Jacob Riis How The Other Half Lives Summary

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There were many similarities and differences between the lives of immigrants in the 1890’s and modern day travelers to America. In the book, How the Other Half Lives, Jacob Riis explains and delves deeply into how different types of people were treated, for example: men, women, African American people, etc. But in this, he also expresses how the immigrants of this time period were treated. To be quite frank, they were treated horribly back then and modern immigration has greatly improved, but here’s why. In the 1890’s, Riis himself documented the slums and ghettos of New York City. He took incredible pictures documenting the environment that people had to live in, including the boom of immigrants from European and non-Protestant people primarily. …show more content…

XVIII).Food supplies were low, as well as common goods such as blankets or beds for that matter. Immigrants were treated very poorly, and no outsider of this section of the country could really see what they were going through. “There was no other explanation, and none was needed when I stood in the room in which they had lived. It was in the attic with sloping ceiling and a single window so far out on the roof that it seemed not to belong to the place at all. With scarcely room enough to turn around in they had been compelled to pay five dollars and a half a month in advance” (Riis Ch. I). After Riis finally made his debut, customers of his work were quite shocked to see how immigrants really lived in the country they thrived in. America was known to them as the land of opportunities and freedom, not herding their people into cages like cattle. They decided there needed to be a change, which is what they decided to achieve. In 1895, the New York Tenement House Act was published in order to outlaw rear tenements while also being the first act to show photographs with written descriptions to the public. Then in 1901, the act was improved and said to improve the housing and treatment of …show more content…

In contrast to the 1890’s, immigrants are granted citizenship, money by the government and maybe a small business, and housing, but maybe not where they would like to be placed. “Even the colored barber is rapidly getting to be a thing of the past. Along shore, at any unskilled labor, he works unmolested; but he does not appear to prefer the job” (Riis Ch. XIII). While they’re given opportunities in that way, they are also denied certain opportunities based on their background, race, or religion. For example, someone coming from a muslim country may be treated differently than someone coming from Europe. “He makes the prejudice in which he traffics pay him well, and that, as he thinks it quite superfluous to tell you, is what he is there for” (Riis Ch. XIII). The system is not fair in this sense, as they judge on the very system this country was founded on. This is because of all the incidents of terrorism and attacks from other countries, which create a stereotype of every race and country other than our own. Another difference is the increased amount of illegal immigrants coming to the United States every year. About 11 million people travel illegally to our country, living in any free space they can find or living with family here. Because of this, it takes away from the funds and jobs that America has to offer to give to them a fair

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