The Academy Award-winning director, John Ford, is considered one of the best filmmakers of all time. Ford achieved in fifty years of filmmaking a unique capacity in American culture in which he put throughout his films. The author Andrew Sinclair stated “he was a practical man who saw his job as showing the mass of the American people the truth of what he recreated about their past” (Sinclair 41). As a man, he concealed his true personality from the public, who built this whole legend of toughness around him to protect his softness as person. From his lack of emotional expression, his films are his way of expressing those feelings through emotionalism. Ford uses a strategy called docudrama. “A docudramas basis in truth actually launches the…
Henry Ford was a brilliant engineer, who had an assortment of inventions producing to the automobile industry in the early 1900s. Of these inventions, arguably the most essential, was the Model T. The Model T was invented to give the public a more accessible and affordable automobile, which the ordinary person could drive. After being invented in Detroit, Michigan and introduced to the public in 1908, the accessibility of the Model T made it extraordinarily popular for several years. The inspiration for this ingenious invention was that Ford wanted a car that was affordable and able to be produced in great volume. Over the course of a year, Ford invented and tested the Model T on rough roads before its introduction to the public in 1908.…
In the early 1900’s Henry Ford developed the idea of “a wagon that will run without a horse”.1 This idea and Ford’s success changed America and its people forever. The development of the automobile played a tremendous role in the economy, labor unions and society. Generally, when most people think of Henry Ford they reflect upon his wealth and contributions to the transportation industry as an infinitely positive phenomenon. It is thought that aside from just allowing consumers to purchase and use his inventions, he provided thousands of people with jobs and the promise of prosperity. The tale of Henry Ford’s legendary business and remarkably effective assembly line is unparalleled in American History. But when it comes to Henry Ford it is impossible to think in terms of black of white. He may have made an awesome amount of money distributing a product loved by almost everyone, but at what cost? Upton Sinclair addresses this question in The Flivver King. The Flivver King tells the story of Henry Ford and his massive business from the perspective of his workers. Contrary to popular belief, the relationship between Mr. Ford and his workers became much more frustrating and upsetting as his business progressed. World War 1 and the Great Depression damagingly effect Ford and his workers. Upton Sinclair’s story of the Shutt family depicts the changes that occurred between Henry Ford and his workers and how his growing wealth and the nations declining economy had a negative impact on his approach as a boss and business man. Abner Shutt is a loyal character and a hard worker for Henry Ford. But as the reader follows experiences he and his family encounters while working with the Ford Motor Company it is easy to realize that Henry Ford’s story of success had more tribulations than most people would have expected.…
The 2004, Paul Haggis film Crash and Jimmy Santiago Baca’s sort reading, “So Mexicans Are Taking Jobs from Americans” surprisingly have many connections on racism, prejudice and stereotypes given the length of the excerpt and the details of the movie. The multiple correlations are easily identifiable within specific scenes and a few lines from the reading. These correlations include ties between all race relationships.…
Mary Austin’s The Ford shows how California’s natural resources, especially water, have historically been taken from the poor by large landowners. The Ford is a story of how a family of common farmers suffers when their landlord decides to sell off their land to Standard Oil, convincing the farmers to leave their homesteads by sending their water away with an aqueduct. These two issues of oil and water have figured largely in California history, since they have been the main reason for landgrabs such as what we see in The Ford. The Ford makes us root for the farmers and want them to organize against their landlord and the corporate interests that are attacking California’s natural resources. It is a book in support of nature and rural farmers,…
Georgano, G. N. Cars, 1886-1930. New York, NY: Crescent, 1990. America on the Move. General Motors Corporation. Web. 8 Dec. 2011. <http://americanhistory.si.edu/onthemove>.…
In the movie Regarding Henry, Harrison Ford plays lawyer Henry Turner who is unfortunately shot in the head and has to recover. Throughout the movie his behavior changes as he goes from being more impulsive to more caring and following his…
Meckier, Jerome. "Debunking Our Ford: My Life and Work and _Brave New World_." South Atlantic Quarterly 78, no. 2 (Autumn, 1979): 448-459.…
