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The Effect of Student Debt on Career ChoicesKenny, Daniel T. January 2010 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Eve Spangler / Student debt affects a multitude of gifted and intelligent college students each year. In order to attend our nation’s premier universities, members of the lower and middle classes must procure loans which prove debilitating to their respective economic situations. Upon graduating, such financial burden ultimately forces these individuals to choose economic pragmatism over the pursuit of their true passions. This growing reality calls for a reexamination of the American system of higher education, particularly the underlying ideology behind it – the American Dream. Through an analysis of eight interviews and the use of supporting data, this study reflects the need for drastic reform. / Thesis (BA) — Boston College, 2010. / Submitted to: Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Sociology Honors Program. / Discipline: Sociology.
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Dolores Dyer: Women's Basketball and the American DreamRoberts, Jackie 12 1900 (has links)
Dolores Dyer played from 1952-1953 for the Texas Cowgirls, a barnstorming women's basketball team that provided a form of entertainment popular throughout the United States in that era. The story of Dyer's life demonstrates how a woman could attempt to achieve the American dream—a major theme in American history—through success in athletic competition. Dyer's participation with the Texas Cowgirls also provides a look into the circumstances that limited women's participation in professional sport during the mid-twentieth century. Women's sports studies, although some are very thorough, have gaps in the research, and women's barnstorming basketball is one of the areas often overlooked. In light of this gap, this thesis relies on a variety of sources, including primary documents from unpublished collections, archived materials, and original oral histories from several members of the Texas Cowgirls team. This thesis contains analysis of the socioeconomic factors that influenced Dolores Dyer's maturation into a professional basketball player, examines what the American dream meant to her, and evaluates the extent to which she achieved it. Overall, it constructs a social history that can serve as a foundational source for further study of women in sports during the twentieth century.
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Spark and ruin : a story of re-beginning (The Flint project)Bush, Alexandra Jennings 01 May 2015 (has links)
"Spark and Ruin: a Story of Re-beginning" is a multi-media concert dance work that addresses empathy as a physical and cognitive reactionary state, and utilizes dancing bodies as agents to facilitate this empathic experience. This work developed out of "The Flint Project," which investigates Flint, Michigan, "the most violent city in America," and a community characterized by racial tension and severe distinctions in class and social standing. This post-industrial, urban community serves as a microcosm through which we can examine how racial, social, and cultural politics intersect to establish systematic practices that challenge the possibility of the "American Dream."
"The Flint Project" is a vehicle for creative research that investigates these systems and develops the material into a live performed event, "Spark and Ruin: a Story of Re-beginning". This performance includes installations featuring live performers and also various forms of media (including photography, film, and interactive "stations"). All of this material is constructed to contextualize the material for the viewer in a proscenium-style full-length dance performance. The objective of this piece is to establish a space for viewers to empathize with the material--to create an experience that will evolve into inquiry of systematic inequality as well as self-reflection of perception and bias. In facilitating this level of questioning, I aim to move viewers with compassion and heightened awareness of social inequity, as well as opportunities to chge the systems that enforce it.
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El Sueno Americano, Es Para Todos: An Analysis of the Rhetoric toward Latinos in the Presidential Campaigns of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, 1992-2000Campos, Kristina M. 14 January 2010 (has links)
This dissertation examined the presidential elections of 1992, 1996 and 2000 for
the narrative tools used to persuade Latino voters. Using Walt Fisher's narrative theory,
I evaluated the various parts of the American Dream myth, looking specifically at the
characters and settings used in the candidate's narrative. Then, I evaluated the values in
those narratives through the lens of the Plan of Delano, specifically looking for ways
these candidates actually reinforced important Latino values.
The new tellings of the American Dream myth valued specific characters-
characters that had been blessed by the American Dream. Clinton's 1992 character had
to work to gain success, but he was also blessed. George P. Bush (George W. Bush's
nephew) was another character blessed by the American Dream. As a first-generation
American, he represented the hope that brings many to America; the idea that their
children could have opportunities the parents could not. The settings of the American Dream story were also important. These settings
varied greatly-from the decrepit and desolate to the fanciful and idyllic-but they
represented all the different places where the American Dream is possible.
Hope, Arkansas is not a place where much hope seems to exist. But even a
community as impoverished as Hope can be the birthplace of a President, because of the
amazing ability of the Dream to permeate even the darkest corners of America. The
barrios of the Southwest appear to be hopeless, but as Clinton's telling of the myth
reminded Latinos, even people growing up in the barrios should have hope-because the
American Dream can exist anywhere.
