The great depression was the most severe economic downturn in history. It occurred in the 1930’s due to the crash of the stock market, also known as Black Tuesday. The crash effected everyone around the country at all social levels. Construction was halted, farms and rural areas suffered as crop prices fell. The effects of the depression lasted up until the beginning of World War II. Photographer Dorothea Lange became famous during this era due to her humanization of the depression. Her collection on photos were of various families that the depression effected and it showed in her photos and it allowed people to see how others were living and the struggles they were facing. One of her most famous pictures taken during this time was “The Migrant …show more content…
Two of her children cling to each of her shoulders facing away from the camera. The dirt on their faces suggests they have no home and have been traveling through harsh outdoors to find a home and a job. The very basics of the picture don’t tell us much. Just that these people were suffering during the depression, so we can conclude that she took the picture just to show the effects of the depression right? As that would not be a wrong answer it is not all the picture tells us or is meant to …show more content…
Many families suffered in more than one way and that is what the migrant mother is about. The picture contains specific details that we overlook. Where is her husband, the children's father? He is nowhere to be found in the picture he most likely dies from TB or strays off to find work, She is on her own. There is no help, no protection yet her children hide in her arms hoping for her to keep them safe and alive. Their clothes are ratted and they are covered in dirt. Recourses that were once common were now a luxury that no one could afford or even access. We know her age to be 32 but look at her she looks of a woman in her late 40’s. The struggles were drowning her in stress and aging her. Her worried expression seems to confirm what we know about the depression. Things weren’t going to get better for a long
She was horrified to see how they were being treated; so, she started campaigning for the better handling of patients in such a state. Dorothea Dix would later go on to make a very highly recognized name for herself. Throughout her lifetime, Dix made many substantial impacts to American society.
The setting takes place in rural Maryland during the 1929 Great Depression. The main character we here from in the short story is Lizabeth. She takes us through life during that time and how she became a woman during childhood. Lizabeth being the narrator explains to the audience how bland the area looks, she does this by saying “Surely there must have there must have been lush green lawns and paved streets under leafy shade trees somewhere in town; but memory is an abstract painting – it does not present things as they are, but rather as they feel”. She gives the audience a glimpse of what her area really looks like and from the sound of it, it’s glassless, dull, and dry.
The Great Depression was a severe worldwide economic depression in the 1930s. It was the longest, deepest, and most widespread depression of the 20th century. It challenged American families in major ways, placing great economic, social, and psychological strains and demands upon families and their members. Millions of families lost their savings as numerous banks collapsed in the early 1930s. In addition, farmers lost their crops and failed to make a living.
An incredibly devastating time for many Americans, the early 1930s introduced the country to the nightmare that was the Great Depression. Sparked by the Stock Market Crash that took place on Monday, October 19, 1929, the Great Depression was the most severe economic downturn in American history. On that infamous Monday alone, investors lost 14 billion dollars and by the end of the year their losses had tripled. In the 1920s, it was estimated that four to five banks opened up around the country on a daily basis.
As the saying goes, a picture is worth 1,000 words. If we truly looked into the story and meaning behind a picture, it could be worth 1,000 more. The Migrant Mother series of pictures are some of the most well-known pictures in American history. But if we take a deeper look at the pictures as Sally Stein did in Passing Likeness, we see that these pictures truly represent something much more than what they were used for and what they’re known for today. This series of photographs was used to represent the struggling working class in America during The Great Depression.
During the dust bowl many people made the pillage to the west in search of a work and a better life, but many people were struggling to make ends meet. Dorothea Lange, a photographer employed by the U.S. Government’s FSA program documented and brought attention of the living conditions of the poor to the public. Her most famous photo, the Migrant Mother taken in 1936, shows a mother looking into the distance with a concerned look on her face while two of her three children hide their faces and a baby sleeps in the women’s arms. She and her children are dirty, but the look on the mother’s face portrays the emotion of people during the dust bowl. Wondering how she will survive another night, where she could find a job, and how she will provide food for her and her three children.
In San Francisco in 1933, Dorothea Lange took a photograph called White Angel Bread Line. The image shows a man standing in line waiting to get food during The Great Depression. According to MoMA, Lange, during this time was a photographer and a photojournalist born in 1895. Most of her work comes from the Depression era, where she was in her mid forties. White Angel Bread Line shows many formal elements that help Lange’s theme of hopelessness.
he Great Depression was a time of huge economic downfall. During this time period people lost their homes, money, and everything they had ever earned. Millions of people were affected, including the middle and lower classes, who would just become poorer. People in upper classes, even dropped to the lower class. This downfall began on October 29, 1929, and the leading cause was the crash of the stock market.
The fact one picture can say so much is beautiful. Pictures can be happy, unhappy, peaceful, violence, and much more. This picture is even full of irony. This picture was taken by Dorothea Lange’s during the Great Depression of two men walking to an unknown, infinity of open road. This picture separates social class.
For example, after the recession begins to affect the Siegels and they are forced to let go of most of their housekeepers, a particular emphasis is made on how slovenly and chaotic their home becomes. This is particularly shown by how quickly unsustainable having dozens of pets to take care of becomes for the family, with lingering shots depicting their neglected lizards and rodents having starved to death in their cages and still more shots of their overworked maid attempting to clean up the messes left by all of Jackie’s eight dogs by herself. These shots show an example of the filmmaker exerting their influence over the viewer’s idea of the subjects by exaggerating negative imagery associated with the Siegel family’s inability to adjust to their newfound
I drew this picture, The Sharecropper Boy, to do one of two things. My first reason was to be able to share one of Dorothea Lange’s pictures, without just printing the image out. My second reason, was to get to know Dorothea Lange’s pictures better. By drawing one of her pictures, I am studying the people and the situations they are in. I learn of their stressful, hard times, just by drawing a picture.
In “Marigolds” by Eugenia Collier, Miss Lottie’s old house, a symbol of poverty and sorrow, is surrounded with beautiful marigolds which she plants because the marigolds bring hope and happiness to a town that critically needs it. For example, the author describes Miss Lottie’s house as the most run down house in the town when she writes, “The sun and rain had long since faded its rickety frame siding from white to a sullen gray” (257). This shows that Miss Lottie’s house is old and falling apart and has not been repaired, which costs money that she does not have, like many others in the US during the Great Depression. This also shows that the house has gone from white, a new and bright color to gray, a gloomy and sad color, which symbolizes
The Great Depression was an economic downturn. It originated in America, but spread to affect the entire globe. It caused severe unemployment, and industrial production plummeted. The downturn hit rock bottom in 1933 when all commercial banks closed.
Background on Ida In this weeks article of a Great Depression survivor, a women with the name Ida Anderson was interviewed. Ida is currently 93 years old living at Sunrise senior living. She was around the age of 4-14 when the Great Depression was going on. Ida lived in Maddison, Wisconsin.
Walker Evans had his own view on the great depression, and used photography to express the hardships people then had to face. His photography expressed much paucity, impoverishment, and depression. When you examine these photos you see much paucity, they have minimal items, such as food and water. You can see that many are very skinny and unhealthy. During the 1930s many families endured impoverishment, they were often very dirty, they didn’t have clean clothes.