Preview

The Devil's Miner: Documentary Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
953 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Devil's Miner: Documentary Analysis
After watching “The Devil’s Miner” and do some additional research I have picked two issues that come along with poverty in Latin America. The first issue that I believe is important is that many individuals go to bed hungry and children are not being fed properly. Although the number of malnurshinoshed individuals has decreased by a lot in the past couple of decades, there is still a huge number of people that are not getting the appropriate nutrients. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the number of undernourished people has decreased from 59 million in 1990 to 47 million in 2013. Latin American and the Caribbean are working on ending hunger. In the movie “The Devil’s Miner,” the family has to pick between using the money that is …show more content…
Women are left alone with many children to care for, so the older children most often stop going to school in order to help financially support their family. In the documentary “The Devil’s Miner” the boy's father died when they were very young and so they had to start working at an early age. The older boy says that if he had a father he would not be working in the mines and would be able to focus more on his education.My mother has told me stories about her life growing up and some of the things that they went through. My grandmother had 13 children total and was left to care for all of them. The older kids would drop out of school and start working right away because theres was a lot of them and they needed many things to support all of them. My mom only got to middle school before she had to drop out to help take care of her younger siblings, when her siblings were a little older she started to work, she was about 13 years olds when she started to work. It is almost as if children from a single parent household feel as if they need to take up responsibilities in order to just keep the family

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Women are fortunate enough to gain back their knowledge from their previous job, by joining the workforce and contributing financially for their family. Motherhood is not a paid job; there are no raises or benefits. By working, mothers receive a different kind of fulfillment, they get praised and paid. Mothers are admired and respected after having newborn children and rejoining the workforce because they are able to balance not only being a new mother, but also committing part of the day to work. Anna Quindlen, in “Off to Work She Should Go,” believes that if your mother has been micromanaging your homework since you were 6, it’s hard to feel any pride of ownership when you do well. By doing so, the child can’t learn from their mistakes and disappointments (483). Stay at home mothers tend to be overbearing with their children. As a result, children will grow up not knowing how to accomplish different situations on their own. Mothers who work part time can still guide their children in the right direction without doing everything for them. This gives the mother time away from her children, forcing them to handle different problems by themselves. Typically, mothers who work full time feel guilty that they are missing out on raising their child. However, working part time can save women from that stress. Mothers can be an employee for half of the day, knowing that they will spend the remainder of the day with their…

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Iss 330c

    • 4808 Words
    • 20 Pages

    • patterns of social inequality and poverty in Latin America • historical roots of Latin American societies • U.S.-Latin America relations, including trade, U.S. influence in Latin America, and…

    • 4808 Words
    • 20 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    2. They’re many factors to poverty but one of the main reasons is War & political instability, this is because many of these countries in poverty are badly damaged and have leaders who don’t know how to protect and held their countries. Other reasons for poverty are that their is a lack of education, overpopulation, and many diseases are spread throughout the civilians like AIDS.…

    • 979 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Unfortunately, it was not a priority for those young men to help out in the home in-fact most didn’t even know where to begin. Although, this is something that could’ve been changed but it took many years to accomplish. Men just like women can work as a team on the housework and the daily title of breadwinner. Women’s occupation should not limited to “housework and child-raising” only because of their sex (Eastman). If a women wants to stay at home and take care of their families day-to-day needs they should be praised just like the men that have done the same.…

    • 788 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This was the case for many of the women during the time of Marija Berczynskas. Marija was forced to work because her family was poor and unable to feed the others. With the low wages of the time and high food prices it was hard for many immigrant families to provide for their family with one source of income, many had to resort to multiple sources which included children. This issue is still faced by many people today, although not as severe, many low income families still have a hard time supporting each other because of low income. Similar to Marija, some women work because the family needs it and are even abused. Although children don't work today, it puts a greater load on the parents, which in turn forces them to hold multiple jobs and not be a home to take care of the…

    • 1004 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Soc/110 Gender Roles

    • 743 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Women want to get out and have a life, not just stay at home and do chores. Women also want to take care of their children. Mothers want to be the one that see their baby’s first crawl or first word. Mothers want to get that child up in the morning, dress her and see her off to her first day of school. Mothers tend to be more nurturing than fathers. For example when a child fall off her bike for the first time a mother will probably run to that child and put a bandage on. Whereas a father will most likely try to brush it off and get the child to try again. I totally agree that males should be the primary bread- winners. Then if a woman wants to work part time or go back to school she can. Sometimes taking care of the children and chores can be split in half between male and female, so no one feel that one is doing more work than the other. If a woman wants to get out the house sometime and have a life maybe she could join a social club, have a few girlfriends, or volunteer with different community organizations. I do not think a woman should have to be the primary bread- winner, the primary caregiver to the children, and still do most of the cooking and cleaning. Some women have to be the primary breed winners. If a woman is left alone to take care of her children she have no choice but to become the primary bread-winner, the primary care giver, and do…

