Nuclear Energy!
Garrett's History special
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Nuclear Energy sources
Bibliography
Jrank- I used this site for information about the controversy over nuclear energy and some specific figures about it.World Nuclear Organization - This site provided me with extensive information about the chernobyl accident, and the 3 Mile Island accident. Also i got a breif overview of radiation sickness from it as well.
NRC- I used this site to further my research on Chernobyl, mostly about how the aftermath was handled. also i used this site to get a more in-depth view on radiation sickness.
Nuclear Energy Institute - I used this site mainly for its statistics and information about nuclear energy in the modern day. also this site allowed me to get a hold of the potential future of the nuclear program. In addition this site gave me the status of americas nuclear waste management systems and the problems that lie within.
Stanford- This site provided a view on nuclear politics. mainly information about the nuclear programs of countries in Europe and how nuclear energy can play a role in a countries power and leverage.
EPA- This government site provided me the knowledge of how america is handling nuclear energy. This also gave me quantitative data about americas consumption rate of energy.
Green Peace - this site provided information about the Fukishima reactor's meltdown in Japan.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Based on a True Story
Based on a true story. In some films these words are
meaningless, simply thrown into the aggregate of media garbage. In other films,
however, these words speak volumes about the experience that the viewer is
going to traverse through. In the world in which we live in one can never be
too skeptical about what he hears. Understanding comes from questioning the
veracity of the information being shoved in your direction and things that hold
true to the entourage of questions are those that are truly valuable in life.
The movie Cinderella Man did a
fantastic job of adding meaning to the phrase “based on a true story” and
holding its own in the quest for validity. Like the movie Glory this film serves to not only entertain but to better the
audience through their moral codes and value systems. The filmmaker combines
true facts and events with embellished situations to instead of depicting a
completely true journey, connects the viewer emotionally to the experience of
the time.
This film
creates the most accurate experience possible while still being entertaining.
The before and after at the very beginning of the movie with the Great Depression
and the viewers visions into Braddock’s agent’s apartment shows the range and
severity of people affected by the depression. Both were wealthy men of
different words, had perfect lives. But after the Depression hit neither of
them were spared from its wicked blade. Historically this is quite accurate,
everyone was affected by This tragedy and the conveying of this message was one
of the most important lessons of this whole movie. There is even a picture of
Braddock before the Depression, and, like in the movie, he looks perfectly
happy and well-to-do. The overall expression of how Braddock felt during the
movie captured the main feel throughout the nation. Braddock felt like a
failure, he put the responsibility of his situation all on himself. In reality
society was mainly to blame. The nation as a whole, almost exclusively men,
felt much like Braddock, blaming themselves rather than society. This value
system that was created in the time of prosperity to justify wealth was now
eating away at the country from the inside out. The shanty towns (or
Hoovervilles) and the interactions with other members in Braddock’s place of
residence all conglomerated to show the utter severity of not only the economic
crisis but also the degrading mental state of the average man. Naturally,
however, this movie is not one hundred percent accurate, but the embellishment
does serve to better the viewers understanding of the time period.
Cinderella Man is no different from
other movies in that the director chooses to place inaccuracies into the movie,
however, they aren’t all bad. For instance Braddock’s last boxer that he fought
had a very faint Jewish star on his uniform. In the real world this star was
very bold and obvious to the eye. The director chose to denigrate its place to
avoid taking away from the feel of the movie and distracting from the overall
message and plot. The director did not want highlight the Jewish start because
it would turn the fighter into a hero because of the time period. He wanted to heighten
the sense that he was the bad guy. Because he is the bad guy we see Braddock’s
situation as much more severe, much more dangerous. And this is to capture the
desperation of the man and men of that time period. While on this topic, the
director also embellished the relationship between Braddock and the champion
fighter to do much of what I just mentioned. While this is technically inaccurate
it actually, in some perverse way, serves to provide a more accurate response
from the viewer and a better understanding of the trials that men went through.
Also, the scene where Braddock begged his old bosses for money was most likely
false. Braddock most likely never went up to them in person to ask for money
instead the word simply got out that he was in need and people sent him money to
help. But again this shows the lengths
that men had to go in that lengths. While Braddock probably didn’t go there
many men did have to compromise their pride for the safety of their family.
Overall this film did a fantastic job of portraying a man’s and a nation’s story
with as little fallacies as possible.
Friday, March 7, 2014
World War I
World War I!
The Great War
The U.S.A. decided to get involved after the Zimmerman telegram was sent. This was a telegram that was sent to mexico by Germany trying to get mexico to go to war with the United States. It was intercepted by Britain and then shown to the United States. The United States was already on edge from the sinking of the Lusitania and this was the final straw.
