Rural America Essays

  • The Paradox of Prison-Based Economic Development in Rural America

    4850 Words  | 10 Pages

    Development in Rural America Introduction Whereas prison facilities were once viewed with aversion as threats to a community’s well-being, prisons today are the focus of competitive bids by rural communities desperate for economic stability. As non-metro economies deteriorated and prison populations exploded over the last two decades, rural America and prison facilities have developed a symbiotic relationship. This paper investigates whether prison-based economic development policies in rural America

  • Contemporary Rural America Captured in Rip Van Winkle and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

    1761 Words  | 4 Pages

    Contemporary Rural America Captured in Rip Van Winkle and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow Most Americans probably believe our times are different from Washington Irving’s era. After all, almost 200 years have passed, and the differences in technology and civil liberties alone are huge. However, these dissimilarities seem merely surface ones. When reading “Rip Van Winkle” and “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” I find that the world Irving creates in each story is very familiar to the one in which I

  • Rural America Analysis

    520 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Rural America as a Symbol of American Values, John R. Logan talks about America being a “historical museum” because of the boundaries of rural areas are changing. People are leaving rural areas and heading to more urban areas. “With only a quarter of Americans living in nonmetro areas (John page1)”. This is taking the majority of the population and putting them into more metro areas that create a lower population that is depleting the population of society in nonmetro areas. This is creating a

  • Powerlessness In Rural America

    753 Words  | 2 Pages

    This powerlessness relates to the notion that rural Americans are victims of distributive injustice in government resources and public policy outcomes, which, Cramer claims, factors into a growing placed-based and class-based rural consciousness (Buttel, 1982; Cramer, 2016; Illing, 2018; Walsh, 2004, 2012). Class consciousness means the acknowledgment, awareness, and perception of an individual’s

  • Life in Southern Mill Villages, 1900s

    2654 Words  | 6 Pages

    Life in Southern Mill Villages, 1900s The Industrial Revolution in America began to develop in the mid-eighteen hundreds after the Civil War. Prior to this industrial growth the work force was mainly based in agriculture, especially in the South (“Industrial Revolution”). The advancement in machinery and manufacturing on a large scale changed the structure of the work force. Families began to leave the farm and relocate to larger settings to work in the ever-growing industries. One area that

  • Extended Families

    586 Words  | 2 Pages

    Extended Families The evolution of extended families has progressed far from the early black and white episodes of The Addams Family, to the country life of The Waltons, and to the crazy lives of the family in Full House. It is clear that the changes in the portrayals of families provide audience members with a picture of families being more complex if nothing else (Bryant, 2001). Therefore, it is certain that each decade has surpassed the other in its growth and development of extended families

  • Prohibiton

    2833 Words  | 6 Pages

    Prohibiton What was Prohibition Introduced? In the 1920's American politics was dominated by democracy and the idea of isolationism to keep America prosperous was incredibly apparent. However in 1919, President Wilson passed the 18th Amendment to the American Constitution prohibiting the manufacture, distribution and consumption of alcoholic drinks (any drink containing over 0.5% alcohol). Prohibition was not just a novel American idea, at the turn of the Twentieth Century, other countries

  • Depression In Rural America

    1270 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Australia Counselling website provided a number of reasons that members of a rural society may suffer from depression. Living in a remote area, many residents are farmers and rely on the success of their farm to survive financially. The loss of a family farm is a factor that was listed as a possible cause of depression in rural areas, along with social isolation. Social isolation—the absence of social relationships—is typically considered unhealthy when

  • Orphan Trains

    891 Words  | 2 Pages

    Orphan Trains Orphan trains and Carlisle and the ways people from the past undermined the minorities and children of America. The film "The orphan Trains" tells us the story of children who were taken from the streets of New York City and put on trains to rural America. A traffic in immigrant children were developed and droves of them teamed the streets of New York (A People's History of the United States 1492-present, 260). The streets of NYC were dirty, overcrowded, and dangerous. Just as

  • Time Period of the Great Gatsby

    941 Words  | 2 Pages

    The 1920's, sometimes referred to as the "Jazz Age" or the "Roaring Twenties," was known as a time of social change in rural America. In many aspects of life, women and men were changing their past accepted lifestyles and quickly adopting lavish lifestyles. Emerged during the twentieth century, one of the most notable writers of his time, F. Scott Fitzgerald, developed one of the greatest novels written, The Great Gatsby. Fitzgerald used his novels to reveal his feelings and opinions on times in

