Timothy Noah's The Great Divergence

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After reading Timothy Noah’s work, The Great Divergence, I am able to adequately analyze the content of the text and describe what the book meant to me while reading it. I would describe this book as informative, interesting, and simplistic. Noah conveys his message in a way that is easy to understand while supplying the reader with many facts about The Great Divergence, what Noah describes as the increase in wealth separation between the top one percent and the rest of the population. I described this work simplistic because Noah formatted the reading in a way that made it very easy to follow and absorb outside sources. For example, Noah described an American’s mood during the 1920’s bull market, “…he could envision an America set free, not from graft, nor from crime…,” by using a source from another author (pg 15). In that case, it was Frederick Lewis Allen, and he set the excerpt apart from the rest of the text by decreasing the text size and justifying the new margins. This …show more content…

One of these concepts was discussed in the fifth chapter, titled “Kudoka and the College Premium”. The value of higher education is discussed, along with the related income that comes with the job they have earned. He also discusses the shift in the trend of blue collar and white collar jobs. One can find that many people worked blue collar jobs in the past while there has been a swing in the desire to work white collar jobs. This idea affects my life after college because it will affect the availability of jobs, as well as the income associated with the job. If the demand is high but the amount of available workers is low, the income will be much higher than if there were many in that field. I believe that many will find that Noah spent time to discuss at least one issue that every reader could relate to, displaying his effectiveness as a

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