World War I ended on November 11th 1918 because of the German surrender and then the treaty of Versailles.
Below are some statistics of deaths in WWI
The Militarization of Toys and Toy Soldiers
Friday, February 28, 2014
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
City Life Project
Progress,
an interesting concept. The idea that we should always be moving forward is
that of intelligence. Many people acquire a highly misconstrued view of what is
actually taking a step in the right direction. During the early 1900’s the
question of “Is this progress?” was being asked by everyone but the top of the
social pyramid. Both good and bad came out of this era in history but mainly
what people were given was a higher appreciation for nature and the natural
world around them. The ends justify the means here, however, the abhorrent
urban living standard, the growth of architecture, the art nouveau movement and
the rise of photography as an art all lead to the people wanting more of the
natural world in their daily lives.
Simple
putridity was the standard in which most people lived in during the early
nineteen hundreds. Their homes so crowded sometimes, with multiple families to
one room. It is impossible for the people of modern America to grasp this
concept, being that most children have their own room sometimes even their own
bathroom. Being wealthy could help one escape most of the cities problems but
unfortunately it could not aid you in escaping the towering steel buildings,
the smog in the air from pollution or even the stench of rotten feces on the
street. Apart from the wealthy, the poor and lower middle class had more
pressing matter to worry about. Sickness plagued many of the people in the
city. Because of the forced close living space, often times if one member of
the family got sick the whole family and other tenets sharing their home would
contract the disease as well. Around thirty million people at this time period
lived in cities, or thirty percent of the population, and about one in three
people were close to starvation. People weren’t being payed well enough to
afford food, let alone medicine. Most of these issues were caused by the
overcrowding problem, too many people trying to get too little. The crowding
problem could be attributed mainly to the structure of most cities. The idea of
using steel girders was being popularized and cities began to grown up instead
of growing out. This allowed for massive apartment complexes to for and even
skyscrapers. These tall skinny buildings squeezed people together, proliferating
all kinds of filth and disease and discontent. Architect Louis Sullivan was
most known for his work in building skyscrapers and he began to build on the
people discontent by trying to achieve a higher exposure to the natural word
through features such as large windows for more light and less geometric
shapes. His pupil, Frank Lloyd Wright, built even more on his idea.
Frank
Lloyd Wright is one of the worlds most know architects. Frank Lloyd Wright
built a bride in to the modern world as we know it through his architecture. He
had this fantastic idea of making things more modern but at the same time more
natural and simplistic. He used low pitched roofs to reflect the parries flat
land, he used stained glass to not only allow the light in but to color it in a
meaningful way. He most people know his style as being very horizontally based,
and in this way he showcases the things that are not simply horizontal lines. He
had stone vases the would be basically just lines but then the plants would
grown out of them. This is to make your eye focused on not just the stone, but
the plant. He wanted people to get a spiritual appreciation of architecture and
nature. He saw no point in having the
modern world completely separate from the natural world so he combined them
together in a way most soothing to the eye. He stated at a time “Using this
word Nature…I do not of course mean that outward aspect which strikes the eye
as a visual image of a scene strikes the ground glass of a camera but that
inner harmony which penetrates the outward form...”. This quote is very fascinating
in how He feels about nature. He spells Nature with a capital N, treating it as
some higher being to be respected rather than mowed over. In a Time when
building were sheer lines and cold grey steel, This architect gave them curving
arches, mosaics, stained glass, and plant like carvings. People were striving
for this. They were living without the natural world and they wanted what they couldn’t
have. Frank Lloyd Wright helped to show them just how elegant the natural world
can be. He was also one of the bigger names in the Art Nouveau movement which
was highly popularized during this time.
Art
Nouveau showed up for about a fifteen year period in American and made a huge
impact on the status quo of art in that short amount of time. As previously
mentioned, people needed to escape from their mechanical world. And often times
people show their emotions and beliefs through their artwork. This artwork
targeted the organic motif. Like Frank Lloyd Wright, these artists began to add
flowers and vines to their sculptures and paintings and such. This was a way to
add a little bit of natural life into the life’s of the people forced to live
without it. People wanted to escape the idea of modernism in art and William
Morris did that. Morris was a key member of this movement and fought against Victorian
design. The artists of this time got back to the basics. The threw out the idea
that sculpture and painting were the only true forms of art. The people wanted
changed so they changed everything. Seeing the world through these artists’
eyes gave the common people of the time period a higher appreciation for what
is organic to the world. The artists drew the vines and people together with
such respect that its obvious how they felt towards the subject. Another form
of art that was being made popular during this time period was that of
photography.