    • 743 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Possible sociological factors involved would be that statistically women have a lower paying job which is not enough to cover for her family. “Single mothers attempt to fulfill two roles, that of the nurturer and that of the provider” (Gucciardi).…

    • 128 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Providing for yourself and your family is a basic necessity, but for generations this need was only allowed to be addressed by men. A woman had always played the supporting role in a household while the man worked and contributed to the house financially. Before it was acceptable for a woman to work, her role in society was simple; a caregiver that looked after the house and cared for the children. While this may sound appealing to some, women in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, the Progressive Era, yearned to do their part in earning wages for their families. To overcome the difficulties that came along with reestablishing a social norm, women were forced through many hardships to prove that they were able to stand among men as a prominent…

    • 1116 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Brazil there is poverty and we can help. Brazil is one of the worst countries when it comes to poverty. In 2012, about 26 percent of the Brazil’s population was below the poverty line. (Sarah de Sainte Croix, para.3) We often do not think about it because we are not there or most of us here do not experience poverty. It is a real problem that is going on in the world and we know this. We have to acknowledge it and address it. We have to face poverty and put forth an effort to reduce it. Even if we are not in Brazil to help there are many practical ways that people can help from anywhere in the world but especially here in America. America is fortunate and because of that we have the ability and ways that we can help this problem in Brazil.…

    • 1495 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The fact that Central America is part of the developing world causes it to drown in poverty. In the seven countries of Central America, rural people are twice as likely to be as poor as their urban neighbors. The situation is especially grim in Honduras and Nicaragua, where 45 percent of children live in extreme poverty, deprived of the resources required to meet even minimum nutritional needs. These people lack education and health care, causing them to have low life spans.…

    • 292 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Welfare Reform Hurt

    • 814 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Education is the way to help people in a broken society, where we have many lost children in the streets and jails, and parents on drugs. Role-models are what’s needed; when a child sees the parents going to school and working, hopefully it will make him or her want to do the same. Also it’s a hard decision for a mother to make, having to leave young children and seek work, but in a society with many single mothers, it’s hard not to have to work. In a mother’s decision to work, she has to have a lot of faith that the morals and values that she instilled in her child at home would help keep them safe and make positive decisions while she’s away from the home working. Education and employment is the only way to empower a society that has been torn down from years of poverty. One of the welfare reforms triumphs was an explosion for never married mothers; who rose from 45 percent in 1995 to more than 60 percent between 2000 and…

    • 814 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This puts an even heavier burden on women to solely her family and a need for a higher pay. “A new report out this week, "Gender Pay Inequality: Consequences for Women, Families and the Economy," commissioned by Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York, the ranking Democrat on Congress's Joint Economic Committee, shows that women's median earnings are now $10,800 less per year than men's. The disparity adds up to more than a $400,000 gap over a 40-year employment lifetime.” (Arquette). The gap seemingly grows each year and women seem to be earning less and less compared to men. Based on this date the "disparity" could fund a child's college, buy a comfortable home, any number of things. When the numbers are that far apart women are bound to take action. “Of the approximately 31 million mothers with children under 18, more than 70 percent participate in the labor force--a significantly higher labor force participation rate than for women overall, about 57 percent, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics.” (Tucker). Women with children under the age of 18 are bound to be working because they are trying to fund one or more children's future with the end goal of college. Women without children aren't as likely to be in the labor force because they are married or well off on their own.As the gap grows more and more families…

    • 640 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Co-Parenting

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Men and women have always had specific roles that are played when starting a family. Women being viewed as the fulltime house worker, and men as the income support. Hope Edelman writes on her essay “The Myth of Co- Parenting: How It Was Supposed To Be. How It Was” how her martial experience was conflicted with ingrained gender roles. The role women played in a household, as oppose to the role women currently now play in the household are very different. Hence, the typical stigma that the man is the main breadwinner and women stay home to take care of the kids, along with all the household responsibilities. These gender roles are taught to a person from the time that they are born.…

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The theory of culture of poverty makes sense to me. I spent time in several Latin countries and from what I have experienced I would agree with the theory. The towns and villages we visited and worked in were a lot like the theory. The adults were very set in their ways, “why fix it, if it isn’t broken” type of mindset. Many would make homemade food and drinks to sell in the town center and raise just enough cattle and chickens to feed their families, they would garden what they could and barter what they couldn’t. They were afraid that if they changed anything they would go hungry and die and leave nothing for their children. The teenagers were eager to move to the cities where they could learn new technologies and have a different way of life but their parents and their religion make them stay in their town continuing with their way of life.…

    • 332 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although Pearce’s statistics are dated (from the late 20th century), to this day, there continues to…

    • 1982 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays