Studs Terkel Essays

  • Maggie Holmes And Dave Bender's Perceptions Of Work By Studs Terkel

    834 Words  | 2 Pages

    Studs Terkel published a nonfiction Working which consists many interviews among different people’s descriptions of their jobs. Through this book, Terkel demonstrates the meaning of work to different people and how their work experiences shape their attitudes about their lives. Among these interviewers, Maggie Holmes is a domestic while Dave Bender is a factory owner. Although their wages are different, Maggie Holmes and Dave Bender’s attitudes about their works are contradictory. People who

  • Stud Terkel’s The Good War

    614 Words  | 2 Pages

    Fussell believes that the soldier of world war two, "suffers so deeply from contempt and damage to his selfhood, from absurdity and boredom and chickenshit, that some anodyne is necessary", and that the anodyne of choice was alcohol. I would argue that Fussell is correct, especially regarding the connection between the absurdity of the war and the associated damage to soldiers image of themselves as good and patriotic, and the use of alcohol to block out the reality of the war. I think this connection

  • Studs Terkel Working Summary

    728 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Studs Terkel’s book Working, Terkel begins a description of a steelworker named Mike LeFevre say that he is “a dying breed”, a laborer who’s the one who has to “build something”, doesn’t have a college degree and is a part of a “union”. Mike LeFevre, as history shows is a dying breed; during the 1980s, businesses chose to cut labor costs through globalization and providing non-union manufacturing jobs, who were paid “30% less than union workers”. Similarly, as Levinson writes in The Box, globalization

  • Studs Terkels Oral History Of The Great Depression

    985 Words  | 2 Pages

    The contrasting experiences of Clifford Burke and Jane Yoder, as depicted in Studs Terkels Oral History of the Great Depression, give people today an insight into the various challenges faced by ordinary Americans during the Great Depression. Intro The Great Depression of the 1930s left a major mark on American society and impacted individuals and families everywhere. Studs Terkel's Hard Times: An Oral History of the Great Depression, offers a glimpse into some of the lives of ordinary Americans

  • Be More Chill

    1102 Words  | 3 Pages

    you in your head). Jeremy steals his Aunts valuable beanie babies and sells them on eBay to collect the 600 dollars he needs to be able to pay for this highly effective pill. It does a magnificent job completely transforming the nerdy Jeremy into a stud that every girl wants to get with. But yet unfortunately things don't always come out as planned as the "squip" leads Jeremy into a world of lies, drugs, sex and violence. Worse yet he never ended up with the girl of his dreams, Christine. My recommendation

  • Cultural Misunderstanding in A Passage to India

    815 Words  | 2 Pages

    demonstrates how these repeated misunderstandings become hardened into cultural stereotypes and are often used to justify the uselessness of attempts to bridge cultural gulfs. When Aziz offers his collar stud to Fielding in an 'effusive' act of friendship, Heaslop later misinterprets Aziz's missing stud as an oversight and extends it as a general example: "...there you have the Indian all over: inattention to detail; the fundamental slackness that reveals the race" (82). Cultural misunderstanding culminates

  • Role-Play: A Strategy for Teaching Social Studies

    1643 Words  | 4 Pages

    Role-Play: A Strategy for Teaching Social Studies One of the reasons social studies is viewed as a tough academic discipline is the result of force-fed historical dates and data. It is also one of the reasons that students think history is boring and irrelevant. Furthermore, their inability to relate to the culture and people of the past creates a what-does-this-have-to-do-with-me attitude early on in their education that directly influence their future performance. The misconception that

  • Understanding Clinical Depression

    3083 Words  | 7 Pages

    Everybody's mood varies according to events in the world around them. People are happy when they achieve something or saddened when they fail a test or lose something. When they are sad, some people say they are 'depressed', but the clinical depressions that are seen by doctors differ from the low mood brought on by everyday setbacks. Psychiatrists see a range of more severe mood disturbances and so find it easier to distinguish these from the normal variations of mood seen in the community

  • Commercial Identity

    1776 Words  | 4 Pages

    Light," says the more studly one. The music is rockin' again. The eight ball catches a drift and falls into the pocket, and those lucky ladies have found some happenin' guys who drink the coolest beer. The moral of the story is "buy a Bud and be a stud." However, that is not the only message in this commercial. The mere fact that commercials like this are successful indicates that they influence people's identity in society. That is a pretty deep and somewhat abstract statement to make about a commercial

  • Full-time Students Vs. Part -t

    619 Words  | 2 Pages

    Full-time vs. Part-time Students There are many similarities and differences between full and part-time students. Each student is trying for the goal of educating themselves to become more successful in life. As students begin their education there is a sense of motivation and eagerness. Knowing the possible compensations and honor that comes with this achievement. There can be a feeling of tension and uncertainty that comes with this new adventure. If an individual does not become discarded, and

  • Muted Group Theory

    2841 Words  | 6 Pages

    depreciating and excluding women" (Griffin,1997,459). Muted Group Theory sees language as excluding women based on several factors. For example the words used to describe a sexually promiscuous individual are radically different. For men words like, stud, playboy, rake, gigolo, and womanizer among others, all with positive connotations, describe the sexually active male. In a harsh contrast words to describe a female with an active sexual appetite include: slut, hooker, mistress, hussy, easy lay, prostitute

  • Be Smart, Don’t start.

