• Research Paper on:
    Comparison of David Guterson's Snow Falling on Cedars, James Goodman's Stories of Scottsboro, and Thomas Bell's Out of This Furnace

    Number of Pages: 8

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    In eight pages the ways in which these works represent 20th century American prejudice are examined. There are no other sources listed.

    Name of Research Paper File: TG15_TGofssfc.rtf

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    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    so good for everyone, it seemed, that the concept of the American Dream was born. In simplest terms, the American Dream, which has been forever woven into the ideological  tapestry of America, can be translated to mean "the good life" of respectability - a prestigious job, personal wealth, and lofty social status. This dream has no conditions on  it, which implies that it is there for anyones taking. All that is required is determination, hard work, and a desire to succeed. While America has always been  an attractive haven for immigrants who were seeking freedom from some type of oppression, the advancements in travel, most notably by air, made it even more so in the 1920s  and 30s as immigrants relocated to the United States in record numbers. Unfortunately for them, they would discover after their arrival that the American Dream was elusive and was  not attainable by people who werent white Anglo-Saxon Protestants. The worst-case capitalist scenario predicted by Karl Marx came true in America during the twentieth century, and stirred up the  prejudice that had never completely disappeared within its mythological melting pot of people and cultures. It was this capitalist reinforced prejudice that strongly influenced human perceptions, judicial justice and  dictated socioeconomic status. As the texts of Thomas Bells Out of This Furnace, James Goodmans Stories of Scottsboro and David Gutersons Snow Falling from Cedars demonstrate, aggressively pursuing the  American Dream meant abandoning ethnic heritage and compromising ones values in order to assimilate into the mainstream; but even then, the dream may not come true because in the capitalist  world, where everything is a commodity to be bought and sold for the highest price, appearances are everything. In the Pennsylvania steel towns of Thomas Bells semi-autobiographical novel, Out of 

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