In Revolutions in the Atlantic World: A Comparative History, Wim Klooster examined and compared four Atlantic World Revolutions: The American Revolution, The French Revolution, The Haitian Revolution, and the Spanish Revolutions. Klooster provided an introduction to global events leading up to the eighteenth and early nineteenth century Atlantic World revolutions. He then devoted a chapter to each revolution, and in the fifth and final chapter conducted a comparative discussion. Klooster approached the studies with specific ideas in mind; 1) International context was mandatory, 2)…
It is a well-known fact the African Americans tend to have higher levels of unemployment and lower levels of education than their white counterparts. The constant debate that whether or not that happened because of the structure of laws in the United States or because black people do not have a culture of working hard. In “Revisiting the Debate on Race and Culture”, William Darity Jr. talks about how different aspects of black identity play a role in the education and wealth of an individual. Chapter five of When Affirmative Action was white the author, Ira Katznelson , talks about a bill that contributed to the disparities between the earnings and the standards of living between white Americans and Black Americans. The chapter focused on the…
Charles Pierce author of Idiot America: How Stupidity Became a Virtue in the Land of the Free, graduated in 1975 from Marquette University with a degree in journalism. Pierce is currently a senior journalist and on-line political blogger at Esquire Magazine. His writing has been published with the New York Times Magazine and LA Times Magazine along with Sports Illustrated and the Chicago Tribune. While searching the provided list of books to choose for this review, I chose Idiot America: How Stupidity Became a Virtue in the Land of the Free. I chose this book because the cover has George Washington riding on a dinosaur and that could only mean that this was a political book.…
Emily LeBlanc Anne R. Thomson English 102 19 July 2017 The Great Depression The Great Depression was a severe economic hardship for America that led to poverty, increased unemployment rates, worsened racial inequality, and starvation. The article, “The 1930s”, written by Bob Batchelor provides a summary of the adversities American citizens had to overcome during The Great Depression.…
Incarceration mask inequalities between black and whites because such a large population of African American men are incarcerated in the prison system that it because a racial inequality. According to the book when someone is incarcerated they are not counted as unemployment and do not fall into the unemployment rate. As the book stated individuals that are typically becoming incarcerated are uneducated and are in low paying jobs . When they go to prison they are no longer counted in wage statistics. This alters the statics making it look like the average wage of workers has increased.…
Detroit, once a symbol of progress in the American economy, has become the failure story of 20th century America. A main factor consisted in racial discrimination towards black people, bringing consequences such as racial division on the society and class inequality. However, racial discrimination did not exclusively brought capitalism towards Black Detroiters lives, but also oligarchy played a role. In the 1940s, Detroit’s economy boomed, becoming the 4th largest industrial job market in the country, attracting not exclusively workers across the country, but the world (Sugrue 19).…
An individual may try to secure one’s own self-fulfillment and satisfaction, but all of the attempts may be futile, if the problems that are disturbing the individual’s self-fulfillment are from an external source. The individual may be forced to escape from the external source to achieve satisfaction, if not the consequences may be dire, the reason being is because, both satisfaction and self-fulfillment tie into purpose, and contentment. Without their existence an individual may lose purpose or contentment, and this causes the individual to struggle to maintain or gain satisfaction and self-fulfillment. In “Behind the Headlines” the author Vidyut Aklujkar demonstrates how an individual can face adversities in an attempt to secure one's satisfaction,…
“The Atlantic Slave Trade” by Klein Herbert is a synthesis made to educate readers with extensive scholarly research from the past quarter century on the Atlantic Slave trade. This book was written to close the gap between popular understanding about the slave trade and scholarly knowledge. The Book systematically organized the Atlantic slave trade in eight chapters starting from “Slavery in Western Development” to “The End of the Slave Trade”. In the following review of Klein Herbert’s work “The Atlantic Slave trade” I will summarize the book’s content, and survey its major strengths, and weaknesses. Herbert Klein researched four hundred years of history of the Atlantic slave trade.…
In the summer of 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I have a Dream” speech. He dreamed for a nation. He dreamed that America “would rise from the dark and desolate valley of segregation to the sunlit path of racial justice.” America, however, never reached that “sunlit path of racial justice.” And the American legal system is where many of the racial injustices still perpetuate.…
“Is Racism a Permanent Feature of American Society?” takes the reader into a deep debate between two scholars. Derrick Bell believes racism will be an everlasting problem faced by African Americans in our society; and Dinesh D’Souza believes the exact opposite. He believes other factors occurring in the society affects blacks and the problems they hold racism accountable for. Derrick Bell argues his point by starting off addressing slavery. He states, “Slavery has left a significant portion of the race ‘with life-long poverty and soul-devastating despair..”…
1. What is your overall reaction to this article? In the article The black family in the age of mass incarceration, was overall and amazing article. A lot of people see the “blacks” as drug dealers or murder or look at them in a different way then they look at white.…
The View from Saturday, written by E.L. Konigsburg, is about four prepubescent children and a disabled teacher. In the story, each of these characters has to make profoundly crucial choices that could change their lives. Choices, as you probably already know, are very important in life. You must choose whether you want to study or not. You must choose whether you want to eat or not.…
It is more difficult for Black people to find employment simply based on society’s negative perception of Blacks. In the essay, Jobless Ghettos: The Social Implications of the Disappearance of Work in Segregated Neighborhoods, sociologist William J. Wilson writes that “many black inner-city applicants are never given the chance to prove their qualifications on an individual level because they are systematically screened out by the selective recruitment process”, this is contributed to the fact that “Employers make assumptions about the inner-city black workers in general” (Ore 334). This discrimination against Blacks does not take place only in inner cities, it is happening all across the low-wage labor market, as discovered in the experiment done by sociologist Devah Pager, Bruce Western and Bart Bonkiowski. Pager, Western and Bonkiowski found that “firms are reluctant to hire young minority men—especially blacks—because they are seen as unreliable, dishonest or lacking in social and cognitive skills” (Ore 344). Through their experiment, a clear racial hierarchy emerged with whites being the most desirable, then Latinos and then finally blacks.…
Income and unemployment go hand-in-hand, because if a person is unable to get a job, there is no way they are going to have a high salary. In Borgia 's 2013 study he found that one reason unemployment is so high in Chicago for blacks because big businesses relocated to the suburbs, because it was a more stable area and there were places…
The features of “the Atlantic World” are part of what makes it important to history and is essential to how we remember “the Atlantic World” in it’s true glory. Novelist Michael Crichton once said that “If you don 't know history, then you don 't know anything. You are a leaf that doesn 't know it is part of a tree.” I believe that human beings are part of a tree of history that each and every one of us can be connected to in various ways. This connection is essential to how we understand history, learn from the past, and change the future for the better.…