    902 Words  | 2 Pages

    Be Smart, Don’t start. We can vividly recall the endless television commercials from reporters and speeches we received from teachers that informed us of the side affects of smoking. As young boys, neither one of us quite understood what was so bad about smoking. We just knew it was frowned upon, and it was strictly discouraged by our parents. Recently our foundations were shaken when we read an article by Peter Brimelow that presented smoking as beneficial and a preventative tool against

  • Ecstasy: Greater Affects on Women?

    723 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ecstasy: Greater Affects on Women? Ecstasy: Are Women More Susceptible To Brain Damage? The rave scene. It’s becoming a popular way to ‘kick-back’ for high school and college kids. “Everyone” is doing it at parties. Unfortunately, this party isn’t all fun and games. Drugs are prevalent at raves. Ecstasy, one of the most popular drugs abused there is like the tiny insects that aren‘t widely feared, but can be deadly. It looks small and innocent, but its more harmful than you may think. Ecstasy

  • Q&A: Studs Lonigan

    1653 Words  | 4 Pages

    Studs Lonigan Studs Lonigan is the protagonist and the name of the trilogy of three novels, Young Lonigan, the Young Manhood of Studs Lonigan and Judgment Day, by the American author James T. Farrell. The novel is a classic depiction of Irish life in the South side of Chicago and how Studs Lonigan comes of age in the setting. It is particularly in the second part that Farrell brings to light the venom of racism and how its unchecked spread helped to produce and reproduce the ghetto. The main

  • American Careers in the Terkel's Working

    961 Words  | 2 Pages

    “American dream”. However, as time goes on the mainstream idea of “living the American Dream” has changed. This change is mostly due to the ever-changing economy, professions, and expectations of the American people. Throughout the book Working, by Studs Terkel, we meet many diverse groups of people to discover the people behind the jobs that allows American society to operate and how their choice of a career path has changed their lives. Here is "Mike Lefervre" , a 37-year-old steel worker. Lefervre

  • The Effect of the Great Depression on National and Individual Morale

    1064 Words  | 3 Pages

    page 172), “If no-one will help than (sic) I will take my life away (McElvaine, page 174). Even those who retained their will to live found that life became a demoralising battle- “I just vegetated” is the description given by Ward James in the stud... ... middle of paper ... ...ffects such as a lack in long term confidence and some level of a mistrust in banks. However, for the worst affected, the most difficult effect on morale must have been the lifelong memory of seeing their children

  • What Work Is Jim Grayson Analysis

    1537 Words  | 4 Pages

    your life then you know that working takes effort, dedication, and hard work. Work for many can also be a struggle just like it was for the main character in “What Work Is” by Philip Levine and for Jim Grayson’s in his interview in “Working” by Studs Terkel. Both the man in “What Work Is” and Jim Grayson are struggling with their experiences with work. The man in “What Work Is” cannot find a job and his brother is overworked, Jim Grayson has a job but it 's very tedious and he doesn’t spend much

  • Ellis Vs Parrillo

    529 Words  | 2 Pages

    racism. His well thought out and organized arguments are extremely insightful in regards to human prejudices. Studs Terkel’s essay "C.P. Ellis" helps define American prejudice from an inside perspective. His story of ex-Klansman C.P. Ellis helps us understand the origins of racism and how it can be passed down from previous generations or is a result of geographical location. Parillo and Terkel both provide insightful information on the

  • American Dream Mindset Essay

    727 Words  | 2 Pages

    What is the American Dream in our society today? People described the American dream as being materialistic, self-absorbed, and full of greed. Wealth and status play a large role in the American Dream of today’s society. The mindset of this era is filled with a “get-rich-quick” mindset and that with money, people can achieve anything. “Those who believe money can do everything are frequently prepared to do everything for money” (George Savil). People will do anything to get that quick rich mindset

  • Money and the Corruption of American Society

    722 Words  | 2 Pages

    Money and the Corruption of American Society The American dream Sweet as a new millionaire The American dream Pre-packed, ready-to-wear The American dream Fat, like a chocolate eclair As you suck out the cream Luck by the tail How can you fail? And best of all, it's for sale The American dream - The Engineer (Miss Saigon) Money is very important in American society today.  Your status in America is greatly influenced by how much money you make.  We see the effects of money while