Sojourner Truth’s “Aren’t I a Woman?” explains how women were treating during the 1800s. Born a slave, Truth was able to express and describe how difficult life was for women during these times. Truth wants her audience to realize the reality that women were not being treated equal. Although she had “plowed, and planted, and gathered into barns, and no mean could head [her]” (1406) she was still being treated as a slave but working like a man. She expresses her confusion on how women were treated. Although some were working like men, or sometimes even more, they were treated unequal. She points out that a man mentioned “women needs to be helped into carriages, and lifted ober ditches” (1405), but she explains that she has never had anyone help…
I think it’s neat how Barbara Ehrenreich related the story to an event years after it happened. I found many different themes such as, the economics of poverty, labor, shame and solidarity, and…
In the 1800’s I think the factory systems were bad people got very sick and hurt. They should have changed the working conditions because the factory systems were very bad. In document A the people said They had to work from 5 in the morning to nine or ten at night, and on Saturday's they had to work until 11-12 at night. They were dirty and people got diseases. In document C they said They broke elbows, scraped arms and got beat up. They could not tell the truth about there treatment or they would get in trouble. In conclusion, the factory systems were bad and it was not good for the workers.…
Girls were forced to work because family’s poverty . A contract for employment, “We confirm that in return for contracting the above person employed as a female operative at your filature …, we have received the said earnest money in full.” (Doc E) Earnest money is the money that the parents of the hired girl received once they contract is signed. Parents were signed these contracts because they live in poverty, they relied on their kids to live. This is not fair, not fair for the family but more for the young girl because the contract was between the parents and factory, the girl has no choice but go off to work in the factory. From a song that was written by a Silk Worker about 1900, “Because I am poor, at age twelve I was sold to this factory. When my parents told me, “Now it is time to go” My very heart wept tears of blood.” (Doc G) The girl is sad and hurt when she was sold to the factory, however she knew her wage was an important help to her family. It is immoral that the Japanese factories hired young girls because they knew that money is important to the girls, the factories saw it as an opportunity so they took advantage of it. Silk female worker wrote this song to express her feeling of hatred of working in the cruel factories Overall, the costs don’t outweigh the benefits because the factories are taking advantage of the girls who have no…
The Plight of Female Slavery is a document written by Francis Anne Kemble who shares her experience on the cruelties of slavery in the south. She discusses the brutality of slavery the women and children there and she also gives her own views on the subject.…
The experiences she had, the people she met, were ones found in the everyday life. Her humorous tales of working in the real world both inspire me and frighten me. While on one hand it shows kindness like when Ehrenreich explains her co worker Gail, “dips into her own tip money to buy biscuits and gravy for an out-of-work mechanic” (pg. 20). Seeing the kindness of Ehrenreich and her fellow workers during her experiment goes to show that despite living a hard life themselves, many are still full of compassion for others. Coming from a lower class family, I understand how easy it is to give when you have little to nothing yourself. My mother always taught me the importance of giving, no matter what. The more negative parts can be found in Ehrenreich’s brutal reality. “You lose your job, your car, or your babysitter. Or maybe you lose your home because you’ve been living with a mother or a sister who throws you out when her boyfriend comes back…” (pg. 52). While Ehrenreich herself lived a prodigal lifestyle, this experiment taught the valuable lesson of the hardships faced by minimum wage workers. Being stuck in that life means constant hardships faced. Like I mentioned in the beginning, the primary problem I saw came before the experiment itself. Her unwillingness to experience the true life of a minimum wage worker highlights the largest problem America currently faces. The higher classes see minimum wage workers…
Women at the time had a generally positive outlook on war, with the exception of those still working under poor conditions. They are gaining their own work lives and even taking over the men's jobs in Britain. A British woman describes her experience working at a munitions plant as tedious, however they are still filled with interest and zest when it comes to working for their country,…
Documents 3, 4, and 5 show how workers in the industrial revolution were placed in working…
