The Emigrants

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    Page 33 of 42 - About 414 Essays
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    The French Revolution in the late eighteenth century was a time of uprisings and attacks as oppressed peasants tried to provide a better life for future generations. In A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens follows the lives of characters living during this period of time. Many French citizens sacrificed their lives during the revolution out of love for their children and grandchildren to provide them with a better future. In this novel, love is also the reason that several characters give up an…

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    Victor Hugo once said, “Music expresses that which cannot be put into words and which cannot remain silent.” Music is the freedom of expression used by those incapable, or forbidden to convey their beliefs. Although it may seem obvious to many Americans today, that each person could present their opinions without fear, it was the first colonists who fought for this right. Afterall, the colonists immigrated from Britain to the new world in search for freedom. However, when their homeland began to…

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    This source is an interview with Mrs M in 1999 by W. Ugolini. This source was part of a collection of interviews for ‘Memory, war and the Italians in Edinburgh: the role of communal myth.’ Mrs M, an Italian living in Edinburgh describes the anti-Italian sentiment and riots when Mussolini, dictator of Italy declared war on Britain and France on 10th of June 1940. This source was written 59 years after the events took place as a result the details could possibly be blurred with the passing of time…

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    During the late 16th and into the 17th century, there was much exploration into the New World. Europeans were becoming increasingly familiar with the new land that the Americas had to offer. There were two main areas that Europeans from England sent the majority of their people. These two regions were recognized as the Chesapeake and the New England Settlements. Ultimately these two regions would come together, but in the early stages of their development, their characteristics and motivations…

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    Kabyle Sociology

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    Weakening of the territory’s link, but persistence of the territorial identities In order to understand the Kabyle collectives’ dynamics on the Internet, we need to look at the sociology of immigration. The Sayad (1977) showed that the first two generations of Kabyle immigrants in France were strongly connected with their country of origin. The relation with the territory of Algeria, Kabylia and more specifically with the village of origin was mainly characterized by the hope and the project of…

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    The day of December 7, 1941 had immense impacts on om American history. On that morning Pearl Harbor, a United States naval base in Hawaii, was attacked by Japanese bombers killing thousands of people and injuring many more(Paul Davis, ABC-CLIO). Nearly twenty American naval ships were destroyed along with about three hundred planes(Davis, ABC-CLIO). A day later Congress approved President Roosevelt’s declaration of war. Conflict with Japan, however, had been imminent for decades. American…

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    people across national borders during their migration, they are called migrants or immigrants (from Latin: migrare, wanderer) from the perspective of the country which they enter. From the perspective of the country which they leave, they are called emigrant or outmigrant. Sociology designates immigration usually as migration (as well as emigration accordingly outward migration). Immigrants are motivated to leave their…

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    Tanti At The Oval

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    “Tanti at the Oval” was a piece done by writer, performer and most importantly; storyteller, Paul Keens-Douglas. Although Trinidadian by birth, he spent his early childhood in Grenada. He is well renowned for his ability to convey cultural equality in his work by ensuring it is appealing to virtually everyone, especially in such a cosmopolitan region. This particular piece entails the main character, Tanti Merle, and her journey to and from a cricket match at the Queen’s Park Oval in Trinidad…

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    The conflicts in Kansas were examples of the immediate causes of the Civil War. The acquisition of land in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the annexation of Texas in 1845, and the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) increased tensions between the North and the South and revived the sectional debate of slavery and its extension, for instance, the Kansas Nebraska Act of 1854. Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois found it necessary to expand westward to create a railroad that linked Chicago and…

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    Many critically acclaimed writers were ones that were dominant in the early 20th century, specifically the famously known Roaring 20s. These writers have immensely impacted American literature in terms of reflecting history and varying styles. A few of these writers are F. Scott Fitzgerald, James Weldon Johnson, and Ernest Hemingway. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s writing usually reflected the events that occurred during his lifetime, which can be considered as part of his writing style. One can easily…

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