Preview

Low Wage Workers In Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel And Dimed

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
700 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Low Wage Workers In Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel And Dimed
Nickel & Dimed

In Nickel and Dimed Barbara Ehrenreich takes a break from her real life and lives as a low wage-worker takes a low wage job in order to understand and find out what wage workers really go through everyday not knowing what's next for them, and how they live off of minimum wage. In everyday life low-income people do many things in order to survive on a daily basis. There are people who work multiple jobs, or live in a shelter, live in their cars, house/apartments housed by various amounts of people, even if they don't know them, and in the book Barbara talks about many of these examples. The first example I want to discuss is when Barbara was working as a waitress at Hearthside. She and a few of her co-workers were talking about their housing situations, and her Gail was telling her about sharing a room. "Gail is sharing a room, and her friends roommate is flirting with her, making her go crazy, but she says if she didn't have a roommate the rent would be impossible alone" (Pg.25). Then there is the Haitian cook who lives with his girlfriend, and two other unrelated people" (pg. 25). Tina and her husband pay $60 per night to stay at a Day's Inn, and Joan who lives in her van (pg. 26). All of these individuals mostly live in these types of situations because they cannot afford to pay
…show more content…
One of the maids tripped and fell, and sprained her ankle and she was afraid to go to the hospital, feeling she has already missed to many days of work she feels if she tells her boss that she will get fired (pg 110). Another example is if you have no health insurance you have to go without paying full price like Gail (pg 27) who needed estrogen pills but has to spend $9 a pill to control her migraines. Also when Marianne's boyfriend lost his job as a roofer because he missed time after getting a cut and couldn't afford the prescribed antibiotic so that it could heal (pg

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Nickel and Dimed was published in 2001 during the blow up of the internet. The book was spreading and a group of college freshmen were even assigned to read it. Ehrenreich even learned that a young man set out himself to try what she did but he started out in a homeless shelter and at the end, he had an apartment and thousands of dollars saved. He went on to write his own book and actually accuse Ehrenreich about her lack of motivation to succeed. She was even called “The Antichrist of North Carolina” and many people didn't seem so happy with her book and her mission. To some people, this book was an eye opener. A woman was under the impression that an “unskilled job” had at least been a $15 an hour job. Ehrenreich refers to lower class as…

    • 312 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the book the Nickel and Dimed a women named Ehrenerich goes and puts herself in poverty. During this experiment she sets rule for herself. Her rules for this experiment is that she can not fall back on her education she has to take the highest paying job that is offered to her, and she also has to find the cheapest living situation. Ehreneich first goes to Florida and finds an apartment that rent that is rather low. After applying to numerous jobs she finally finds a job as a waitress. While working she realized how she has to rely on so much of the tip and also made her realize she did not like management. She’s always had to be doing something where as management could be sitting there all day telling other people to do jobs. With these…

    • 217 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    It’s hard for a minimum wage worker to find a place to live because they can’t pay the security deposit so they get stuck staying in a hotel or moving in with a friend or a family member. For example, Tina and her husband don’t make enough money so they had to stay in the Days Inn paying $60 a night. Getting stuck paying this every night would be impossible. Joan lives in her van. Gail is stuck with a roommate that keeps hitting on her. Claude shares a two room apartment with his girlfriend and two other people. And Annette lives with her mother. She’s six months pregnant and abandoned by her boyfriend.…

    • 465 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    For each, she had to master new skills, learn the social environment of each job, and work laboriously for hours on end. She further analyzes and evaluates the rising problem of poverty. A single, educated woman – with the ability to rely on conveniences such as emergency cash, a car, and a credit card; a woman who was without children or a family to support – struggled to make ends meet working one or more jobs demonstrates the inadequacy of the minimum wage and its fail to sufficiently supply an individual or family with the means necessary to support the “working poor.” Companies are reluctant to raise the pay of their employees and can punish and/or fire employees who step out of line. “When you enter the low-wage workplace, you check your civil liberties at the door…We can hardly pride ourselves on being the world’s preeminent democracy if large numbers of citizens spend half of their waking hours in what amounts to a dictatorship.” (Ehrenreich 210) The calculated $30,000 “living wage” for a family of three comes to $14 an hour, and 60 percent of Americans earns less than that. The lifestyles of the poor are tainted with low self-esteem and the need to “work through” fatigue, injury, illness, etc. “They are [the lifestyles] emergency situations. And that is how we should see the poverty of so many millions of low-wage Americans – as a state of emergency.” (Ehrenreich…

    • 691 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the thought provoking novel, Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich explores the life of low-wage workers in America’s society. While speaking with an editor one day, the question of poverty and how American’s survive off six and seven dollars an hour played in Ms. Ehrenreich’s mind. So as a journalist, Ehrenreich goes undercover working several minimum wage jobs and tries to survive off the earnings. Seeing and living the lives of these poverty-stricken workers, Ehrenreich learns that hard work doesn't always lead to success and advancement in today's society.…

    • 1072 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich plunges into the world of minimum wage workers. In her immersion, Ehrenreich attempts various types of minimum wage jobs such as those that would be categorized as service work like a waitress or a house cleaner. Ehrenreich expresses not only the difficulty of these jobs, but the behavior in which people acted towards her. She explains that once she entered the world other service work she was seen as lower standard of human, if she was “seen” at all, since many times Ehrenreich would feel invisible to the rest of the world. In addition, sometimes she was not even seen as a human at all, but instead an animal or machine. This was seen most prominently with her time spent as a maid.…

    • 505 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Barbara Ehrenreich's, Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, is a book that strives to change the way America perceives its working poor. Achieving the American Dream can be difficult, if not impossible for many people with stumbling blocks and obstacles along the way as portrayed in Nickel and Dimed, due to the cost of living in contrast to the wage of low or middle class earners.…