This investigation will explore the question: To what extent did Clara Barton’s service challenge society’s view of a woman? The scope of this investigation is over Clara Barton’s life specifically during her time in the Civil War (1861- 1865) and the impact that Clara Barton’s may have had during this time regarding the role of women in society. These sources will demonstrate how Clara Barton impacted society and changed the perception of women. They do this by providing insight into parts of Clara Barton’s life that are often not discussed and the implications of her actions on the entire Civil War society.…
The book, Bread and Roses by Watson gives an account of the 1912 textile workers, the strike of the workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts. This is an excellent piece of work that captures the labor history of America that many people seem to ignore. It gives an account of the plight of workers in the textiles. It shows a hard working group of masses who are ready to do whatever it takes to live better lives; to make sure they are economically stable and get whatever they want. This is all in the pursuit of the American Dream. However, the Watson shows the results of such expectations in the American Dream which are humiliating at some point. The workers in the mills are frustrated by the twist of events in the work place. Some are not willing to work and go on strike. The people’s ambitions and high expectations are met…
The employers of the industrial city took advantage of the growth of population, and exploited the migration of immigrants moving to the cities looking for work, along with the fact that there were no regulations to keep the businesses in check at the same time the growth of the city was so fast and the lack of education on sanitation, life for the immigrant was dirty and difficult. For example; in New York City 1870-1920, population grew from 942,292 to 5,620,040 with the percentages: Austria-Hungary 8%, Russia 8%, Italy 6%, England 6%, Ireland 30%, Germany 33%, and Other Foreign 9%. (Rise of the Industrial City: New Places, New Peoples) With such a growth and the need for workers along with the need for employment, businessmen took advantage of this to fuel their greed at the cost of people’s quality of life and health. There are eight basic categories that these affected; Income and Wealth, Child Labor, Working Conditions, Public Health and Length of Life, Rise of the Middle Class, Working Class Families, The Role of Women, and The conditions of living. So, what were the conditions of this time period, and what affects did they have, just how much of a role in this period did women have, and what kind of role did women have in causing there to be changes.…
The roles these woman faced between their community and family were relentlessly altered compared to the female roles that were a tradition in society. 1 As Deborah Gray White stated in her book Ar’n’t I a Woman? “black woman were unprotected by men or by law, and they had their womanhood totally denied.” (12) Unfortunately, black women did not belong to that body of females who deserved respect and protection. Female slaves had the least power in the society. They were also the most vulnerable due to the fact that they were African American in an all-white society and were slaves in…
he righteous cause of women in 1888 is like today also because they still don't get treated equally, just like back then. How men and women get paid for the same things they do still aren't equal like it should be, just because of the fact that they are women. The big problem when women don't get paid equally is that it affects them very bad as well. Women work and do the same things as men to receive a fair amount of pay so they can take care of themselves and their families, so when they're not getting their pays, it really affects them and it makes them strong more as well. Researchers say that no matter what you do , when you check and female and male's pay for doing the same exact job, there will always be a gap in the pay they're both…
"She was a very well educated woman who had the options available to those in her class with her intellectual ability, but she chose to devote her life to organizing the poorest of the poor, women who worked in fields, who sold vegetables, who were domestics, who struggled to eke out a living for themselves…
Briefly, the reasons why Lyddie should sign the essay is because; first, she is getting poor working conditions with poor pay, like showing where the working conditions just keep on getting worse than they already are, the girls are getting sicker and are losing their healthy lives. Furthermore, it shows while they made a point about the hours and pay, it simply put so it doesn't benefit them and it shows they are being stretched to their maximum capacity In addition, another reason Lyddie should sign the petition is since it shows the workers and women get no time at all that other than to work and the comparison between the workers and as a racehorse, as they did the work for little meanwhile the “owner” took all the glory and prize. Besides, although you might think Lyddie is missing out on signing the petition, you are sincerely wronged as Lyddie has many benefits to signing the petition like shorter hours, more pay, safer work conditions, and in the end help benefit her family even…