Monday, October 11, 2010

How do you think life was like living during the great depression?

The fact that the people who lived through the Great
Depression never forgot it tells much of the desperation of the times.  They remained
frugal until their last moments, saving such small items as sacks or anything that could
be reused.  Always they talked of how certain foods were unavailable, and if they did
have something, they made it last for days.  Of course, there were the long lines that
people so patiently waited in to get bread or soup. And, worse, there were people who
jumped from windows in their despair over fortunes
lost. 


One needs only read Steinbeck's The Grapes
of Wrath
that tells of the plight of the tenant farmers in the Dust Bowl and
Of Mice and Men to learn how alienated people were in this time,
how mistrustful they were of others.  Woody Guthrie traveled in boxcars on trains and
sang of the desperation of the time. Numbers of workers were drawn to Socialism and
Communism and waged strikes in the hopes that they could attain a better
life.


Dorothea Lange, a phographer of the Depression era,
is known for her realistic and haunting images.  Her 1935 shapshot of a migrant worker
with her children bespeaks volumes of the poverty and destitution that people of this
era lived in. Once proud people were dependent upon the government to provide for them,
and they were ashamed. But, they had to work and the WPA provided jobs.  Or, they were
too proud, like Mr. Cunningham of To Kill a Mockingbird.  Still
others turned to illegal activity such as bootlegging.  "People did what they had to
do," remarks one octegenarian. Still, the "picture shows" thrived during this time
period as people were delighted to enter the theatre and forget the misery outside. 
Nearly every Depression-era movie had a happy, positive
end.


The Great Depression followed by World War II is what
made those that Tom Brokraw calls "The Greatest Generation."  As Elie Kazan, the famous
director remarked, "Only when people endure a great struggle in their lives do they
truly become a person of worth."  Certainly, the Depression and WWII were trying times
that made people worth their mettle.

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