ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
American Literature: Great Depression 2054 Views
Share It!
Description:
Transcript
- 00:01
No How depressing Great depression market in front It's coming
- 00:26
Some people come a bill others just call me cash
- 00:29
but you you can call me boss just josh and
- 00:36
i'm really a nice guy I went to get to
- 00:38
know me want to know what wasn't nice the greater
Full Transcript
- 00:41
the broch rawdon on point with the evil music today
- 00:44
huh Thie great depression was as bad as the name
- 00:47
implies This tidal wave formed in october nineteen twenty nine
- 00:50
when the american stock market collapsed The dow industrial average
- 00:54
the primary measure of the stock market back then peaked
- 00:57
in september nineteen twenty nine at three hundred eighty one
- 01:00
point seventeen points and would plunge to a staggering forty
- 01:04
one point twenty two points by nineteen thirty two Okay
- 01:08
some context might be useful here The proceeding decade was
- 01:10
known as the roaring twenties due to rising income inequality
- 01:14
and general debauchery by fancy folks The stock market crash
- 01:18
ended this decade of decadence in an instant The story
- 01:21
of the great depression can be told with a litany
- 01:23
of the leak statistics It was like a magic trick
- 01:26
Billions of dollars in assets disappeared Just like that Wealthy
- 01:31
americans who owned almost all the nation's stock at the
- 01:35
time were walloped by an eighty percent decline in the
- 01:38
value of their holdings More troubling to the wider population
- 01:41
were rampant bank failures between nineteen twenty nine and nineteen
- 01:45
thirty three Two out of every five banks in america
- 01:48
collapsed effectively annihilating more than seven billion dollars of their
- 01:54
customers Hard earned savings By nineteen thirty three the country's
- 01:58
gnp i'ii gross national product had fallen to barely half
- 02:03
of its nineteen twenty nine level which is huge Imagine
- 02:07
if your country suddenly started producing half the amount of
- 02:10
products as usual there probably wouldn't be any good job
- 02:13
opportunities right What's more it could even lead to higher
- 02:16
prices as a reduced supply of something usually causes increased
- 02:20
demand which is known as the law of supply and
- 02:23
demand The combination of few jobs and high prices huh
- 02:27
Sounds like a recipe for disaster Industrial production fell by
- 02:31
fifty percent Production of automobiles dropped by two thirds The
- 02:35
steel plants operated at just twelve percent capacity Bad times
- 02:39
people all around These were big booming industries at the
- 02:43
time So it's a huge deal that they went sour
- 02:45
it be like apple suddenly stopping production on the ipad
- 02:49
The horror The unemployment picture is even nastier if you
- 02:52
can believe it Between nineteen twenty nine and thirty three
- 02:55
more than thirteen million americans lost their jobs Of those
- 03:00
sixty two percent found themselves out of work for longer
- 03:03
than a year forty four percent longer than two years
- 03:06
twenty four percent longer than three years and eleven percent
- 03:09
longer than four years Can you imagine being an adult
- 03:13
without a Job 4:4 years At that point you're basically
- 03:17
retired unemployment peaked at a staggering twenty four point one
- 03:22
percent in nineteen thirty three and never drop below fourteen
- 03:26
point three percent until world war two For context the
- 03:30
unemployment rate has never surpassed nine point seven percent in
- 03:33
all of the economic downturns since the economy got so
- 03:37
bad that even calvin coolidge who's business friendly presidency had
- 03:40
fueled the roaring twenties boom lost faith in the free
- 03:44
markets ability to fix itself A turning point came in
- 03:47
nineteen thirty two when franklin delano roosevelt was elected president
- 03:51
of the united states Shortly after taking office roosevelt made
- 03:54
it his mission to deliver relief recovery and reform the
- 03:58
so called three r's he allegedly wanted to include a
- 04:01
fourth our rodeo but his advisers counseled against it Roosevelt
- 04:05
christened his relief efforts the new deal This ambitious plan
- 04:09
begun during his first hundred days in office created a
- 04:12