    • 1809 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Judy Gomez Quotes

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages

    As stated in global statics nearly 1/2 of the world’s population, which is more than 3 billion people, live on less than $2.50 a day and more than 1.3 billion live on less than $1.25 a day. Judy Gomez is a 17 year old teen who has already been swept into a life full of hard-work, inadequate opportunities, and the scuffle to survive within the country’s modern economic status. In a diminutive apartment building in New York, Gomez along with eight other family members, live together in close corridors attempting to apply each other’s skills to their preeminent ability in order to survive. Gomez can testify firsthand the struggles he endures on a daily basis in hopes of making enough money to get his family through the week, “Now I'm working 13-hour…

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The experiences she had, the people she met, were ones found in the everyday life. Her humorous tales of working in the real world both inspire me and frighten me. While on one hand it shows kindness like when Ehrenreich explains her co worker Gail, “dips into her own tip money to buy biscuits and gravy for an out-of-work mechanic” (pg. 20). Seeing the kindness of Ehrenreich and her fellow workers during her experiment goes to show that despite living a hard life themselves, many are still full of compassion for others. Coming from a lower class family, I understand how easy it is to give when you have little to nothing yourself. My mother always taught me the importance of giving, no matter what. The more negative parts can be found in Ehrenreich’s brutal reality. “You lose your job, your car, or your babysitter. Or maybe you lose your home because you’ve been living with a mother or a sister who throws you out when her boyfriend comes back…” (pg. 52). While Ehrenreich herself lived a prodigal lifestyle, this experiment taught the valuable lesson of the hardships faced by minimum wage workers. Being stuck in that life means constant hardships faced. Like I mentioned in the beginning, the primary problem I saw came before the experiment itself. Her unwillingness to experience the true life of a minimum wage worker highlights the largest problem America currently faces. The higher classes see minimum wage workers…

    • 1230 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Nickel And Dimed Thesis

    • 1522 Words
    • 7 Pages

    An example of this is when Ehrenreich went to the doctors for a rash that she got when she was working in Portland, Maine as a maid. In the book she describes her experience with the rash when she said, “The itching gets so bad at night that I have mini tantrums, waving my arms and stamping my feet to keep from scratching or bawling. So I fall back on the support networks of my real life social class, call the dermatologist I know in Key West.” (Dunn, 88) If the author didn’t call her dermatologist and suffered through the rash, the chapter would have been more thought provoking. It would catch readers’ attention to see what would have happened over time to her health. Another event that the author could have done differently to make the book interesting was when she decided to not get her other job at the hardware store in Minneapolis. If she would have worked there and at Walmart, then we would have seen her struggle with the two jobs. Seeing the author taking on all this work makes reader’s curious and anxious to read more, but knowing that she always had a way out bored me and my classmate at certain parts of the…

    • 1522 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Her experience into the world of the living poor introduces an entirely unseen world in the American economy. As a consumer, we witness many of the workers who earn minimum wage, and while their private lives are talked about, Ehrenreich's first-person view introduces an entirely different view in comparison with the many statistics about the poor's lack of income. Furthermore, her success proves that with hard work and dedication, everyone has the potential to succeed. Her overall argument in support for the living poor is increased as a result of experience. Most individuals will never experience the life of the living poor; therefore, Ehrenreich's account presents the issue of poverty into a whole new social class. As for myself, I truly believe that the majority of the citizens living…

    • 737 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    " There are no secret economies that nourish the poor; on the contrary, there are a host of special cost", meaning that there isn't any help for the poor but yet they have to pay for everything they need and have. Although it may be true in some cases but I disagree with the statement. The reason why I disagree is because it all depends on the person's situation. As for Barbara Ehrenreich she bases it on her co-workers life on how some struggle just get by without support. Unfortunately they are in a bad position where they are not able to receive support from others around them or simply because they're not motivated enough to do something about it and move on.…

    • 1072 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Great Gatsby

    • 816 Words
    • 3 Pages

    One of the most obvious cases within the novel is the tragedy of George Wilson and Myrtle Wilson. Myrtle Wilson is very materialistic in a way that she craves a more luxurious lifestyle. This leads to her discontent with George’s repair shop and does not fancy life whilst being married to a mechanic. George however comes off as more firm footed in a way that he is does not worry about not living luxuriously enough. He appears to be content with the way his business is going. It isn’t until George finds about Myrtle’s adultery with Tom that we see a different, scarier, side of him. Myrtle gives herself to Tom because he is a wealthier man and she is attracted to the material things he can buy her. Unfortunately due to tragic manslaughter-suicide-murder ending to the scandals, there isn’t much room left for happiness.…

    • 816 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Mathilde” “ i think i could do it on $400, for this was exactly the amount he had been saving for a gun.” Mathilde is selfish, she knew her husband was saving up money to save for a gun so he could go shooting this summer, but she didn't care. All she cared about was not looking poor at the ball. However, “Della” “ I had my hair cut off and sold because i couldn’t have lived through christmas without giving you a present.” Della wasn’t thinking about herself, all she cared about was getting her husband jim a christmas present. She gave up her most valuable thing so she could have enough money to buy jim a…

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The flat they all live in is crowded because there are 8 of them to share 3 bedrooms and a small lounge and kitchen. The lift in the flat is broken so the children can't go out to play and get exercise. Also when the lift isn't working the twins cannot attend the nursery, so they will not learn all the simple things you learn in nursery. The mother cannot leave the flat to shop for food, so they will have to eat less food for each meal to last them until she can get to the shops. Also their father cannot leave the flat because he has a severe disability and he has to stay in bed. He can’t even work because of it, and the mother can't work because she has to look after the children and Wayne too, so they have to live on benefits.…

    • 727 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays