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Gilded Age And The Gilded Age

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The Prosperous Gilded Age and The Corrupt Underneath
The Gilded Age, was a brief period in American history, from the late 1800’s to the early 1900’s, where there was a rapid economic growth as the industry expanded, generating groundbreaking opportunities for individuals. At its triumph peak, society was perceived from the outside that the new era of Americans was prosperous, however, conspicuous consumption and luxury masked corruption and the fact that a majority of people were suffering. Like gilded gold, the outside looks exemplary, but much like the Gilded Age, the inside contrasted dramatically. Besides the wide amount of success in this era, society was unbalanced with hierarchy, with a competition of social class and mental health. No one calling out the corrupt nation besides a few pieces of literature that challenge this time of equality. Authors like Nellie Bly, in “Ten Days in a Madhouse”, challenged Gilded Age norms of Mental Health and social class, calling out society by illustrating the horrors of the “less than”. By explaining the story of other women in the asylum who are the minorities in society, put into institutions for invalid reasons, for the fact that they were at the lower scale of society. In this selection, “Ten Days in a Madhouse”, by Nellie Bly, the author confronts the prejudice and hierarchy in society as she takes on an undercover assignment investigating the brutality and discrimination at Women's Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell's Island. Bly

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