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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page analysis of the types of entertainment that occupied Americans during the Great Depression. The author presents the thesis that Although they had less significantly less expendable money to invest in entertainment during the Depression, they desperately sought any type of entertainment that could provide psychological relief from the desperate circumstances of their everyday lives. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPgrtDp2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
hardest ever endured in the United States. This was the time of the Great Depression. Although this country had experienced earlier depression, even one in 1920 just a
few years previously, the Great Depression would prove to be an order of magnitude more significant than any other. Americans faced ever-increasing unemployment, falling production and falling prices.
People that endured this period were not just hit hard economically, they were hit hard psychologically. The thesis can be presented that:
Although they had less significantly less expendable money to invest in entertainment during the Depression, they desperately sought any type of entertainment
that could provide psychological relief from the desperate circumstances of their everyday lives.
Just as was the case in the years preceding the Depression, families spent countless hours entertaining themselves during their idle hours playing card and board games. As was the
case before the Depression, children played hide and seek, the obligatory backyard baseball games, and continued to pursue other normal entertainment activities. The radio was an important entertainment form.
Television, in contrast, was just beginning to make its entry into the American household as well during the years of the Great Depression. The first marketing attempts for
television in the United States occurred unsuccessfully in the 1920s. These early sets left much room for improvement and during the early years of the Depression researchers were occupied
with doing just that. The first long distance telecast was orchestrated by AT&T and succeeded in transmitting image and sound from Washington D.C. to New York City in 1927.
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