American Modernism and the Jazz Age
Historical Context: From Boom to Depression
At the beginning of the 20th century, Americans saw themselves as culturally inferior to Europe but morally superior. After World War II, the United States emerged as a global military and economic power, which strengthened the belief that American culture was no longer inferior.
Before 1929, the country experienced an economic boom. Business became the central activity of American life, and economic success was seen as the only true measure of achievement.
Read MoreAmerican Romanticism: History, Themes, and Key Figures
The Origins of American Romanticism (1800–1860)
American Romanticism developed before the Civil War, during a period of democratization, industrialization, and westward expansion. These processes created optimism but also deep tensions, especially regarding slavery. Democratization expanded voting rights for white men, industrialization divided the nation between the industrial North and the agricultural South, and territorial expansion, justified by Manifest Destiny, intensified the conflict over
Read MoreCapital Punishment vs. Life Imprisonment: Key Differences
Comparing Capital Punishment and Life Imprisonment
Capital Punishment
- The inmate is executed.
- Completely irreversible if an error occurs.
- Ends quickly on the execution date.
- Higher costs due to complex and long appeals.
- Banned by most international treaties.
- Never optioned; the sentence is final.
Life Imprisonment
- The inmate stays in prison.
- Reversible if new evidence proves innocence.
- Lasts until the natural death of the inmate.
- Lower costs compared to capital punishment cases.
- Accepted as the maximum standard
19th Century Gender Roles and the Rise of the New Woman
The Cult of True Womanhood
During the 19th century, industrialization created a strict division between the public sphere (production, business, male) and the private sphere (domesticity, consumption, female). This separation produced the ideology known as the Cult of True Womanhood, which defined the “true woman” as the Angel in the House. Women were expected to embody piety, purity, submissiveness, and domesticity. Marriage and motherhood were considered their only legitimate sources of fulfillment.
Read MoreThe History and Impact of American Slave Narratives
The Origins of Slavery in America
Slavery existed in all American colonies during the Colonial Period. After the American Revolution, it was abolished only in the North. A decisive turning point came in 1793 with Eli Whitney’s cotton gin, which made cotton extremely profitable and transformed the South into a cotton-based economy, reinforcing and expanding slavery. As the nation moved westward, political tensions grew over whether new states should be free or slave states. The Fugitive Slave Acts
Read MoreSoftware Testing Strategy: Staffing, Resources, and Tasks
Staffing and Training Needs
When planning a testing project, Staffing and Training Needs ensure you have the right number of people on the team and that they actually possess the technical skills required to use the tools and understand the domain. If you skimp on this section of your test plan, you risk missing deadlines because your team is either understaffed or struggling to use the required technologies.
1. Staffing (Resource Estimation)
Staffing is all about calculating the headcount needed for
Read MoreHospitality of Notation: Exam Techniques and Methods
When writing an exam answer on the Hospitality of Notation, you want to clearly define the concept and then structure the core techniques with sharp, precise examples. Examiners look for the distinction between hospitality in an array (horizontal/coordinate subjects) and a chain (vertical/hierarchical subjects).
Here is a streamlined, exam-focused version:
What is Hospitality of Notation?
In library classification, Hospitality is the ability of a notation system to accommodate newly emerging subjects
Read MoreOperating Systems: Resource Management and System Security
Module 1: Deadlock Management and the Banker’s Algorithm
1.1 Mathematical Definitions and the System Model
A deadlock represents a processing state where a defined set of concurrent processes remains indefinitely blocked because every process within that active set is waiting for an event or a resource acquisition that can only be triggered or released by another blocked process residing inside that exact same set. Processes interact with system resources using a strict sequence of atomic operations:
Read MoreEssential Legal English Vocabulary and Terminology
Legal Professions
- Attorney: Lawyer qualified in the USA. (Abogado en EE.UU.)
- Barrister: Lawyer who represents clients in higher courts. (Abogado litigante)
- Lawyer: General legal professional. (Abogado)
- Solicitor: Lawyer who advises clients and prepares legal documents. (Abogado asesor)
- Acting for: Representing a client. (Representar)
- Advocacy: Speaking on behalf of a client. (Defensa jurídica)
- Appear: Act in court. (Comparecer)
- Judge: Person who decides cases. (Juez)
- Litigation: Court proceedings. (Litigio)
The Gilded Age: American History and Literary Realism
The Gilded Age: A Period of Rapid Transformation
After the Civil War, the United States entered the Gilded Age, a period marked by rapid industrialization, expansion, corruption, and deep social inequalities.
Regional Shifts and National Expansion
In the South, Reconstruction attempted to reintegrate the former Confederate states and protect the rights of freed African Americans through the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. Once federal troops withdrew, segregation laws (“Negro Codes”) dismantled
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