What is a muckraker? Muckrakers were investigative journatists who wrote exposés on corruption in politics and buisness. In 1906, President Theadore Roosevelt made a speech about investigative journalists. He began calling them Muckrakers, a name which had influenced society 's views. Writers who used their exaggerated works to expose corruptions, fraud, and injustice now had their own label.
Elsie Hickam is Sonny’s mother. Her husband, Homer Hickam Sr. works at the mine as superintendent. Reading the October Sky book, I would say that Elsie was an intelligent, ambitious and supportive woman generally. She doesn’t enjoy living in this small town and she doesn’t support her husband working at the mine. They usually argue about it, and almost all her family was involved in the mining so she hates every aspect of her life there.
Wells remained in the North, where she became the nation’s leading antilynching crusader.” (Foner pg.63) On the other hand, Social activist and reformer Jane Addams worked to make working-class people's lives better, especially women and immigrants. Jane stated “Progress is not automatic," "The world grows better because people wish that it should and take the right steps to make it better.” (week 3 reading)
The play, Silent Sky, follows the narrative of a 30-year old woman named Henrietta Leavitt and attempts to mirror Henrietta 's personal challenges with the obstacles that most women, in the early 1900s, had to undergo. Henrietta Leavitt can be considered the protagonist because she seems to have a set goal and she experiences the most substantial change, throughout the play 's entirety. She is first introduced as a small-town girl from Wisconsin with big ambitions but, gradually, as the story progresses, she morphs into a most valuable contributor to the field of Astronomy. Not only does her status and position in society change during the play, but she also learns many life lessons and achieves her goals. The character, Henrietta Leavitt,
Jane Addams was Progressive to the extent that she lived
Heros’ come in many shapes and forms. Tall, short, small, big, anyone can be a hero, they just have to put in the effort. Though anyone can be a good hero, a great hero is somebody who inspires others, makes a difference, and is selfless. First and foremost, a great hero must be someone who inspires others. Ida B. Wells is an example of a true hero.
Jane Addams and Ida B. Wells, two pioneering figures of the Progressive Era, reshaped the landscape of what was deemed possible for women in the socio-political climate of the time with their transformative reform agendas. These two women directly addressed the gender disparities that had intensified during the Gilded Age, channeling their efforts into reforms that not only advanced women’s roles in society but also aimed to correct broader social injustices. Jane Addams founded Hull House in 1889, a community center that became a beacon for social reform in an era defined by severe economic disparity. Hull House offered educational programs, legal aid, and healthcare services, directly addressing the consequences of the Gilded Age, such as
Women like Jane Addams, who accomplished many things such as the Hull House. Jane Addams like William Jennings Bryan was an anti-imperialist, she had explained how imperialism had a negative effect on America’s young children, “ The little children on the street played war… the barbaric instinct asserts itself.” (Doc 4) . Jane Addams was a feminists as well as an anti-imperialist. She was concerned for the affects it has on the children at the time.
In condition to the fighting for the rights and better working conditions other multiple groups, women activist such as Jane Addams similarly fought for improved living conditions, and education for poor workers. Jane Addams founded the Chicago Hull-House (Foner 719) Hull houses helped to provide those less fortunate with lessons of middle-class American values. The Hull house was also a way to help people who needed a place to stay for the night, get meals, but also as a daycare center for working mothers ("Open Collections Program: Immigration to the US, Settlement House Movement"). As women activist grew in America to thousands, their ideas had moved to other countries such as London that had also adapted Hull Houses and many women’s activist
Despite facing opposition from powerful interests, Addams remained steadfast in her commitment to social justice and equality. Her experiences at Hull House during the 1890s serve as a testament to the power of collective action and compassion in effecting positive change in
Jane Addams was born in September 6, 1860 and died in May 21, 1935. She was an intelligent educated woman who came from an upper-class family. She graduated as valedictorian of Rockford Female Seminary. She started to study medicine however she had to leave school due to her spinal defect. She was uncertain of her career, so she made a few trips to Europe.
Steeltown U.S.A.: Work and Memory in Youngstown is a book written by Sherry Linkon and John Russo. The authors, both experts in the field of labor studies, draw on a wealth of personal stories and historical analysis to paint a vivid picture of the human impact of economic change. Through their work, they explore the challenges faced by workers and families in places like Youngstown, Ohio, and the strategies they have developed to navigate a rapidly changing world. Throughout the book, the authors use some very good themes. This book also makes me reflect on the Brick Companies that were in Oak Hill when it was booming.
“She advocated woman’s suffrage because she believed that women’s votes would provide the margin necessary to pass social legislation she favored” (History.com). Addams even wrote a paper called “Why Women Should Vote”. She expressed that the world is merely an extension of their house and no one should be scared for what they belive in. She continued to fight until women got their right to vote in 1920 and then moved onto other issues that women had. Overall, she completed the movement with a sucessful victory winning the right for women to
Hitchcock has treated Lisa as a remarkable portrait of American personality and Pomerance describes her thus: “There she is now, scampering up a fire escape, sliding onto a window ledge in her high heel, invading a presumed murderer’s cave, finding irrefutable evidence that something dark and unthinkable has undeniably been happening there, and transmitting that evidence back home” (Pomerance 161). Lisa by becoming a sleuth on behalf of Jeff wants to prove that she can be the sort of girl he needs and their marriage is possible. She now shows that women can also have power, agency, activity, and adventurous triumph within their grasp. No other character in Rear Window exhibits such derring-do, the prowess or the skill (Pomerance 161). Lisa proves that nothing is impossible
The Weather Underground The Weather Underground is a documentary from 2002, directed by Sam Green and Bill Siegel, that gives an insight to the homonym social movement started and developed at the end of the 1960s. The Weather Underground has been for many years one of the most active organization in the American scenario. Born as a division of the SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) in 1969, the Weather Underground or Weathermen as they called themselves inspired by a Bob Dylan’s song, quickly obtained a large consent and support among the left-winged youths. They were protesting the injustice and violence of the Vietnam War.