on their own or with their children. It may come in the form of saving money and buying cheaper food or receiving help from the government for a small amount of time. People in these conditions struggle each day to feed and shelter themselves. Ehrenreich has a Ph.D. in biology and is an experienced writer. This would cause her to earn more than the average person on the street. She would not automatically know the struggles of the people around her‚ but she would have an insight on it. She does
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for cash assistance. In the expo‚ Nickel and Dime‚ Barbara Ehrenreich questioned the “uplifting benefits” of unskilled adults working in a low-wage economy. Ehrenreich’s undercover journalism was her scientific methodology of choice to capture firsthand the experience of poverty in order to prove her theory that it is mathematically impossible for welfare recipients to survive in the low-wage workforce. While following Barbara Ehrenreich journey in “Nickel and Dimed” I realized how certain aspects
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in front of the tube in hopes that the child will spend one more hour in the pool‚ or on their bikes‚ or walking with friends. But few do‚ not when it’s “too hot” outside and there’s a humming computer waiting in the next room. People disagree‚ Ehrenreich says‚ “because it is either dangerous or would involve getting up from the couch‚” and then where would we be? The passage points out that television pulls people in two directions: we’re drawn to it‚ to the plastic people with plastic smiles and
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twenty places I’ve applied calls me for an interview” (Ehrenreich‚ 249). She also emphasized the unrealistic salary provided for workers especially who are single mothers‚ “by taking $6 to $7 an hour‚ perhaps subtracting a dollar or two an hour for child care‚ multiplying it by 160 hours a month‚ and comparing the results to prevailing rents” (Ehrenreich‚ 247). The “Why me?” experiment found the effect of
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doing the right thing. I understand a parent wanting the best for their child but they also need to consider the child’s choices‚ too. A parent cannot force a life onto their child/children and expect them to be happy. Nickel and Dimed Ehrenreich makes it obvious of the struggles that she faces with this “experiment”
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Riner Professor Martin English 1301 12 July 2011 On On Dumpster Diving by Lars Eighner The world is full of funny things doing things to certain beings that sometimes seem to not be very funny. Life has a way of forcing a man to see particular phenomena through other men’s eyes. Sometimes that “other” is the one type of person you knew you would never be‚ or at least you thought you did. A Mr. Lars Eighner‚ born in Texas‚ raised in Texas‚ had the upbringing of a success. Having attended Lamar
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became a dumpster diver. To my surprise‚ there was so much more to this than I thought. Lars Eighner‚ to me‚ had a sense of adventure to “scavenging”. It was fascinating to him to “acquire many things from the dumpsters.” He categorized things in an advanced system that reminded me of a computer filing system. No matter how sophisticated a system is‚ there is always an error. No matter how careful Eighner was he would “contract dysentery at least once a month.” If the categories were not enough‚ he
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Introduction Barbara Ehrenreich began her research to explore how people attempting to move from welfare to work are managing—if at all. This exploration also extended to those who are apart of the working class and having not been on welfare. Attempting to place herself in the position of her subjects‚ Ehrenreich strived to see if she were able to survive on the minimal income provided by a series of low level and low paying jobs. In was her foreknowledge of laws and the inclusion of these laws
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Matthew Crawford and Barbara Ehrenreich both obtained a higher education; Crawford with a PhD in political philosophy and Ehrenreich in biology. The two are very educated individuals who were now experiencing‚ "lower class jobs" yet they have very different attitudes toward the line of work that they pursue. Barbara enrolls in working at a restaurant named Jerry’s‚ she tells the reader all about her horrid experience. She applied to work at a restaurant like Jerry’s as an experiment‚ to see how others
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Ehrenreich took the above ‘subjective’ and ‘objective’ framework to construct her essay. The specific content relating to that approach is further expressed when she uses the creative technique of comparing and contrasting the employment problems of the middle class and the working class which she describes as white collar and blue collar workers. She makes persuasive use and references‚ official reports‚ and statistical data. She draws heavily on the use of quotations‚ published works‚ subject experts
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