These values, these characters, these settings have added to the rich rhetorical
history of the American Dream myth. These presidential candidates expanded the places
where that hope could reach, and the people who could be blessed by the Dream. All of
this culminated in a story that Latinos could relate to, that they shared in and that
rhetorically persuaded them to believe in these candidates.
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Fagidaboudit the American dream and Italian-American gangster movies /Lamberti, Justin V., Winn, J. Emmett January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis(M.S.)--Auburn University, 2005. / Abstract. Vita. Includes bibliographic references (p.98-101).
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Waking Up from the American Nightmare: Is the Dream Home the Ideal Home?Stowasser, Nadja 15 June 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Documenting the Undocumented: Understanding Identity and Displacement Through U.S. Latinx ExperiencesQuintanilla, Thelma B 01 January 2021 (has links)
Undocumented migrants are a part of our daily lives, yet we rarely hear their stories or know who they really are; the word "undocumented" can have a negative connotation both within and outside the Latinx community and is often associated with criminals and various other negative stereotypes. This study aims to understand how identity is affected by documentation status and how that affects the undocumented and documented Latinx community, the experiences of Latinx people of different documentation status with connections to illegal immigration, and how they navigate through those experiences in the United States of America knowing that they are putting themselves at risk.
There is not enough representation of undocumented Latinx people and their role in society; it is important to understand the undocumented Latinx community and give them a voice because undocumented people are one of the U.S.' backbones in cultural and socio-economic terms. This investigation will provide more insight into their experiences and the identity struggle within the Latinx context through a series of interviews and an in-depth literature review of other publications sharing undocumented Latinx individuals' oral histories. It aims to shine a positive light on the community and contribute to future research on similar topics.
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Microentrepreneur Identity in Appalachian Ohio: Enterprising Individuals with a Regional FlavorMorris, Jerimiah F. 10 June 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Working Hard And Barely Making It: Ideological Contradictions And The Working PoorKane, Wendi 01 January 2009 (has links)
The existence of large, relatively comfortable, middle and working classes is what has set the advanced capitalist societies apart from most societies throughout history. These classes, while not quite "privileged," offer the hope of opportunity and upward social mobility for those who work hard. Yet in the last 30 years a growing class of "working poor" has emerged who invest many hours working but at wages that keep upward social mobility beyond their grasp. The existence of the working poor, it seems, dispels a key element in the ideology of individualism; they work hard yet do not "get ahead." This study addresses the contradiction presented by the working poor; specifically, do the working poor support the ideology of individualism? Prior research finds that the disadvantaged justify the system that inhibits them from having a better quality of life (Jost, et al. 2003). This study, however, suggests that the working poor are more conscious of the ideology's failure to explain their lack of mobility in a system that promises opportunity to those who work hard. Research data were generated through the use of telephone surveys in five counties in Central Florida with approximately 1571 respondents. Several measures of "working poor" were created; moreover, respondents within these categories tended to disagree with the "work hard, get ahead" ideology. Respondents who viewed their financial situation as getting worse, unable to grasp the "upward mobility" promise of the American Dream, also significantly disagreed with the ideology.
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Pojetí Amerického snu ve Velkém Gatsbym Francise Scotta Fitzgeralda a v Americkém snu od Normana Mailera / The Concepts of the American Dream in Francis Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and Norman Mailer's An American DreamKříž, Jonáš January 2013 (has links)
The thesis provides a comparative analysis of the American Dream's concept in the two essential pieces of American literature: Francis Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and Norman Mailer's An American Dream. The theoretical part of the text focuses on the general definition of the American Dream and its development throughout the history of the United States. It aims at exposing the close relationship of the idea of the American Dream and the American national consciousness in terms of self-reliance, individualism and freedom. The analytical part concentrates on isolating the individual literary motifs of each novel that can be regarded as related to the notion of the American Dream. It discusses the central characters as well as dramatic aspects of The Great Gatsby and An American Dream in order to prove the American Dream to represent an essential theme in their literary frameworks. As a conclusion the thesis presents the opinion that each author elaborates this theme differently. Both novels, however, expose the individual version of the American Dream as being defeated in a struggle against the collective nature of the 20th century American society restricting the efforts of an individual for his or her self-realization. Keywords: Norman Mailer, An American Dream, Francis Scott Fitzgerald,...
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