Norma Essays

  • Norma Rae

    1737 Words  | 4 Pages

    Norma Rae This film is based on the real life story of Crystal Lee Sutton and her involvement with Ruben Warshovsky and the organization of the textile workers at the J.P. Stevens Company in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina (Labor Films). Sally Field plays the lead role of Norma Rae (Crystal Lee Sutton) fighting poor working conditions at O. P. Henley Company in 1978. This company is a southern textile mill, working with a union organizer to overcome pressure from management, implied dangers,

  • Norma Rae

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Norma Rae was seen in many different ways by people. In the beginning Norma's qualities were different than those at the end. Norma Rae changes and it is for the better. One of Norma's bad qualities is that she is dependent on men. George is very abusive towards her, like when they were in the hotel room and he slapped her across the face. Her father treats her as a little girl. He is always in her business; he always wants to know where she is going, when she is coming home and who she is seeing

  • Norma Rae

    1525 Words  | 4 Pages

    Norma Rae In the film Norma Rae, the textile workers were unsatisfied with many aspects of their Capitalistic work environment. They fought to form a union so that they could change the undesirable characteristics to better meet their needs. Political, environmental and cultural processes all played a part in the workers struggle to form an effective union. Unlike the film, Matewan, in which the coal miners worked under feudal control, the employees of the O.P. Henley Mill worked amidst a

  • The Character of Norma Jean in Shilo

    553 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Character of Norma Jean in Shilo Norma Jean Moffit is a major character in Bobbie Ann Mason's "Shilo" who undergoes a profound, yet subtle change. She had to marry at the age of eighteen to the man who got her pregnant, and in a cruel twist of fate, the child dies suddenly of crib death. Now at the age of 34, she is ready to have the life she feels she always should have had, however she is stuck in a loveless marriage to a man whose interests are the opposite of hers. Her decision to leave

  • Norma Rae and Labor Conflict

    891 Words  | 2 Pages

    Norma Rae and Labor Conflict Labor conflict is strongly portrayed in Norma Rae, especially since in the second half of the 20th century labor unions were taken for granted as a basic worker's right (even as membership declined). Norma Rae both emphasizes the power unemployment has over the worker and shows the power that unions can have in the capitalist system. Companies want to control every aspect of the labor process because they need to make profits, and the way in which they control the

  • Matewan and Norma Rae

    917 Words  | 2 Pages

    Matewan and Norma Rae Theoretically, the characters of both Matewan, and Norma Rae take part in a capitalistic society. In both situations the people are partaking in a form of labor market, where they are selling their time and energy. However, the town of Matewan, governed by the Stone Mountain Coal Companies' monopoly on the land and businesses, and isolated by distance and limited technology, as fallen into a feudalistic condition. Despite the fact that Norma Rae's small hometown of Alabama

  • Exploration of Capitalitsm In Norma Rae

    1210 Words  | 3 Pages

    Exploration of Capitalitsm In Norma Rae While many of us tend to view capitalism as the ultimate goal when talking of profit capability and worker freedoms, we are shown a much different reality in the film "Norma Rae" in which the economic system comes under direct and harsh scrutiny. While the economic system on display in "Norma Rae" is a vast improvement from the impoverished feudal economic system shown in Matewan, there are still several improvements that can clearly be made to the O.P

  • Norma Fox Mazer

    1473 Words  | 3 Pages

    Norma Fox Mazer There are, and have been, many great authors. One of my favorite authors is Norma Fox Mazer. I have had a few teachers recommend this author to me, so I decided to read her books. They are entertaining. I like Norma's books because she writes about things that happen in people's lives, such as divorce and boy/girl problems. Her books are exciting, and make you want to keep reading. I have read a couple of books by Norma, including Good Night, Maman. It is historical fiction

  • Martin Ritt’s Norma Rae

    851 Words  | 2 Pages

    Martin Ritt’s Norma Rae Martin Ritt’s Norma Rae portrays the plight of the Southern factory worker during the 1970’s. As the film progresses and Norma Rae fights for her rights, it is difficult to believe that economic system under which she works is that of capitalism. Yet, the very idea that she is able to advocate for her self and for others, as workers in a factory with the support of a union organizer, demonstrates the role of the worker in a capitalist society. Norma Rae was able to form

  • Analysis Of Norma Rae

    1343 Words  | 3 Pages

    Norma Rae Movie Analysis Unions were created to help the working man and woman achieve better wages and working conditions. Historically, unions were met with high scrutiny and resistance from management and self-organizing was a struggle. The movie Norma Rae perfectly depicts one woman 's struggle to organize a union within the textile mill she works at. Summary of Movie The movie Norma Rae opens in the summer of 1978 in a textile factory in a North Carolina town. As the camera pans through the

