This document is from a book that Riis has compiled about the immigrant’s horrid living experiences by illustrating the poor living conditions in the slums of New York City in the time period between the late nineteenth to early twentieth centuries. As there were more immigrants entering the United States the population increases has led to the growing concerns over the shortage of housing. With the…
Depicting different aspects of why East Harlem’s underground economy really exist and demonstrates how residents tend to survive. However, East Harlem is an impoverished community where crime rates and unemployment…
It can cause the whole community to fix major issues such as crime and health. From the subway station itself, New York had a complete bend on the way it took crime into perspective. It was a turning point that put crime in it’s place and allowed New York City to take back it’s territory. The city with the highest crime rate, a city in the grip of one of the worst crime epidemics in its history. But then, suddenly and without warning, the epidemic tipped” (Gladwell 151).…
The Movie Gangs of New York, released in 2002, gives insight into the violence, corruption, and disarray that occurred in The Five Points of Manhattan during the 19th century, and reveals one of the biggest skeletons in New York’s closet. Martin Scorsese’s translation of the events in the film proves to be very intriguing, and for the most part accurate. However, there are a few aspects of the film he did not correctly portray: the timing of events, and the scale of the events that occurred.…
A report has been conducted to form literature review on the New York City Subway, an…
There has been a tremendous change in East Harlem between class warfare and gentrification. East Harlem is one more economic factor to the city’s wealth per capita since the attack of September 11, 2000. It is Manhattan’s last remaining development and it is on the agenda of the tax revenue of our government. East Harlem has become a profit driven capitalism. Gentrification enforces capitalism, it does not separate people, it does not go against race, poor and the working class, it wages war on the poor and the working-class.…
During the great depression of 1929-1939, hopping on trains to find work, also known as ‘hoboing’ was a common pastime. Around two dozen mainly male young whites and blacks, were riding…
Additionally, these three broad socioeconomic groupings run in conjunction with some lifelong Baltimore residents; particularly people I have met walking around the city or sitting in the park. These individuals would typically place themselves in one of the latter two groupings and would also characterize the most socioeconomically privileged grouping as being dominated by Johns Hopkins affiliates. Grouping riders into these three categories makes sense in the context of this paper, because it also helps emphasize how residents born and raised in Baltimore view the influx of the socioeconomically privileged associated with Johns Hopkins Institution. Throughout this paper, these groupings will be inherently understood from their clothing, their actions, where they get off the bus, and various other indicators. Using observation to classify individuals into one of these three groupings is an inaccurate and unscientific manner of characterizing people by their socioeconomic grouping; however, the conflicts that do emerge on the Charm City Circulator are not based on known socioeconomic status but instead on perceived socioeconomic status, therefore, this paper makes socioeconomic judgements that also run in conjunction with those of all individuals who ride the Charm City Circulator. Additionally, assumptions made regarding socioeconomic…
This was something that was widely recognized as a clear sign of technological progress. Economy flourished and this new way of transportation allowed for many to have jobs. The railroads might have been considered a form of disorder because of the destructive activity that took place in order to set the tracks and also because it wasn’t a ‘traditional’ way of life and old-fashioned New Yorkers were worried about losing traditional values. Because of this new era, demand for steel was off the charts and it allowed for order in the City. One huge factor of disorder related to the railroads was the fact that because of this new for of transportation, trading flourished with large trading companies and industries making hundreds of New Yorkers jobless. Traditional « mom and pop » stores dissapeared because no one thought to buy supplies from their stores anymore. These new factories started spreading throughout the city and the working conditions were very awkward for there was no personal Relationship between the bosses and workers whatsoever and workers were constantly being fired. These factories did however lead to manufactured and economic growth and was beneficial to the nation in the long…
New York City has reached a tipping point when hundreds of thousands of innocent people are stopped, interrogated, searched and humiliated by the NYPD for doing nothing more than walking to the subway, going to school or leaving work. (Mallory)…
Homelessness has existed in various forms for centuries, as have general tensions between homeless people and the rest of society. In the late 1800s formerly transient workers from the railroad and lumber industries settled into U.S. cities as those labor sectors shrank. This trend caused reaction from local residents and city governments in the form of “ugly laws” meant to manage the problem of vagrancy. Still, the number of homeless people, particularly those living on the street, remained relatively low through the 1960s (Borchard, Kurt, 2005). In the mid-1970s homelessness began to increase as inflation raised, real-dollar wages began to decline, and manufacturing jobs disappeared at an alarming rate. In the 1980s federal funding cuts for low-income housing caused a decline in single-room occupancies and exacerbated the growing problem of homelessness. While in earlier periods…
Gentrification in Harlem has transformed a slummed abandoned neighborhood into a tourist attractive Mecca. The heart of Manhattan once was surrounded by large empty lots and vacant building. After World War II drugs, crimes, and poverty increased significantly in Harlem. Harlem was known as an unsafe area at this point. Today it has beautiful brownstone building, lavish condos, life and culture, and the…
In On The Subway by Sharon Olds the narrator contrasts two worlds to develop both portraits by comparing a white wealthy woman to a African American young man. By doing that she uses imagery by describing the appearance of both characters. Also she uses tone to explain the fear the white woman had because she felt threatened by the black man. He also uses organization to reveal how the white woman changed her mind from the beginning of the poem to the end.…
In the essay "Take the F" by Ian Frazier he writes about the experiences he had living in Brooklyn. He talks about a lot of topics such as city life, diversity, travel. He shares his moments while he was in Brooklyn. In the essay he talks about the people he was surrounded by, the things he did and places he went. He talks his experience of moving into a different place. According to him, in his time, people used to describe their place according to the subway line near them.…
She wishes that she could just forget, take all of her memories of November 1st, and burn them to be lost forever. She doesn’t let Margaery hold her that day, and Margaery can understand, considering the very few bits and pieces Sansa has let slip about Joffery.…