...Well in 1930’s this was pretty much the normality in day to day life. To kill Mocking bird shows what is was like to live in a time when people were treated terribly because of the color of their skin. This novel also reflects the time at which it was written because in the 1960’s racism against African Americans was still a big problem. To Kill a Mocking bird is a timeless classic because it teaches readers what it was like to live in 1930’s and issues of racism, it relates to the time period it was written in , and it also still relates to issues that are present today. During the 1930’s racism was a very big issue in the south. African Americans were treated extremely un- fair and had little civil rights. They were persecuted and discriminated against because of the color of their skin and no other reason but that. Racist Americans seemed to really think that African Americans were less important and less human then white people because there skin was brown. “Despite the decline of organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan, racism was as strong as ever, especially in the Southern states” (Allen). To me this shows that the racist white American was ignorant and honestly stupid to think that a person was less important and less human because their skin was a different color. African Americans in south were severely segregated from the white people , whether it be in a restaurant, a store or just walking down the sidewalk. To kill a mocking shows how un-fairly African Americans...
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...Fashion of the 1930’s In the 1930’s fashion was at its peak. The fashion showed the elegance and beauty of the United States during a time of depression. During the 1930’s, fashion began to have a ready to wear mentality. The United States was just beginning the Great Depression and trying to adjust to a life with very little. The American people had to find cheaper ways and places to buy and manufacture clothes, especially after the stock market crashed (Dudbrige). Most of the inspiration for the fashion came from films which impacted the culture (Lewis). Most of the designers that designed for these films were located outside of the country where the bulk of the fashion industry was located (Lewis). In the 1930’s, fashion impacted the country...
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...depression, the lives of most every American was disrupted. The effects of the depression sent waves throughout the world from women having to work with the economy being crippled. The life of many families was shattered which separated children from their families. Many banks were shut down due to the drop in the stock market. The thought of living the American dream was no a blur for people could not buy nor own deteriorating their lives. The Great Depression had an immense impact on the lives of families. The average family income was nearly fifty percent lower previous to the depression began. Millions of families were evicted from their home due to losing their savings. “Children of impoverished families, recalling memories of family life during the 1930s, often remembered their fathers as emotionally distant and indifferent”. Teens rode on freight trains or hiked on mountains and roads to look for work. Families with small children often did not have food so the children were...
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...Amid the 1920's racism was boundless and was practically inevitable as Blacks always got threatened not only by individuals but rather the recently rising group called the Ku Klux Klan. Individuals of various religious foundations were also being abused by these groups. Segregation happened amid the 1930s when the white and black individuals were isolated inside their group in view of their skin tone. Segregation means the separation of people due to race or color in a community. Racism is loathed or prejudice of another race or different races. Even though there was a decrease of such associations as the Ku Klux Klan discrimination was as solid as ever in the Southern states there were no laws to secure against racist or loathe groups that...
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...Of Mice & Men exemplifies how being different caused segregation in the 1930’s. Lennie’s cognitive disability caused him to be discriminated against, just like those of color. I chose to do a diary entry so that I could really challenge and put myself in the position of those that were discriminated against for being different. I feel in our time that is 2015, we are also facing discrimination and racism with the recent police brutality. Therefore, I felt the need to do segregation in the 1930’s. With a diary entry, I could not only take emotions and experiences that I have faced for being different and discriminated against, but also those that faced prejudice in the 1930’s, to tie it all together into a diary entry from the 1930’s. My purpose...
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...To Kill A Mockingbird And The Movement Towards Racial Equality Since the American colonial times, African Americans rights have been repressed over and over again. Whether it is the right to enter a white owned stores or the right to vote, they can never have the same liberties and freedom that the Caucasian man and woman have. In 1930’s novel To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, an African American man named Tom Robinson is accused of supposedly raping a white woman, Mayella Ewell. Tom is being defended by Atticus Finch, a white attorney and town friend of the fictional town of Maycomb. Atticus ,as well as many of the townspeople's, believes that Tom is innocent but, due...
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...In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, many of her characters demonstrate courage. The acts of courage are small to large, and come from many different people. But there are three main characters who are proven to have stood out within their acts of courage. These three are Atticus Finch, Adolphus Raymond, and Boo Radley. Courage is the act of doing something that frightens one. Everyone of these characters displayed an act of courage that stands out above all else. Atticus Finch is a white man who defended Tom Robinson, an african american man, in a trial. This trial took place in the 1930’s while racism was still in large effects in many parts of the United States, and this trial took place in one of those areas. “The one thing that...
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...Essay on African American History Introduction In the essay “On the Evolution of Scholarship in Afro- American History” the eminent historian John Hope Franklin declared “Every generation has the opportunity to write its own history, and indeed it is obliged to do so.”1 The social and political revolutions of 1960s have made fulfilling such a responsibility less daunting than ever. Invaluable references, including Darlene Clark Hine, ed. Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004); Evelyn Brooks Higgingbotham, ed., Harvard Guide to African American History (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001); Arvarh E. Strickland and Robert E. Weems, Jr., eds., The African American Experience: An Historiographical and Bibliographical Guide (Westport: Greenwood Press, 2001); and Randall M. Miller and John David Smith, eds., Dictionary of Afro- American Slavery (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1988), provide informative narratives along with expansive bibliographies. General texts covering major historical events with attention to chronology include John Hope Franklin and Alfred A. Moss, Jr., From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African Americans (Boston: McGraw Hill, 2000), considered a classic; along with Joe William Trotter, Jr., The African American 1  Experience (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2001); and, Darlene Clark Hine, William C. Hine, and Stanley Harrold, The African American...
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...“It’s a sin to kill a mockingbird” (119). The story To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee was taken place in the 1930’s, when the Great Depression was taking place. Although that was a big event that was happening at the time, it was not the only one. Prejudism was also a big issue. African Americans had to deal with many obstacles, some being their living situation and prominently the way they were treated. Resources were not as open to blacks as they were for whites, therefore their homes and churches were not as up to date. In the novel, when Calpurnia takes Jem and Scout to her First Methodist Church, the children noticed it was quite different from their church. Unlike the white’s church, this one “was unceiled and unpainted within” (159)....
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... In the little town of Maycomb, Alabama class, gender, and race all determine how much power someone has. Class refers to a person’s level of income and education and often boils down to how much money one is able to earn. Mayella and her family are very poor. They live in an old cabin, where African americans use to live. The only thing nice in Mayella’s yard was her red geraniums. Scout refers to Mayella as the “loneliest person in the world” (Lee, chap. 19). White people would...
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...Significant events World War II through the 1970’s Assignment 3 “World War II through the 1970’s” Tim Truster Professor Michael Curran 26 August, 2012 Abstract My history assignment 3 “World War II through the 1970’s” will identify two major historical turning points during this period and what impact they had on current society, economy, politics, and culture. It will also explain two reasons Americans in the late 1930’s wanted to stay out of the European conflict that became World War II. I will explain the role women played to help win World War II. I will describe two civil rights breakthroughs after World War II that moved the cause of African-Americans forward. An explanation to why the Vietnam War brought political awareness to a new generation of young Americans. Finally two programs under President Johnson’s “Great Society” agenda that are still with us today will be discussed. Two historical turning points during the period of World War II through the 1970’s I will discuss in my paper will be the ending of World War II by defeating Japan and the Civil Rights movement. World War II itself was a major turning point in history. In 1945, Japan was lightly defended against the American attack; huge firebombing of Japanese cities went unanswered. America estimated that an invasion of the Japanese home islands would cost 50,000 American casualties in the first phase of the attack. The battles at Iwo Jima and Okinawa demonstrated the extent to which Japanese...
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...great opportunities and religious freedom. In addition, the land of “milk and honey” was contemplated as a safe haven for those trying to escape persecution in their country. As the charter business continued to develop, traveling became more accessible to an even larger number of individuals worldwide. The lack of rules and regulations were a catalyst for America’s increasing population. As a result of this rapid growth, new and more restricted immigration laws were introduced in 1965. I will come back to this point in one of the segments below. Immigrations have a tendency to generate minority groups. These groups are often the targets of oppression and abuse. For a long period of time African and Native Americans were disregarded by the US government, however in 19th century with the...
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...The modern history of Detroit began with the creation of the Ford Motor Company in 1903 by Henry Ford. Fordism created an appeal for Detroit’s automobile factories, and soon they were the embodiment of American labor and industry. In Henry Ford’s footsteps, the Dodge Brothers and other automotive inventors and capitalists began building their own automobiles in Detroit, forging Detroit’s famous nickname as the “Motor City.” Soon, Detroit’s economy and the automobile industry were one in the same, and the reliance on the automotive boom in the early 1900’s shaped Detroit’s economy for a century. The creation of the Big Three American automobile companies brought manufacturing-sector wage labor and heavy reliance on the oil, steel, and rubber industries. Detroit was not immune to the Great Depression of the 1930’s, but the gaping hole in the economy was filled with a threat abroad. During the Second World War, Detroit auto plants were converted in order to construct tanks and aircraft, earning Detroit the...
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...Born in Alabama in 1891, the prestigious Zora Neale Hurston is considered one of the greatest writers of twentieth- century African American literature. As a leader in the Harlem Renaissance Hurston was credited for protecting the rights of African Americans through her folk writing style. However, one of the books I read by her quickly changed my perspective of her and I soon realized that she was not only a proud supporter of African American rights, but women`s rights as well. In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston uses character Janie Crawford to speak out against the unjust treatment of women in their marriages. Zora Neale Hurston is an inspiring figure to me because she taught me the importance of self-reliance and how to...
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...The discrimination against the black character on the ranch, Crooks, is an example of how the ugly truth of oppression is brought to life in Of Mice and Men. Steinbeck reveals how unjust the treatment of African Americans was and the way oppression was carried out. He also shows dialogue with Crooks to give a voice to a character that would not of had one in the real world of the 1930’s. However, African Americans are not the only groups oppressed in Steinbeck’s novel. Women are subjected to the stereotype of “house wife.” Curley’s wife is portrayed as someone who needs to stay in the house and should not interact on the ranch with anyone but Curley. She also has no given name other than she belongs to Curley showing that she was not worthy of an individual identity. But, the most obvious sign of oppression unfolds through Curley’s wife and Crook’s conversation. She says, “Well, you keep your place then, Nigger. I could have you strung up on a tree so easy it ain’t even funny”(Steinbeck 81). The truth of how deep the penetration of oppression reached into the lives of the people of the 1930’s is shown through the way the Curley’s wife easily disregards her own abuse to cause equal pain to Crooks. The oppression in the novel shows the lack of friendship that people craved but were unsure how to...
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