  • Comparing the Themes of Vincenzio Bellini’s Norma and Euripedes' Medea

    3067 Words  | 7 Pages

    Comparing the Themes of Vincenzio Bellini’s Norma and Euripedes' Medea Vincenzio Bellini’s opera Norma is considered by many to be a reworking of Euripedes' classic Greek tragedy Medea. Both plots have many identical elements of Greek tragedy such as a chorus, unity of location, and a human decision and action culminating in tragedy. Richard Wagner greatly admired Greek tragedies, believing them to be “The highest point ever reached in human creative achievement…” (Wagner 1). In his essay Theories

  • Movie Analysis: Norma Rae

    2060 Words  | 5 Pages

    Introduction Norma Rae is a film that was produced in 1979, that was based on the real life story of Crystal Lee Sutton and her efforts to start a union for the textile workers at the J.P. Stevens Company located in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Sally Field plays the role of Norma Rae (Sutton) who works with union organizer Ruben Warshovsky, played by Ron Leibman, to help fight the poor working conditions at the O.P. Henley Company in 1978 (Norma Rae, n.d.). Norma Rae works at the factory along

  • Analysis Of The Movie Norma Rae

    1362 Words  | 3 Pages

    Norma Rae The movie Norma Rae is a 1979 drama film about a textile worker from Alabama that becomes involved in labor union activities in the factory where she works. Though it is a film, it is based on the true story of Crystal Lee Sutton, a textile worker from North Carolina, who worked for J.P. Stevens textile plant, and was fired from her job for trying to organize a union (southerstudies.org, 2009)…………… The analysis and information provided will provide a summary of the movie, detail the motives

  • Norma Rae: Union Obstacles And Challenges

    1142 Words  | 3 Pages

    well as a toddler not getting the toy they want. They are not happy and very confrontational to Ruben and Norma Rae as the movie progresses. Management promotes Norma Rae to stop her from complaining and hoping her friends and family would turn against her. They continuously try to keep Ruben out of the factory and hide unionization flyers on the bulletin boards. Management refuses to let Norma Rae’s father go on break early when he starts to have cramp in his arm which ends up being he had a heart

  • Norma Rae: Southerner Reuben Warshowsky

    532 Words  | 2 Pages

    The movie, Norma Rae, presents a female Southerner named Norma Rae who forms a platonic relationship with northerner Reuben Warshowsky, a labor union organizer. Norma Rae is a widow who works to the bone at a textile mill in a small southern town and lives with her parents and her two young children. The conditions of the workplace are loathsome. There is no respect for employees. All the workers, including Norma, are underpaid and overworked. Rae's parents also worked at the mill and it took a great

  • Human Capital Case Study: Norma Rae

    1067 Words  | 3 Pages

    response play out at the beginning of Norma Rae. Norma’s mother started having hearing problems in the middle of the factory workday. When Norma’s noticed the issue she immediately took her mother to the company doctor, who just dismissed the medical issue. After a brief exchange, the doctor stated that if the mother is having issues with her hearing she could just find another job. Frustrated, Norma replied “What other job in this town? This is the only job!” (“Norma Rae,” 1979) This appears to be the

  • Henrik Isben's A Doll's House

    738 Words  | 2 Pages

    has not been able to express her own feelings. She has bottled everything up inside, and she has a passion to open up and show her true self. Problem: Norma has been a “doll” all her life. She has taken on others problems and kept her thoughts and feelings all to herself. It is now time for Norma to explain herself and deal with the facts. Norma forged her father’s signature on an I.O.U for two hundred and fifty pounds. She tries to do anything she can so her husband will not find out. Her husband

  • Shiloh by Bobbie Ann Mason

    560 Words  | 2 Pages

    apparent in Norma Jean and Leroy’s marriage. As Norma Jean advances herself, their marriage ultimately collapses due to Leroy’s unwillingness to adapt with her and the changing environment. Leroy Moffit is a truck driver, and over the years as his wife Norma Jean is adapting to the changing community his adaptation to things consist of pretty much the way he drives his truck. During this time Norma Jean is left at home to fend for herself and learn the workings of nearly being a single woman. Norma Jean

  • Marilyn Monroe

    1137 Words  | 3 Pages

    of all actresses, Marilyn Monroe was born Norma Jean Mortenson on June 1, 1926, in Los Angeles General Hospital. Prior to her birth, Marilyn's father bought a motorcycle and headed north to San Francisco, abandoning the family in Los Angeles. Marilyn grew up not knowing for sure who her father really was. Her mother, Gladys, had entered into several relationships, further confusing her daughter as to who it was who fathered her. Afterward, Gladys gave Norma Jean (Marilyn) the name of Baker, a boyfriend

  • Shiloh by Bobbie Ann Mason

    735 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Shiloh” she presents the character of Norma Jean as having a strong personality but an emptiness deep within. Norma Jean is presented as a strong character on the outside in the opening of the story. “She lifts three-pound dumbbells to warm-up, the progresses to a twenty-pound barbell.”(Mason p. 46). However as the story progresses she exhibits the emptiness which she feels. “One day Leroy arrives home from a drive and finds Norma Jean in tears.” (Mason p. 50). Norma Jean feels an emptiness toward