325:questions:week_9_questions_comments-325_19
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325:questions:week_9_questions_comments-325_19 [2019/10/24 03:19] – [Venus Green, African American Women in the Bell System, 1945-1980 (1995)] hdykhuis | 325:questions:week_9_questions_comments-325_19 [2019/10/24 08:55] (current) – [Geoffrey Bennett, “Colour Comes to All,” The Story of Popular Photography] 76.78.225.32 | ||
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- | I thought it was really interesting to read about the different processes of actually developing the film. I never before had read or learned what actually went into the process. The transformation over time shows the different processes and what ones worked and were kept. Also learning about going from black and white to color was really cool to read. I think even now black and white movies seem more interesting to me simply because it feels like it puts you back in time. Overall I really enjoyed reading and learning about these processes and films. -Tory Martin | + | I thought it was really interesting to read about the different processes of actually developing the film. I never before had read or learned what actually went into the process. The transformation over time shows the different processes and what ones worked and were kept. Also learning about going from black and white to color was really cool to read. I think even now black and white movies seem more interesting to me simply because it feels like it puts you back in time. Overall I really enjoyed reading and learning about these processes and films. -Tory Martin |
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+ | It was interesting to see throughout the reading just how much people at the time thought colour photography was going to shape society as Alfred Stieglitz said, " | ||
==== Christine Kleinegger – “Out of the Barns and into the Kitchens: Transformations in Farm Women’s Work in the First Half of the Twentieth Century.” ==== | ==== Christine Kleinegger – “Out of the Barns and into the Kitchens: Transformations in Farm Women’s Work in the First Half of the Twentieth Century.” ==== | ||
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The transition from homemade food, in terms of gathering and preparation, | The transition from homemade food, in terms of gathering and preparation, | ||
- | I think it's interesting that women were the primary ones making dairy products including cheese and then it was taken over and perfected by a man. Cheese was then made by factory where 1% of cheese was not made in a factory. | + | I think it's interesting that women were the primary ones making dairy products including cheese and then it was taken over and perfected by a man. Cheese was then made by factory where 1% of cheese was not made in a factory. |
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+ | This reading reminds us that there is still unequal gender roles in our society today. When the men went to war, the companies had to question if allowing women to work in their place would be the right thing to do even though the women have been making cheese in their farms way before the men have. The women who took the men's jobs were paid 20 dollars less than the men who previously had the jobs. This also reminds us that even in today' | ||
I found it interesting that in 1917 advertisers started to focus on one of a father-daughter relationship. The advertisements told fathers they could keep their daughters on the farms if they provided them with labor-saving devices. To go even further a Ford ad that was aimed towards men for tractors catered to their concerns of their daughters, by implying that if they owned a ford tractor they would be a better father because they would be less tired. This movement went on further to say that daughters would like the farm more if they had these tools and would thus be more willing to stay. I find it interesting and kind of smart to use daughters as a marketing campaign to specifically cater to fathers. I think fathers would be more inclined to help their daughters than their wives because their daughters are their offspring. -- Erin Madden | I found it interesting that in 1917 advertisers started to focus on one of a father-daughter relationship. The advertisements told fathers they could keep their daughters on the farms if they provided them with labor-saving devices. To go even further a Ford ad that was aimed towards men for tractors catered to their concerns of their daughters, by implying that if they owned a ford tractor they would be a better father because they would be less tired. This movement went on further to say that daughters would like the farm more if they had these tools and would thus be more willing to stay. I find it interesting and kind of smart to use daughters as a marketing campaign to specifically cater to fathers. I think fathers would be more inclined to help their daughters than their wives because their daughters are their offspring. -- Erin Madden |
325/questions/week_9_questions_comments-325_19.1571887164.txt.gz · Last modified: 2019/10/24 03:19 by hdykhuis