Difference between revisions of "Week 15 Questions/Comments"

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I found Leonora Barry's piece on the Knights of Labor to be very interesting.  I thought that it showed many of the characteristics mentioned by some of the other readings, the fact that she was a widow with three children for example.  She seemed however, to be a very strong woman, one who embrassed her work and her position as master workman.  What I found really interesting was that she and others went around educating the children in the factories and such and pushing for the children who are working to be educated in an effort to erase the social and economic situation that causes the circumstances that drive mothers into the workplace. --Mary P.
 
I found Leonora Barry's piece on the Knights of Labor to be very interesting.  I thought that it showed many of the characteristics mentioned by some of the other readings, the fact that she was a widow with three children for example.  She seemed however, to be a very strong woman, one who embrassed her work and her position as master workman.  What I found really interesting was that she and others went around educating the children in the factories and such and pushing for the children who are working to be educated in an effort to erase the social and economic situation that causes the circumstances that drive mothers into the workplace. --Mary P.
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I also thought the "Office Clerk" by Clara Lanza was an interesting document.  I thought it was particularly intersting how it said that women never complained about things like "...the temperature of the building [being] too hot or too cold or that the light is not properly adjusted."  Women might not have complained about things like the temperature or light, because they were happy to be able to have a job period that was outside of the home.  Men however, could complain about those things and easily get a new job if their current job didn't suit them.  ~K. Stinson~
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What really struck me about "A Sweatshop Girl's Story" was how Sadie Frowne felt about injuries sustained on the job in factories.  From the way she was talking, she made it seem like these injuries were no big deal.  If you hurt your finger, you just wrap it with a bit of cotton, if the injury is worse than that, you may have to have that finger amputated, but, you just accept it and go on with your life.  Maybe injuries like that were so common in those factories, that it truely was no big deal.  ~K. Stinson~

Revision as of 00:31, 6 December 2007