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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper discusses David Shipler's ground breaking book on the 35-40 million Americans who work hard but are remain mired in desperate poverty. Bibliography lists sources.
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8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVShiplr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the awful tragedy of the Middle East. In The Working Poor, he tackles the issue of something thats not supposed to exist in this country: the class of
Americans who have jobs and work hard, but cannot climb out of poverty. Shiplers Approach America is supposedly the country where hard work pays off; where
people who hold down jobs and "play by the rules" can expect to achieve economic success and financial security. But for 35 million Americans, that isnt true. They
do have jobs (sometimes more than one), they work as hard as they can, and they still remain mired in desperate poverty. For them, there is no such thing
as "the American dream." Shipler sets out to investigate this "invisible" underclass, how they got where they are, and what can be done about it. The first thing that
Shipler does is to dispense with the notion that poor equates directly to black. Although blacks and women make up a good portion of this group, they are by
no means the only people in it: its as diverse as America (Suskind, 2004). Shipler is the right author to tackle a subject as big as this, since
hes already delivered powerful works on the Middle East (Arab and Jew) and race (A Country of Strangers: Blacks and Whites in America). He is "known for tackling the
unwieldy" and this subject is certainly that (Suskind, 2004, p. 7). In order to make sense of the problems of these people, "a writer needs to be both a witness
and a wonk, the former to dramatize the plight of the poor and the latter to devise policies to help them" (Massing, 2004). It is Shiplers intention to examine
...