  • Gender Issues in Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

    2339 Words  | 5 Pages

    the men and maintain order. Irving's main character, Icabod Crane, causes a stir and disrupts the female order in the Hollow when he arrives from Connecticut. Crane is not only a representative of bustling, practical New England who threatens rural America with his many talents and fortune of knowledge; he is also an intrusive male who threatens the stability of a decidedly female place. By taking a closer look at the stories that circulate though Sleepy Hollow, one can see that Crane's expulsion

  • Walmart

    9173 Words  | 19 Pages

    Overview When Sam Walton founded the first Wal-Mart in 1962, the idea of bringing in a discount-shopping store into rural America was almost unheard of, except for the local five and dime stores. When Walton noticed that he had a lot of competition from regional discount chains, him and his wife Helen traveled the country to study other new retailing concepts, and were convinced that it was the wave of the future. With Walton's vision, Wal-Mart grew to be a multi-billion dollar, international company

  • County Fairs In Rural America

    1631 Words  | 4 Pages

    Throughout the summer, in rural America, many counties hold a party. County fairs are a tradition that gives locals a chance to enjoy themselves. Deschutes County, which is located in the heart of Oregon, is no different. Over the years, we have become more sophisticated at throwing a party. Our fair operates normally late in July, and in 2015 ran from July 29 through August 2. This ritual of summer celebration has been taking place here for over 90 years. The current 132-acre site is much larger

  • The Food Industry In Rural America

    1321 Words  | 3 Pages

    Our generation is moving to big cities and forgetting about rural America and the important role it plays to keep us alive. People need food and the only way to have the food is to farm it. Agriculture is so important to everyday living; from the food, you eat to the spices you put on your food to make it taste better

  • Rural Homelessness

    855 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rural Homelessness As the Joad family lost its farm and hit the road in Steinbeck's classic, The Grapes of Wrath, so to did America lose its ability to plead ignorance to the problem of rural homelessness. Yet, as the troubles of the Great Depression, and two million homeless Americans, were eclipsed by a world at war, the issue of homelessness was once again placed on the back burner, and then taken off of the stove altogether (Davis 275). Although this problem has seldom been discussed

  • Mental Health Disparities in Rural America

    1699 Words  | 4 Pages

    Mental Health Disparities in Rural America Mental healthcare has a long and murky past in the United States. In the early 1900s, patients could live in institutions for many years. The treatments and conditions were, at times, inhumane. Legislation in the 1980s and 1990s created programs to protect this vulnerable population from abuse and discrimination. In the last 20 years, mental health advocacy groups and legislators have made gains in bringing attention to the disparity between physical

  • The Importance Of Living In Rural America

    545 Words  | 2 Pages

    Growing up in Midwest America, there is not much to look at. The trees, fields of grass, rolling hills, and small towns offer a dull environment for a teenager. There are hardly any monuments, sculptures, or architectural feats to gaze at in admiration. Ultimately, the Midwest appears very mundane. This monotonous landscape seems to push the idea of a typical lifestyle of conformity; one that customarily consists of attending school, finding a career, and settling down with a family. To fully procure

  • Stock Market Crash On Rural America

    738 Words  | 2 Pages

    rest being supplied by a loan – this buying on credit is otherwise known as ‘buying on margin”. Stocks lost 80% of their value by 1930 and it took twenty-five years to regain their worth post-depression. The Crash had a significant impact on rural America when land values dropped to less than half of what they had been worth. Even before the droughts that led to the dust bowl, farmers had difficulty selling their crops since people had less money to buy them. By 1932, corn was actually cheaper

  • Paying Attention to Rural Education

    1180 Words  | 3 Pages

    For many communities, particularly rural communities, schools serve as a source of identity. Because of this, the problems that plague rural schools become enough of a problem that they threaten the identity of the community; unfortunately, many lawmakers and policymakers in seats of power do not have an intuitive understanding of how rural schools work. Policies that work for urban schools, or even suburban schools, can not be assumed to fit the role of a rural school. It is suggested in this article

  • Special Education in Rural Communities

    1576 Words  | 4 Pages

    Special Education in Rural Communities Christmas in January, I hurried quickly to the party, stereo in hand. Checking the time, I rushed across Pollock road to attend my first function as a member of Best Buddies, a community based program sponsored by universities throughout the world to enrich the lives of college students and adults with intellectual disabilities. I entered the room; a low buzz nagged at the edge of my hearing. As I placed my stereo upon the piano and plugged the chord