The turn of the century in American, when E.L. Doctorow's novel Ragtime is set, was a time marked by rapid technological developments and industrialization. These years also brought a heavy flood of immigrants as well as an increasingly urban American landscape. Technological advancements enabled increased efficiency and mass production. However, Doctorow clearly brings into question the consequences of this new technology for the average American worker. J.P. Morgan's discussion with Henry Ford about the assembly line's innovations brings this debate to the front. Doctorow writes, "From these principles Ford established the final proposition of the theory of industrial manufacture - not only that the parts of the finished product be interchangeable, but that the men who build the products be themselves interchangeable parts" (113). Here Doctorow clearly addresses the potential for technology to undermine the value of the individual and his abilities.…
I am writing in regard to the Ford Built Tough FFA scholarship. FFA (Future Farmers of America) has become a big part of my life. I will be talking about my plans for my major, my first year as an FFA member, who inspired me to continue on this path, and what sets me apart from other students applying for this scholarship. The Scholarship would go toward my studies at Emporia State University. The Ford Built Tough scholarship will help in paying for my studies in Agriculture Education to become a teacher for agriculture experience.…
During the 1880’s to the 1940’s, a wave of Eastern European immigrants grew in America, triggered by growing industries and advancing technology. This soon led to the establishment of steel mills, other factories, and plants which reshaped the American labor force. The experiences of Djuro and Mike, Mary’s husband, reflect a level of hostility towards Europeans from “mainstream” Americans and earlier. Without a doubt, the Kracha’s were negatively affected by stereotypes and attributions. However, the men and women who desired citizenship in the New World, Bell suggested only desired it to improve their lives and the futures of their families. Bell does not portray any immigrants who fail to accept the necessity of hard work. Therefore, Djuro’s minor episode of drunkenness shouldn’t take away from the years…
In the 1974 production of Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation, Gene Hackman and John Cazale take center stage in a film about a paranoid surveillance expert who has a change of conscience when he suspects that a couple he is spying on will be murdered. While this was a great movie in my opinion, It was definitely a movie that brought together a cast full of newer actors that would go on to become even bigger names in Hollywood. One of these rising stars in particular was a young Harrison Ford.…
Discrimination in the past came in many forms but it started with systemic discrimination. In the early 1900s the Anglo-Saxon ideology was at a high. In the segregation of Mexican student’s article, the author shows how these ideologies affected Mexican American in California. Even though Californian had equality law for Mexican Americans, they were still discriminated against. “Mexicans were only…
The story frequently points to the instability of individual’s relationships. Les and his mother Aileen lost contact ad haven't spoke for a long time. Like other characters of Ford’s tale, Les was a sufferer of having excessively awareness very early in life that gives him the flexibility to go on living, the power for development, and living independently even if it means alone.The story frequently points to the instability of individual’s relationships. Les and his mother Aileen lost contact ad haven't spoke for a long time. Like other characters of Ford’s tale, Les was a sufferer of having excessively awareness very early in life that gives him the flexibility to go on living, the power for development, and living independently even if it…
Cynthia J. Cranford argues, in her article, that immigrant social networks have become exploitative and that the popular trend of regarding immigrant social networks as a form of social capital and focusing on the benefits of these social ties may, in fact, be misconstruing the nature of the situation [ (Cranford 2005) ]. Cranford argues that these networks may become exploitative in nature and she poses an important question regarding who these social networks are eventually benefiting. Cranford notes that many scholars view the idea of social networks as an avenue for immigrants to obtain jobs, and subsequently gain upward mobility [ (Cranford 2005) ]. She cites several examples of scholarly articles theorizing that these social networks are beneficial to both the employer, and the employee. She also claims that these studies de-emphasize ‘power differentials’. To support her thesis, Cranford used primary research in the janitorial industry in Los Angeles. The research consisted of 30 months of fieldwork in Los Angeles where Cranford draws on the information gathered from Latina and Latino immigrants that entered the industry at a time and place characterized by restructuring. To obtain this information, Cranford chose to use the purposive sampling technique [ (Cranford 2005) ]. Cranford stressed on the importance of building a certain amount of trust with…