host of new government programs including the civilian conservation corps
- 04:16
and works progress administration which provided work from millions of
- 04:20
needy americans Roosevelt also pushed through regulations like the nineteen
- 04:24
thirty three banking act that sought to rectify the structural
- 04:27
issues leading to the great depression Around nineteen thirty five
- 04:30
roosevelt launched another policy initiative known as the second new
- 04:34
deal a big part of the second round was making
- 04:36
permanent the first batch of temporary new deal measures but
- 04:39
the biggest part of it by far was the social
- 04:42
security act which created an american institution that remains a
- 04:46
key political issue today Of course not everyone loved the
- 04:50
new deal In particular conservative politicians thought that government spending
- 04:54
wouldn't stop the crisis and they weren't entirely wrong Although
- 04:58
the new deal stopped the flow of blood caused by
- 05:00
the great depression it ultimately didn't solve the crisis And
- 05:03
of course others argue that roosevelt's new deal policies weren't
- 05:06
progressive enough For instance advocates for socialism wanted more government
- 05:11
Programs for the working class Either way unemployment remained brutally
- 05:14
high throughout the thirties and it wasn't until roosevelt's third
- 05:17
term and the mobilization of u s forces in world
- 05:20
war two that the country finally reached full employment Of
- 05:23
course war is in a way a government sponsored economic
- 05:27
initiative which sort of proves roosevelt right Then again there
- 05:31
are plenty of valid arguments to the contrary worth examining
- 05:34
notice that we've hardly talked about the actual causes of
- 05:37
the great depression which is because they're kind of hard
- 05:39
to nail down legendary british economist John maynard keane's champion
- 05:43
1 major interpretation of the crisis in nineteen thirty six
- 05:46
is general theory of employment interest and money He suggested
- 05:50
that the great depression had been caused by something called
- 05:52
a failure of aggregate demand which basically means that we
- 05:55
had enough stuff just not the ability to buy it
- 05:58
In this interpretation widespread unemployment and economic stagnation were the
- 06:03
new normal a situation that might persist indefinitely in order
- 06:06
to get the economy moving again Keane's argued that the
- 06:09
government should increase spending even if it means running a
- 06:12
significant budget deficit As you can tell this philosophy was
- 06:15
influential on the new deal and similar stimulus programs In
- 06:18
contrast economies of the lays a fair tradition which emphasizes
- 06:21
the wisdom of free markets argued that the stock market
- 06:24
crash was a natural reaction to the decadence of the
- 06:27
nineteen twenties and would naturally revert back to a normal
- 06:30
state of affairs after a quick recalibration decades later a
- 06:33
third interpretation of the great depression would be championed by
- 06:36
milton friedman and anna schwartz In their nineteen sixty three
- 06:39
book a monetary history of the united states Freed minute
- 06:42
schwartz We're big believers of the free market similar to
- 06:45
the lays a fair economists of the nineteen thirties but
- 06:48
their analysis differed on a few key points To them
- 06:51
The crash was caused by the policies of the federal
- 06:53
reserve as well as individuals hoarding of cash After the
- 06:56
bank started going bad This reduced the amount of money
- 06:59
circulating in the economy and kicked the crisis into top
- 07:02
year So who's right Well the real answer might be
- 07:06
all of the above Each of these analyses touch on
- 07:08
valid ideas but none of them tell a complete story
- 07:11
on their own Instead we have to look at all
- 07:14
Of them to gain a fully rounded view of the
- 07:16
situation Besides its impact on the economy the great depression
- 07:19
completely changed american society The crisis had the effect of
- 07:23
radicalizing americans and pushing them towards extreme positions Some became
- 07:27
supporters of charles e coughlin a catholic priest who was
- 07:30
launched into national stardom by his radio show which was
- 07:34
a novel thing at the time Coughlin was initial supporter
- 07:36
of roosevelt's new deal but he eventually swung hard to
- 07:39
