I have chosen for the week’s discussion the photography of Jacob Riis. Jacob Riis was a photojournalist that told whom shed light on the living conditions of the impoverished citizens in New York. The first photo by Jacob Riis is titled Under the dump at West 35 street, 1989-1913. The exact date cannot be pinpointed only the time frame in which the photo was taken. http://www.authentichistory.com/1898-1913/2-progressivism/2-riis/204.jpg May varying types of visual elements are seen in the photograph
Doc. 19-3: Jacob Riis Describes Abandoned Babies in New York City's Slums Dreams of being a mother during the 19th century were demolished when the birth rate of babies increased dramatically, for the only way to “care” for a child, was to abandon them. A mother’s instincts are loving, protecting and caring unconditionally for their child. Through the early times, the birth rate of newborns was insignificantly high, due to many reasons, one being the lack of a way to avoid pregnancies. The consequence
immigrants found their way to America just to struggle to survive in the tenement housing for the remainder of their lives. This was their lifestyle until people such as Jacob Riis, the social workers of the settlement houses, and the participants in the Ladies Garment Worker Union wanted to change things. Jacob Riis was a Christian Dutch writer who believed that those who were wealthy and able to make change were the ones to improve immigrant housing to follow the footsteps of Christ
Many readers infer that John Wilson is a homeless man in the short story, “Zebra,” by Chaim Potok, but this claim has been proven otherwise throughout the story. This quote proves that John Wilson is, in fact, not homeless: “The sender was John Wilson, with a return address in Virginia” (Potok 60). The reader can assume from this quote that John Wilson does occupy a home due to the fact that there was a return address labeled on the envelope. In the story, Zebra also realizes that John Wilson is
In Riis’ novel “How the other half lives”, Riis intends to expose the harsh conditions that the families of New York were being housed in. While doing so, he rights all of what he finds in his journal. Riis first fills in some informational background about the history of New York tenements, which once belonged to some of the city’s most luxurious families. As industrialization increased over the course of the nineteenth century, the rising rates of immigration of both rural and urban areas that
photographs taken by a turn of the 19th century photographer named Jacob August Riis. Riis was not only a photographer, but also a reporter, a writer and a reformer. He used his skills to spur reforms and spur the minds of the public and the government throughout his life. Riis had his beginnings in the humble town of Ribe, Denmark (Jacob). He was born in May of 1849 to his father, Niels Riis, a schoolteacher, and his mother, Carolina Riis. From his father, he began to learn English at a young age. He
the public and legislators, where it needed to be seen. Actually, instead of documentary photography, it may best be called social reform photography, as they both worked tirelessly and used the medium to force attention and to effect social change. Riis used photography to illustrate his “social reform” documentary writing, he was not originally a photographer, but he saw the drama and sense of proof photographs provided. His photographs were presumably and represented as unposed and some of his images
Jacob Riis was an effective muckraker because he took photographs that showed how bad conditions were for those who were in poverty in factories and homes. For example, in one of his photographs, it shows a boy in a glass factory in the 1890's and he is in ragged clothing surrounded by a mess of dust and glass everywhere showing that kids were experiencing bad working conditions in factories. Also, on one of his other photographs there were many people living in the street because they couldn't afford
always the case. The excerpt, Waifs of the City’s Slums, is from a book written and photographed by Jacob Riis in 1890. How the Other Half Live, Riis’s book, s was used to highlight the injustices many immigrants faced in the lower East Side of New York City. His writing showed that he was intolerant towards certain races, but despite his feeling he was able to show the real need for such a book. Riis separated the people in the slum into two different categories; those who deserved help and those
This is a chapter of a book was written by Jacob Riis, who was a muckraking journalist. Muckraker was a journalist who pushed for reform in publications that covered the issues of society for the middle and wealthy classes. In this book, Riis made a photographic report about the life of poor people in the tenements of New York. In the beginning, Riis described a raid which was made by policemen. The object of that raid was the stale-beer dives. He said that the squads sent to make simultaneous control