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Gilded Age
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The Gilded Age refers to the period of rapid industrialization, economic expansion, and social transformation in the United States roughly between the end of Reconstruction and the early twentieth century. History courses at both the survey and upper-division level frequently assign this era because it raises fundamental questions about inequality, labor, and national identity. The term itself signals a critique — a glittering surface concealing deeper tensions — making it intellectually rich for academic analysis. The era's contradictions, including explosive industrial growth alongside widespread worker hardship, the expansion of freedom alongside its denial, and America's rise to world power alongside domestic crisis, give students ample material to argue meaningful theses.

Student essays on this topic approach the Gilded Age from several distinct angles. Many focus on industrialization and its consequences for workers, examining conditions in factories and the shifting position of labor. Others take a social history approach, centering women's lives and civil rights alongside broader questions of freedom and determinism. Comparative and connective essays link the period to Reconstruction before it and to later decades through 1945, while some draw parallels to modern economic crises. Literary and cultural analysis appears as well, with works such as Mark Twain's fiction, the novel McTeague, and Devil in the White City serving as primary texts for examining Gilded Age society.

A strong essay on this topic stakes a specific, arguable claim rather than simply narrating events. Evidence drawn from economic conditions, legislation, labor movements, or primary literary sources carries the most analytical weight. Writers should connect individual examples — a factory worker's position, a legal case like the Borden murders, a cultural text — to broader structural arguments about power, inequality, or change. The most common pitfall is treating the Gilded Age as a backdrop rather than as an active force shaping the lives being discussed.

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Paper Masters
W.E.B. Du Bois's vision for African American uplift and disagreement with Booker T. Washington
A contrast between the ideas of WEB Du Bois and Booker T Washington concerning the education of African-Americans. The paper focuses on the critique of Washington offered by Du Bois in his work The Souls of Black Folk. The paper suggests that Washington's insistence on vocational and technical training for blacks is seen by Du Bois as too materialistic and not sufficiently devoted to the idea of equality. The paper then discusses Du Bois's own suggested program, that blacks should insist upon the same sort of educational experience as whites, in the interest of dignity and equality.
Research Paper Doctorate
Difference Between Monopoly and Oligopoly
¶ … Oligopoly and a Monopoly: Viewed in Light of the AT& T. And SBC Prospective Merger
Research Paper Doctorate
Issues in social welfare
The Beginnings of Social Work as a Profession: From the late 19th century to the Early 20th century
Essay Undergraduate
American Labor Movement History of Labor Movement
The American Labor Movement – The Labor Question, Racism, Sexism & Xenophobia The "labor question" is the foundation of the American Labor Movement. Concerned with the ideal of an industrial democracy, including a more equitable society with social and financial betterment of working class people, the "labor question" arose during and in response to America's 19th Century (Second) Industrial Revolution. The American Industrial Revolution transformed America from an agrarian society to an industrialized society and feasted on child labor, convict labor and work schedules of 10 – 16 hour per day, six days per week, for wages of approximately $1.00 per day. At that time, "the richest 1 percent owned 26 percent of the wealth, and the richest 10 percent owned 72 percent." This widely disproportionate division of wealth and power between affluent capitalists and their industrial workers was rightfully considered by the workers to be unjustifiable in America's democratic society. The struggle for industrial democracy resulted in many material gains. The "labor question" is still vital in American society because the central problems of the labor question remain central. While the "labor question(s)" focused on the ideals of democracy and financial/social equality, the proponents did not mean that those ideals were for everyone. Racism, sexism and xenophobia – "hatred or fear of foreigners or strangers or of their politics or culture" - certainly played a role in the history of the American Labor Movement. Unions tended to be the bastion of the working-class white American male and the American Federation of Labor, founded in 1886, was often overtly racist and anti-communist. Scholars suggest some methods of overcoming racism, sexism and xenophobia in order to make unions truly democratic and to help unions regain their power and relevance in modern America and the global economy.
Paper Undergraduate
An analysis of Enron's organizational behavior
Enron collapsed very quickly in November 2001, and its failure should have been a warning to serious dysfunctions in the entire corporate and financial system, but this did not happen. Its executives admitted that they had falsified its records going back for at least five years, although in reality they had been doing so since the 1980s. When the company filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy it laid off over 20,000 workers and at least $24 billion in pension assets, stocks and mutual funds also vanished (McLean and Elkind 2003). In addition, the Arthur Anderson accounting firm that had been complicit in covering up the fraud and embezzlement at Enron for many years, also went out of business. This catastrophe also demonstrated that Wall Street banks, stock analysts and ratings agencies had either been deceived or allowed themselves to be deceived by Enron when they continually painted a positive picture of the company and its future prospects. Later in the decade, the exact same problem would occur with the banks and investment firms that were marking ‘assets' of dubious values like subprime mortgages.
Essay Doctorate
Industrialization After U.S. Civil War American Industrialization
This paper argues that the increase in American industrialization in the period from 1865 to 1920 was, in some sense, the cause of massive political inequality and unrest, and necessitated the age of reform that would follow. The paper examines the issues of labor exploitation (particularly child labor and convict labor), economic inequality (with the rise of the US Senate as a "millionaire's club" and the 50 years of Republican-party dominance over the political process) and economic instablity (with the Panic of 1873, the Populist movement, and the rise of organized labor). It concludes that industrialization was the cause of all this unrest, and required the rise of reform-minded Presidents like Theodore Roosevelt.
Paper Undergraduate
Progressive Movement and the Gilded Age
This paper examines the economic, political and social conditions during two periods of American history. The Gilded Era, from roughly 1868 to 1901 was a time of unprecedented expansion and excesses. The Progressive Era was a reaction to the excess of the Gilded Era and a movement to make thing more equitable for the common man.
Research Paper Doctorate
Stephen Crane\'s Maggie a Girl of the Streets
Stephen Crane's novella, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, was written during America's "Gilded Age" which was the era from the end of the Civil War to the turn of the Century. The name was given to the period by Mark…
Paper Undergraduate
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Given the recent crash on Wall Street and the housing market symbolized by corrupt financiers like Bernard Madoff, ethical and moral leadership of corporations has become a major issue for those who study the American…
Case Study Masters
Social welfare concepts and policy frameworks
The Brutality of Laissez Faire Capitalism and the Minimal Welfare State.