Some Like It Hot (1959) is an all-time classic Hollywood comedy directed by Billy Wilder. The story follows a smooth saxophone player Joe (Tony Curtis) and his intuitive bass-player best friend Jerry (Jack Lemmon) after they witness a Mafia massacre. The two buddies create a spontaneous plan to get away from the Chicago native mobsters. Joe and Jerry disguise themselves as cross-dressed women and join an all-female jazz band who are boarding a train from Chicago to Florida. The story heats up…
Shabbetai Zevi was a Jewish man with a Spanish background who contributed to the history of the Jews. He pretended to be the Messiah and gave the Jews hope during a miserable time. Even though he was not the true Messiah, he gave the Jews someone to believe in. During the 17th Century, everyone thought the Messianic Era was approaching to coincide with the predictions that had been made. After initial disbelief, the Jewish people began to accept that Shabbetai Zevi was the Messiah. He rose…
Since the Jewish population was on the fringe of French society, Voltaire’s negative portrayal of the…
African Americans by making them pay for land and tools, and in some cases, family members. Families had been split up numerous times by the slave trade and following the Emancipation Proclamation and the end of the war, family members often went in search of each other. In some cases, when slaves would leave after the Emancipation Proclamation took place, they would be forced to leave their family members, including children behind, as Rebecca Parsons had to. But the unfair treatment didn’t…
evident that one of the personal qualities that Lincoln possessed was faith. This faith guided him in important or difficult decisions that needed solved. An example of one of these unpopular decisions was the issue of slavery and the signing of the emancipation proclamation. During the time of the civil war, there was resistance from both the…
talk about the issue of slavery. The abolitionism was a movement to end slavery, and the argument was founded on the Declaration of Independence and Preamble of the Constitution. The final reason on why the thirteenth amendment was created was the Emancipation Proclamation. It was proposed by Abraham Lincoln to free slaves in the Southern states, so the Confederates could no longer use them to support the army in the field. Though prior to the Civil war, the first draft of the thirteenth…
In Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution, James McPherson discusses not only the many changes wrought upon the United States because of the Civil War, but also the ways in which President Abraham Lincoln was instrumental in the carrying out of these changes. When Lincoln gave his inaugural address, he spoke only of the Union, but by the time he gave his infamous Gettysburg address, he spoke only of a united nation (McPherson, viii). A nation he united through “revolution”—a complete…
Thomas J. DiLorenzo’s book, The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War, is about unveiling the side of President Lincoln that is not told in today’s history books and is overlooked by the monumental Lincoln legend. DiLorenzo’s book exposes the myths that made the Civil War seem vague. DiLorenzo is an American economics professor at Loyola University Maryland Sellinger School of Business. He has written many other books regarding mostly history subjects.…
The Emancipation Proclamation would make more than three million black slaves free. The Emancipation Proclamation was given by President Lincoln on January 1, 1863. “The Emancipation Proclamation declared “‘that all person held as slaves”’ within the rebel states “‘are, and henceforth shall be free,”’ (“Lincoln Issues Emancipation Proclamation”). The Emancipation Proclamation freed many slaves, but only in the rebel states. The slaves…
One August afternoon, at the height of racial segregation, a man stood at Lincoln memorial with hopes to demolish racism, not with violence, but with words of peace. With little more than four words, magnificent applause spread amongst thousands of racial justice supporters who began to feel even more empowered and passionate about the cause than ever before. “I Have a Dream,” has become one of the most revolutionary speeches of all time, and it’s deliverer, Martin Luther King Jr., has left a…