Ash, after ash, slowly hugging the side walks of Greene Street and Washington Place becoming the temporary street paint of Manhattan in 1911. The top three floors of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company were vanishing before the pedestrian’s eyes, but not everyone is in disbelief. The masterminds being selfish and money hungry allowed nothing to get in their way and had an attorney to cover up all the mess. This outbreak of chaos left the city stunned and bruised with the 146 deaths of innocent immigrants. The pain of those who could not distinguish the bodies of there loved ones in order to give a proper goodbye before heading to the cemetery.…
March 25, 1911 was another Saturday for the men and women of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. The women work their long hours in the horrible conditions that were provided for them. The men hovered over them and analyzed the women's every move. At the end of the shift the women were to stand in a single file line to have their purses checked, to ensure that they were not stealing from the factory. Little did the people know that on this Saturday something would happen that would not only change the lives of the workers, but also began a change for most of the factories.…
Lyddie, is a novel written by katherine Peterson, that shows the struggles of being a factory girl. Lyddie has a goal, to one day reunite her family on the farm. Lyddie now has the responsibility to care for her sister, Rachel. Lyddie has a home, and food everyday. The factory girls work 15 hour days, 6 days a week, tending four looms.…
Ostler’s more inclusive form of politics can be applied to late 19th century industrial relations and gender relations. Thomas G. Andrews illustrates in his book Killing for Coal how the plight of the coal workers was strangely similar to the Sioux’s situation in many ways. The U.S.’s need for coal to support its economic boom was similar to the U.S. government’s need for Sioux land in order to expand, and colliers residency in company towns that had significant control over miners’ lives is reminiscent of the Sioux’s’ lives on reservations. The solidarity that miners gained through their suffering and their representation of it through strikes and protests follow a similar pattern to the banding together of different Sioux tribes and the use…
Boss Politics: Hollywood and the Political Machine Hollywood’s representations of the urban political machine are depicted in the movies The Last Hurrah and The Great McGinty. Using a historical context and definitions of piolitical machines and boss’s make it easier to understand and comapare the meaning of these movies. The Last Hurrah (TLH) depicts the failing political machine of Frank Skeffington in a new England city.…
Apart from the growing number of women that publicly protested the law, Livy’s account depicts a divided atmosphere…
Spanning from the 1890’s to the 1920’s, the Progressive Era marks a period of monumental social and political change in the United States. Leaders in the movement sought egalitarian reform in various political, social, financial, industrial, and scientific spheres. It was during this era that the social sciences in the United States became codified as professional and robustly scientific academic fields. In addition, many socially and politically relevant persons, reforms, and institutions arose from the period. One visionary of note is the renowned political/social activist, philosopher, and author, Jane Addams.…
Exposition There were butterflies in my stomach and I could feel beads of sweat run down my face. A policeman unlocked my handcuffs and pushed me into the dark cell. My clothes were mucky and weighed down with sweat. The dirty cell had a foul stench of garbage and rotten sewage which made it impossible to withstand. My family were supporters of women's rights ever since I was a little girl .…
The issues of growth in Manchester were the average health of common people, the laws imposed on the common person, and space of the city. The people of Manchester reacted very negatively to the Industrial revolution changes while parliament workers thought very highly of the revolution. The city of Manchester battled health issues throughout the industrial revolution. Document 3 is an official document written by Thomas B. Macaulay in 1830 about how positively the industrial revolution is impacting life expectancy.…
In the 1800s, many workers (including men, women and children) had risen above their bosses and supervisors, in the form of petitions, strikes and marches that had took power against the horrid working conditions of that era. Lyddie, a novel written by Katherine Paterson is a memoir of a fictional character named Lyddie who works in a factory to repay her family's debt which takes place in the industrial revolution. Lyddie is 13-15 in the circumstances of the book, and she is hinted throughout the book to be the only provider for her family at the time. Lyddie is then thrown into situations where she is constantly bombarded with choices. An underlying tone that is presented in the novel is the danger that is presented during her time in the…
“It is time that we all see gender as a spectrum instead of two sets of opposing ideals. ”- Emma Watson (Ferguson, 238). In the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, women did not have the right to vote. The dominion act of Canada stated that “no woman, idiot, lunatic, or criminal shall vote”.…
In The Wretched of the Earth, Frantz Fanon alludes to sources of power for both colonizers and colonized. Colonizers gain their power from both physical and psychological violence, whereas the colonized must gain power over the colonizers through physically violent rebellion. Hannah Arendt, in Crises of the Republic, takes a very different view of power. While she agrees that occasionally violence is used to exert power and control, true power comes from the concerted efforts of the group, not necessarily from violence. The outcomes of these two very different theories of power are worlds apart, with Fanon demanding violent revolt and Arendt espousing peaceful civil disobedience.…
One question historians wonder about is, was Karl Marx’s call for the worker to upsurge in a revolution to seize power is justified. In the first half of the 1800’s, the workers were miserable, suffering low pay, poor work, and living conditions and they had no political power. The primary sources of The Berlin factory rules from the Foundry and Engineering Works of the Royal Overseas Trading Company, the Workers’ revolution was justified. In the latter half of the 1800’s the revolution was not justified.…
It is necessary for the government to impose a certain amount of power and control on its citizens in order for a society to function properly. However, too much power and control in a society eliminates the freedom of the residents, forbidding them to live an ordinary life. In the dystopic futuristic novel, The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood demonstrates the theme of power and control through an oppressive society called the Republic of Gilead. The government establishes power and control through the use of the Wall, military control, the Salvaging, and the Particicution. The Aunts indoctrinate the Handmaids and control them by using fear and intimidation.…
Women in today’s society have made leaps and bounds to becoming men’s equals, but what if in the future all the progress women have made was reversed in an instant? What if women were no longer able to hold money, hold a job, or make the most basic decisions for themselves? Their only job is to bear children and listen to the orders from men because men are the superior gender. In The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood, Republic of Gilead exercises total control over its people, women in particular, by the use of religion as the basis for their society and the use of propaganda to restrict the citizens.…