A community is a place where people around supposed to be able to live and thrive together. When one thinks of a community, the image that most likely is visualized is one of a place where each person lives harmoniously with all the other members of that community. While this may be the typical image of a community, it is not the realistic view. In reality communities can share both good and bad aspects. In Place Matters: Metropolitics for the Twenty-First Century Peter Dreier, John Mollenkopf, and Todd Swanstrom make the argument that the place a person lives ultimately matters over all else; the place which a person lives effects the choices that that he/she makes and determines his/her ability to obtain a high quality of life.…
Erik Larson is a nonfiction author with a number of bestsellers including The Devil In The White City. He lives in Seattle with his wife and three daughters. In The Devil In The White City, Erik Larson tells stories of two men accomplishing different lifestyles in Chicago. The book takes place around the time of the World’s Fair and is written in a third person omniscient point of view. While one man is trying to prove Chicago’s ability of not being a failure to the country, the other man brings a whole new meaning of failure to the city of Chicago.…
Cities and their suburbs can be described as: a city is a legal entity, an urban area is a continuously built-up area, and a metropolitan area is a functional area.…
The last chaper in the book is doesent have a crazy ending with plot twist and turns or anything that shocks you as a reader. It is a boring ending where Carol just decides to get married and have kids, Sinclair shows how she didn’t really wanted to move back but it was the best choice for her. Early in the book Sinclair describes carrol as someone who has a creative mind and bright ideas wanting to come to a town and bring the town more creativlity and new ideas on social issues as well. This town seems to be very consetative and if anyone who thought different was an outcast, for example Miles Bjorstam in the story. He was a socialist and a democratic which were probably very different views from what the majority of the citzens in that…
In the piece “At the edge of Poverty” David Shipler tells about the world of “the forgotten Americans”. The people who can’t save, can’t get a better job, and cannot move on to a better life. He shows us how hard it is to be someone like that, to be on the edge of poverty. He brings us to a different level of understanding of what these people go though and how they are almost are stuck in society, only to dream for a better future. In this well written piece, Shipler does a wonderful job of grabbing and keeping the attention of the reader with many techniques. He uses metaphors, pathos, dramatically short sentences, imagery and many more techniques. Shipler does, though, have two of his best techniques that he uses to really make this piece…
In the play Much Ado about Nothing written by William Shakespeare in 1599 shows the concept of love and its different sides (tragedy, hope...). The two main couples that are formed throughout the play are Hero and Claudio and Beatrice and Benedick, each couple is unique as the four characters are very different and have very different personalities from one another. Beatrice and Benedick represent the ideal couple because they both take their time, and wait for the right person, the reader is able to see how they truly love each other and want the same things for their future even though they don’t always admit it. Throughout the play Beatrice and Benedick both realize that love changes people, and their points of view.…
“Still, our first impressions of the Germans were rather reassuring. The officers were billeted in private homes, even in the homes of Jews. Their attitude toward their hosts was distant, but polite. They never demanded the impossible, made no unpleasant comments, and even smiled occasionally at the mistress of the house.” (5)…
In this quotation, Dickens is trying to show the sympathy Charles Darnay got from the people, who moments ago where cheering to get him killed. "(...) tears immediately rolled down several ferocious countenances," Dickens wrote. He wanted the reader to know the nature of these people in the French Revolution. Dickens wanted us to see the cold hearted ways of these people, but he also wanted us to see why they did it,…
Raw materials and natural resources were being used to create trade and commerce in the new colonies. The colonies traded things such as fish, ships, timber products, corn, wheat, livestock, tobacco, sugar, rice, and much more. Specialized trades might have chosen to work certain jobs based on what was being traded in their area. For example in the middle colonies where there were things such as livestock and corn those who lived there may have become farmers.…
Life is a Story “Live life to the fullest because you only get to live it once.” This quote provided by Ernest Hemingway perfectly epitomizes the main message in the play Our Town, written by Thornton Wilder. The author makes a point of saying that life is divided into three differential parts: Birth and Daily Life, Love and Marriage, and, of course, Death. Occasionally, this trinity of life may be unappreciated by one until it is too late.…
Chicago - a land of opportunity. Today one might chuckle at the thought, but during the nineteenth century it was very much the case. William Cronan’s Nature’s Metropolis was published in 1991 and still remains one of the greatest books ever written about the city of Chicago. Cronan uses the book to describe the rise of Chicago and how it played a role in the flourishing of economics in the country as a whole; thus, using Chicago as an example of the interconnectedness between city and country. Beyond that however, Cronan’s oxymoron title is descriptive to how Chicago, and our country as a whole, was built from nature.…
Imagine a place where bright lights currently glow the streets, a city that become depended on trade to grow its riches. Known today as Amsterdam, the city is known for its international trade and transport. Today Amsterdam holds the must see Museum of Van Gogh. And to mention Amsterdam’s social life is well known. Here in Amsterdam, reefer is legal, prostitutes are common, and religion is free to be expressed. This lively city has rich history, but began with humble origins.…
The United States currently has the highest incarceration rate in the world. Over 2.4 million persons are in state or federal prisons and jails—a rate of 751 out of every 100,000. Over 3,500 of these are awaiting execution; some for Federal crimes, most for capital offenses in one of the 36 states that still allows for capital punishment. Another 5 million are under some sort of correctional supervision such as probation or parole (PEW 2008).…
Urban studies aims to develop an understanding the modern city metropolis. As Savage et al. have pointed out, the urban encompasses far more than just the physical city itself; understanding the city help us to understand many aspects of modern life (2003, pp.4). Many of its features, such as mass media and public transport systems have spread throughout society over the past century. Sociological studies of urban life began with the landmark publication of 'The City' in 1925 by sociologists Robert Park, Ernest Burgess and Louis Wirth from the University of Chicago, students of Georg Simmel who shared his belief that the urban environment changed man's personality and made relationships impersonal. They sought to explain different features of the urban environment within this theory and predict its development, starting with their own city Chicago, which they believed to be paradigmatic of new cities, designed to serve the needs of industrial capitalism (Park 1925, pp. 17, 40). Park and his colleagues posited a largely deterministic view of the city as a logically developing space ordered primarily by economic needs. Ernest Burgess developed the 'concentric zones model' to explain urban development and expansion of the modern city according to a predictable, ecological pattern (Burgess 1925). Louis Wirth has contributed to the school prominently in his essay "Urbanism as a Way of Life" in 1938, which sought to further develop a theoretical basis for the expanding field of urbanism (Wirth 1964, pp. 83). This text became one of the most influential works on understanding the social consequences of the city, and had real consequences; future sociologists have used his theory to help plan cities' layout (Knox & Pinch 2010, pp. 149). Although now over 80 years old and dated in many respects by economic change, the Chicago School remains highly influential in the urban studies today, which…
Charlie Chaplin’s 1931 silent film City Lights follows the story The Tramp (Charlie Chaplin) who fall in with a Blind Girl (Virginia Cherrill) selling flowers on the side of the street. Unable to see that The Tramp is really a vagrant in gentlemen’s clothing, she mistakes him for a wealthy gentleman. The Tramp, who has fallen for the blind beauty, makes no attempt to correct her. Instead The Tramp attempts to earn money to help the woman he has fallen in love with; especially upon the discovery of an operation that may restore her sight. The Tramp succeeds in acquire the funds necessary to help his love, though his actions ultimately result in him being incarcerated for a period of time.…