"Disappearing technology of the 20th centrury" Essays and Research Papers

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    American Expansionism During the 19th and 20th Centuries Expansionism in America during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century shared many similarities and differences to that of previous American expansionist ideals. Either way most Americans believed that we must expanded beyond our borders to make America appear as a strong nation. Americans believed that the U.S. was a strong nation‚ we just needed to prove so by taking whatever land we pleased and call it ours. This idea was displayed

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    Several conflicts in the 19th and 20th centuries contributed to the shaping of the American identity in separate ways that eventually led up to the America that we know today‚ that is still changing politically‚ socially‚ and economically. Conflicts including the Spanish-American War‚ WWI‚ and the Roosevelt Corollary all changed greatly how the American identity is seen both domestically and internationally. These conflicts caused us to see ourselves as more powerful‚ however‚ more unstable. Other

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    European countries imperialized‚ or “extended control and influence over the political or economic life of other nations”(“imperialism.”) for their own selfish desires‚ which often resulted in harming the cultures of the native peoples in the 19th and 20th centuries . They imposed western ideas on the natives and destroyed the native culture. Britain evaded many counties like India and China. Although they said they were trying to help the inferior‚ they really were extending their power to other places

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    The Constitution is the living document of the well-known American rights. It starts the long list of all the respectable rules with the famous line “We the People”. What some people may not know‚ is that “We the People” didn’t apply to 69% of the country. The Constitution gives “the people” their rights and their power which means that the people that are left out of it‚ don’t have rights in America. In this case‚ women. Women were vital parts of America. They could do jobs and work in the workforce

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    The Progressive Era lasted from the 1890s until the mid-20th century. Progressives were a group of people who supported causes such as tax and political reform‚ as well as many other issues affecting the American people. This movement saw exponential growth when people called muckrakers assisted in revealing the corruption and societal issues in America. Progressives saw great success at the local and state levels‚ introducing many economic‚ social‚ and political reforms‚ including public transportation

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    In the early 20th century‚ the Progressive Movement of Era had a global social activism and political support and change across the United States. The goals they wanted to target were to seek to return control of the government to the people‚ political machines‚ restore economic opportunities‚ and to correct injustice. Muckrakers‚ such as Thomas Nast‚ Jacob Riis‚ U. Sinclair‚ F. Kelly‚ helped cities for better places to live‚ which was prohibition. Since‚ 1848 the National American Woman Suffrage

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    By the turn of the 20th century mass transit had coalesced around electric power for street railways‚ subways‚ elevated railways and for interurban railways of around one-hundred miles or less. Animal and cable traction systems had already undergone mass conversions to electricity or been abandoned altogether where the financial investment was proving unworthy. Steam powered locomotives drove long distance railroads; by 1890 there was in excess of 130‚000 miles of mainline track in service. In the

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    Next‚ let us talk about the history of computing. The first use of the word "computer" was recorded in 1613‚ referring to a person who carried out calculations‚ or computations‚ and the word continued with the same meaning until the middle of the 20th century. From the end of the 19th century the word began to take on its more familiar meaning‚ a machine that carries out computations. Computer was invented by Charles Brbbage ‚ he

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    was brought into the world and would ultimately become a photographer that would change the way the public viewed portraits.1 Her talent for capturing raw images of the everyday life of New Yorkers would change the view of photographing within the 20th century. Her photography changed the course of modern photography forever. Before Diane Arbus was a well-known photographer‚ she was identified as being the wife of Allan Arbus‚ an actor‚ who helped encourage her to do photography. Together Diane

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    Identify and describe the philosopher’s contributions to the field of philosophy. The 20th century philosopher-theologian Josiah Royce was the first to use the phrase "The Beloved Community" but Dr. Martin Luther King‚ Jr.‚ who followed the Fellowship of Reconciliation made the “term” popular by devoting himself to its meaning on a deeper level. This term eventually encompassed the imagination of people regarding the idea of goodwill the world over (Schulke & Fernandez‚ 2012). Dr King’s objective

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