, and mystery of an unidentified group, but seemingly ostracizes the reader by…
Words 2156 - Pages 9
path for fixing the problem in the same sense of knowing the root of an illness allows a doctor not just to alleviate the symptoms but to cure the disease. Therefore, we need to attempt to find a clear starting point. There must be a fully coherent narrative to explain the financial crisis of 2008, one that we are still reeling from. Some believe that we should start by exploring the crash of 1987, or with the subprime mortgage crisis that led to the housing burst in 2008. However, as others note…
Words 2750 - Pages 11
forget there are those with extreme misfortune. It is easy to go about everyday life without picturing the difficult situations others go through unless there are ways to be reminded. Ever since nationwide poverty became an issue during the Great Depression, America has not been able to diminish it. Many articles, songs, charities, and conferences have been introduced to try to eradicate poverty, but to no avail. There are many well-crafted, trustworthy, ethical, and effective artifacts on poverty…
Words 2008 - Pages 9