Photography
has always been a fascinating subject to human beings. The idea that one can
take a picture of exactly how something appears in just that moment of time is
astounding. When Kodak released a camera in 1888 that was available to the
upper middle class, the genre took off. People took pictures of everything and
it wasn’t until later that it became respected as an art form. Considering Kodak’s
logo “Just press the button and we’ll do the rest” I see why. Photography
became understood to be more about the subject matter and making a point rather
than showing actual skill. Ansel Adams became a big name in photography. He was
an environmentalist at this time, wanting to remind people of the organic world
that they had forgotten. His pictures are all of natural settings never with
any humans. The black and white simplicity of the photographs made the contrast
in his photos pop out to the viewer’s eye and make them want to look at it. He
did a great job at educating people in this matter. He is often criticized for
showing a doctored world to the public. The world isn’t as natural as it seems
but he did what he felt was needed to be done.
Through all of these forms of art people have grown to a higher level of understanding and care for nature and have come to realize that the modernism can include organic material rather than just that of machinery. The unhappiness that these cities bred set the ball in motion for actual progress. after all, progress cannot begin until there is discontent. People have a nasty way of wanting what they cant have, and i feel as though this is a great example of this. For example the Art Nouveau movement was overtaken by the Art Deco movement which involved lots of geometric shapes and illustrated ideas such a cubism. However seemingly "modern" this new art form was one can still see how the concept of how important nature is to human life stuck with it. Where the style changed much of the subject matter remain to be about natural life.
Through all of these forms of art people have grown to a higher level of understanding and care for nature and have come to realize that the modernism can include organic material rather than just that of machinery. The unhappiness that these cities bred set the ball in motion for actual progress. after all, progress cannot begin until there is discontent. People have a nasty way of wanting what they cant have, and i feel as though this is a great example of this. For example the Art Nouveau movement was overtaken by the Art Deco movement which involved lots of geometric shapes and illustrated ideas such a cubism. However seemingly "modern" this new art form was one can still see how the concept of how important nature is to human life stuck with it. Where the style changed much of the subject matter remain to be about natural life.
Sources:
Art Nouveau History - I used this Source for an overview of the Art Nouveau movement and what the key ideas of it were.
Art Nouveau - Very brief look into the art Nouveau movement. i used this to acquire further questions about the movement.
Louis Sullivan - Used this source for a look into Sullivan's life. this source gave me some key points about the man to further research such as his modernism and key role in the art Nouveau movement in architecture.
Artlex - This source provided me with a description of Art Nouveau and what its roots were. This was especially helpful because it provided pictures after its descriptions.
Khan academy, Photography - I used this source for an overview of the development of photography. this also gave me a good incite into how people viewed it as a lesser art form because of its ease of use and how it later developed into being a more respected form of art.
Sierra club, Ansel Adamas - This source gave a great description of how this photographer played a part in the rise of photography. It also discussed the validity of the meanings behind his photos.
Loc. Urban Live - This source was very helpful in giving me numbers that i could use to help prove my points about life in the cities during this time period.
Frank Lloyd Wright bio - This entire website was immensely helpful in giving me information about the architects life growing up, his architecture, and his personal philosophies about nature. I i acquired a fantastic quote about nature from here.
Frank Lloyd Wright: A Gatefold Portfolio- This book has flip out pages of Frank Lloyd Wrights buildings and his plans for said building. it provides descriptions about how each house is significant and different. I used this book while beginning my research to get a good start on learning about his personal style.
Frank Lloyd Wright Inside and Out - This book, like his portfolio, also provided pictures along with descriptions. This one, however, went much more in-depth with the symbolism and beliefs behind the specific features of his homes.
American History - Alan Brinkley - This textbook allowed me to achieve a nice starting point for my research. It also gave me a lovely description of th problems of Urban life and the development of people trying to make nature a priority.
Ansel Adam's black and white photograph of a valley and mountain |
An art nouveau door, showing the movements adherence to nature ideals |
vase incased in vines and flowers to show the art nouveau's dedication to natural ideals |
Crowded city life in the early 1900s |
Friday, November 15, 2013
Carnegie Believes that in order to benefit the lives of other people he has to give money to help make education and peace a priority in the world. He believes that people must make their own lives, he does not want to simply give people money and help. Carnegie Builds up organizations and donates money to provide people a better way of taking control of their own life. With companies such as the Carnegie institution of Washington and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, He hopes to provide opportunities to those less fortunate. Almost every corporation that he funds is based around education. Personally i believe that this is a great way to give money. The only counter argument that could be used is that this plan does not directly influence the lives of underprivileged people. He is leaving a giant part of progress up to the people. If i had a hundred million dollars i would give the money away in much the same way as Carnegie did. However i would be more focused on the advancement of the scientific community than he was. I would spend it all funding research projects for things such as stem cell research and quantum physics.
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