Urban Poverty in 18th Century America Depicted in Riis', How the Other Half Lives

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With his book How the Other Half Lives, Riis offers the audience a glimpse into the unsettling and unnoticed reality of the urban poverty in America at the turn of the 19th century. Not only he revealed the dark side of the society, he also showed the urgent need for change. Riis used emotional as well as logical appeal to support his argument in favor of the need for a social reform. By combining powerful pictures and detailed annotations accounting the conditions of life in the New York, Riis made How the Other Half Lives unique and very effective in delivering his message and initiating a change.

How the Other Half Lives served as a wake up call for the upper and middle class and installed a feeling of moral responsibility. Even though written in 18th century, the impact of How the Other Half Lives echoes still today in how poverty is viewed both in America and around the world. Riis shed light on the threat to the democracy by the growing disparity between the rich and the poor during the 18th century. Although often times politically incorrect, with his How the Other Half Lives book, Riis showed the atmosphere of darkness that bred in the forgotten slums of New York and successfully illustrated the need for immediate social reform.

How the Other Half Lives makes it clear that slums of New York were an issue that could not have been ignored any longer. In How the Other Half Lives, Riis describes such dwellings as places where, the reckless slovenliness, discontent, privation, and

ignorance were left to work out their invariable results, until the entire premises reached the level of tenant-house dilapidation, containing, but sheltering not, the miserable hordes that crowded beneath moldering, water-rotted roofs or burrowed ...

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...e them not so unlike themselves.

Another effective emotional appeal used by Riis was guilt. By explicitly describing the horrifying conditions that people faced daily in the slums and providing visual proofs, he made the wealthy feel responsible and urged them to right their wrongs.

Through his photographs and mastery of writing, Jacob Riis gives readers a clear insight and alerts the audience how much the ignorance of the higher social class has hurt their fellow man and themselves. Through How the Other Half lives, we can see that in absence of the contribution of Riis, the upper and middle class had not seen anything else but the shiny side of poverty that they often read about in the papers or saw on the street at times. Through How the other Half Lives, Riis not only exposed the dark side of America of the 18th century but also gave poverty a face and humanity.

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