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AP U.S. History 3.1 Period 6: 1865-1898 7 Views


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Description:

AP U.S. History 3.1 Period 6: 1865-1898. Both excerpts reflect...what?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Here's your shmoop du jour brought to you by consumption what is

00:08

Easter we're supposed to eat a pound of chocolate right it's not Easter oh well [Man eating easter bunnies]

00:14

whatever okay all right take a look at the following

00:16

passage we hear now on all sides the term robber barons applied to some of

00:21

the great capitalists...[mumbling]

00:59

alright well here's an eighth question both excerpts reflect the what?

01:04

then here is potential answers all right

01:12

contrary to how it

01:13

sounds the Gilded Age was actually in the late nineteenth century not when [King Midas appears with lots of gold bars]

01:18

King Midas was around clever nickname cred goes to Mark Twain there seriously

01:23

is really clever name the word gilded refers to an object that is covered in a

01:28

thin layer of gold but made of something else underneath so the Gilded Age is a

01:34

critical term calling out how the appearance of plentiful wealth covered [Woman wearing dress and poor man appear]

01:38

up a poorly treated and well poor working class yeah totally it was clever

01:44

alright so the unfortunate reality of the situation was that members of the

01:49

working class could expect to work long hours for very little pay a lot of them [Construction workers appear]

01:53

even sent their children to work to make ends meet factory work was often [Children working in a factory]

01:57

dangerous and factory owners that weren't held accountable for unsafe work

02:01

environment workers who were injured or killed on the job had almost no chance

02:07

of legal recourse at courts usually held that the workers responsible for being [Worker appears in court before a judge]

02:12

negligent that's the definition of unfair ladies and gentlemen now

02:16

seriously grab a dictionary that exact sentence Rilla maybe okay we'll take a [Man holding a dictionary]

02:22

look at answered be Twain may have scathingly called it the Gilded Age but

02:26

despite its shortcomings it was a very productive period the Second Industrial [Cogs turning]

02:31

Revolution was a time of rapid economic growth and invention it just wasn't very

02:36

fun for the people who actually made that growth happen so we can repeat do [Man standing in an attic]

02:41

both excerpt reflect eat a wing support for capitalism during the Gilded Age

02:47

while the lower classes didn't enjoy the same bright and shiny experience of the

02:51

Gilded Age as the upper class naturally they had some pretty strong feelings [Upper and lower class men standing beside each other]

02:55

about this unfortunately there are opinions well

02:58

didn't really count for much so we can predict eight what about a the South

03:02

wasn't quite cheap enough with the dramatic economic growth to the north

03:06

instead they seemed stuck in their agrarian past but the passages don't

03:11

have much to say about the south at all not even a nice howdy [Magnifying glass inspects passages]

03:14

or last year's old so that eliminates a and leaves us with see each of the

03:20

passages presents an opposing viewpoint of the changing time some saw the

03:25

increase in production the philanthropic efforts of the rich and political

03:29

involvement as positive changes others were angered by the widening gap between

03:34

the rich and the poor political corruption and poor working conditions [Person thinking of examples of gap between poor and rich, working conditions and corruption

03:38

of the lower classes yeah guess who was who

03:41

surprise surprise so C is the right answer guess it's hard not to be happy [Man standing in the snack aisle]

03:45

when you can afford that much more chocolate than the rest of us

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