This photograph was created in the 1930’s during one of the saddest parts of United States History, the Great Depression.…
A few contemporary singers work hard to send a positive message. For instance, nine Grammy Award and four American Music Award recipient Mary J. Blige fit in this group of singers. After being sexually abused and molested as a child it left her feeling ashamed. This awful thing stayed with her throughout her life as an adult. Feeling that this all was her fault led her to believe that she was worthless. The emotional pain grew and as a teenager Mary turned to men and drugs for escape.…
Have you ever wanted revenge on your parents? Lizzie Borden was accused of the murder of her father and stepmother at the age of 31. I deem Lizzie guilty of the murder of her stepmother. Also, I think Bridget Sullivan, their servant was responsible for the murder of Abby Borden. According to source #3, Lizzie tried buying poison just days before the murders of her father and stepmother. She claimed the reason for the poison was to clean a sealskin cape. Plus she burned a dress the day after being named a suspect. In my opinion, most of the evidence points to Lizzie…
Marie Antoinette was born in Vienna Austria on November 2, 1755. She was the 15th child of the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I and Empress Maria Theresa. In 1770 she married Louis-Auguste, the Dauphin of France. She was the Queen of France from 1774-1792. She was the mother of four children. At first, she was adored by her subjects. Eventually, though, she came to be disliked and even blamed for France’s financial crisis. The reasons for this dislike included her loyalties to Austria—France’s sworn enemy—and her extravagant lifestyle, profligate spending, big hair, and even bigger dresses. She was thus nicknamed Madame Deficit (French: Mrs. Debt). With the fall of the French government and the beginning of the French revolution, the royal family…
You can detect this as her motive because the topics her work consisted of tended to be controversial. There are other photographers who shared a similar motive with Dorothea Lange. Most notably, the other 10 photographers that the Farm Security Administration hired to report and document the plight of poor farmers. The photographers were: Jack Delano, Walker Evans, Russell Lee, Carl Mydans, Gordon Parks, Arthur Rothstein, John Vachon, and Marion Post Wolcott. Before I got into detail in how Lange’s work contrasts the work of these similar photographers, I will detail the unique characteristics of her…
Considering to be one of the finest contraltos of her time, Marian Anderson became the first African American to perform with the New York Metropolitan Opera in 1955. She also performed at the Lincoln Memorial in 1939. After 2 years of studying the Boghetti, Anderson won a chance to sing at the Lewisohn Stadium in NY. Born February 27, 1897, in Philadelphia, Marian Anderson displayed vocal talent as a child, but her family could not afford to pay for formal training. Members of her church congregation raised funds for her to attend a music school for a year, and in 1955 she became the first African American singer to perform as a member of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City.…
Dorothea Lynde Dix was born in 1802 and died in 1887. She was an author, teacher, and reformer. She worked with prisoners and the mentally ill people. Because of this she helped make dozens of new institutions in the United States and in Europe and also helped change peoples’ view of these people.…
Did you know that Amelia Earhart inspired Eleanor Roosevelt to apply for a pilot license. Well she also took Eleanor on a trip from D.C. to Baltimore in 1933. As Eleanor Roosevelt once said “Yesterday is history , tomorrow is a mystery and today is a gift , that is why it is called the present.”…
http://www.webster.edu/~woolflm/dorotheadix.html. The website is an excellent source that chronicles Dix's early life. As a child she lived in a household with a mentally unstable mother and an alcoholic father. This site details her first career as a teacher, then her second career as a social reformer. The Webster site gives an abundance of specific detail about how Dix influenced people and how passionate she was about her beliefs. The last portion of the website biography laments the fact that Dix and her accomplishments are sadly under-reported in most history and psychology textbooks, but that…
Think of the world without music. Without it, there is no dancing, nothing to sing along to in the car, and life as we know it isn’t as fun. There is music for everyone. There is pop, latin, rock, jazz, hip-hop, country, and metal. With the large amount of music, there is a large amount of singers that provide us with the music that adds spice to our life. One of these singers was Selena Quintanilla-Pérez, or better known as Selena. She was one of the most influential hispanic musician, and she is still remembered today because of the tremendous effect she had on the world.…
Frances, aka. Fanny, Wright was born on September 6, 1975 in Dundee, Scotland. She was a Scottish lecturer, writer, freethinker, feminist, abolitionist, and social reformer; also in 1825 she became a United States citizen. Wright had a very wealthy background with her father being a designer of Dundee trade tokens. Unfortunately, both her parents died leaving behind their three children. When Wright was three years old, she was taken to an orphanage but inherited a few figures. In England, where she later was transported to an aunt, is where she began her journeys back and forth to pursue her love for writing, and by adulthood, she had accomplished her first book. (Wikipedia)…
Can you imagine being denied the right to read and write all because of the color of your skin? Mary Jane McLeod Bethune was denied this right when a white child snached a book away from her because it was illegal for a black person to learn how to read (Hine, 2000). Mary McLeod Bethune was born on July 10, 1875 by Mayesville, South Carolina. She was an educator, civil rights leader, and government official who founded the National Council of Negro Women and Bethune-Cookman College (“National Council of Negro Women, Inc.” n.d.). Bethune’s impressive life inspired women to become anything they wanted to be by helping pave the way for black women education. Mary Jane McLeod Bethune died May 18, 1955 in Daytona Beach, Florida at the age of 79 and although she is gone her legacy lives on…
When I was a little girl, I was a big fan of Selena Quintanilla. I had all her music, disks and posters all over my room. My dream was to meet her in person and it came true when I assisted one of her concerts. I knew everything about her even though I was 4 years old. She was a role model for me, she was family oriented and she is still today living in my memory. I memorized every song of hers word by word, and I would imitate her dancing all day long. As a little girl I could not understand why someone would have wanted to take her life away when she was a good person. Selena Quintanilla is considered to be one of the most popular and influential Hispanic music icons of all times because of her history, culture, and all the people she influenced with her charisma.…
There were very many influential people in the 1930s. One that stuck out the most was Dorothea Lange. She was a professional photographer, a very known professional photographer, during the Great Depression and even after that. She documented the struggle of migrant farm families. Lange photographed the pain and despair of women, men, and children living in dirty, miserable camps. She also photographed the unemployed men who wandered the streets of San Francisco (Migrants). Lange was an influential American documentary photographer and photojournalist, best known for her Depression-era work for the FSA or the Farm Security Administration. Lange's photographs humanized the consequences of the Great Depression and influenced the development…
Mother. The very word, for most, conjures up the notion of comfort, safety, and unconditional love. This idea of motherhood is capture in Dorothea Lange 's picture, Migrant Mother. When one views the picture, one is struck by the tired look in her eyes and the hope for a better situation down the road. One has to wonder if Dorothea viewed this picture from a psychoanalytic perspective, social or formal analysis when constructing the actual shot. Knowing this adds an even greater depth to an understanding of what the photographer was trying to say, what kind of message she had for the world.…