the right and threw his support behind the fascist movement
- 07:42
in europe Strange as it sounds in hindsight many americans
- 07:45
at the time look to these authoritarian states for inspiration
- 07:49
in turning around their economy Another example is louisiana governor
- 07:53
huey p long who happened to be buddies with coughlin
- 07:56
Long too was launched into national prominence though he did
- 07:59
it through a simple slogans share our wealth He even
- 08:02
ran against roosevelt as a democrat in nineteen thirty six
- 08:05
by arguing that the new deal was too conservative So
- 08:08
why are we spending so much time talking about the
- 08:10
great depression when we all really want to talk about
- 08:13
is the grapes of wrath Well because it's important background
- 08:16
Information Although the novel isn't exactly about the great depression
- 08:19
the economic crisis hangs heavy over its plot If you
- 08:23
remember the joad family left home because of the dust
- 08:26
bowl a fearsome weather phenomenon primarily in the oklahoma area
- 08:31
naturally they hope to find work elsewhere But this little
- 08:34
thing called the great depression is wreaking havoc on the
- 08:36
rest of the country As a result the jobs are
- 08:39
rarely able to find jobs for themselves and when they
- 08:42
dio conditions are far from pretty We see further impact
- 08:46
of the great depression in the local residents of these
- 08:48
regions who being an economic hardship themselves hate interlopers like
- 08:53
the jobs stealing their jobs The joes even spent some
- 08:56
time at a government operated work camp which eludes the
- 09:00
new deal efforts made by president roosevelt there's also a
- 09:03
strain of anti bank sentiment in the novel At one
- 09:05
point a bank is described as a monster that can't
- 09:08
stop growing or it will die whether you agree with
- 09:11
this assessment or not It's clear that steinbeck's mistrust of
- 09:14
financial institutions is based on his view of the great
- 09:17
depression Unsurprisingly the great depression figured prominently in steinbeck's personal
- 09:21
Life in fact he was just starting his career as
- 09:24
a writer when the depression hit in thirty four he
- 09:26
spent time with two labor organizers in california who gave
- 09:29
him insight into the worker's rights movement Two years later
- 09:32
he traveled with a group of okies who had fled
- 09:35
the dust bowl just like joe ds and wrote a
- 09:37
newspaper article about them All in all steinbeck spent a
- 09:40
lot of time with poor folks who were crushed by
- 09:42
the great depression which helped solidify his own left leaning
- 09:45
political views Is it a coincident that this time was
- 09:48
also steinbeck's most productive time as an author Nah thirty
- 09:52
sawed the publication of steinbeck's most beloved books like tortilla
- 09:55
flat of mice and men and the grapes of wrath
- 09:58
of course to different extents and too varied purposes All
- 10:01
of these novels are shaped by steinbeck's personal encounters with
- 10:04
the great depression See what i mean when i said
- 10:07
that economic me real bomber even though it makes us
- 10:09
sad there are some really important lessons to learn about
- 10:12
the great depression First the depression was one of the
- 10:14
defining events of the twentieth century just as much as
- 10:17
any world war or cold one for that matter Because
- 10:20
of this the great depression shaped the world we live
- 10:21
in today even if we don't realize it After all
- 10:24
no depression means no social security And why is this
- 10:27
relevant for our purposes It's Because understanding the great depression
- 10:30
is crucial to understanding the grapes of wrath Not doing
- 10:33
so would be like watching a star wars movie without
- 10:35
knowing what the forces Finally the great depression helped shape
- 10:38
john steinbeck's political views which in turn helps us better
- 10:42
understand his fiction Which brings us to the end of
- 10:44
today's lesson I hope you've thought about how financial downturns 00:10:48.514 --> [endTime] makes us dollar bills feel it's depressing just depressing
Up Next
“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...
Related Videos
Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?
¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...
Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...