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Growing Up, By Russell Baker

Satisfactory Essays

In Russell Baker’s Growing Up, Baker tells a story describing his life in Virginia to his elderly mother, who develops slight senile-dementia. Baker’s memoir depicts the struggles he and his family endured during the days of the depression from the time of his birth in 1925 to his marriage in 1950. The stories for the most part encompass Russell and his mother, Lucy Elizabeth. Lucy Elizabeth showcases how women’s roles in the household transformed dramatically after the Great Depression, increasing their daily responsibilities and dependency on both their children and husband. Russell portrays an example of the children developing a large amount of pressure and burdens children endured especially when in the absence of a father figure. While fathers struggled with the stress of finding a job and the inability to support their family. Baker uses the experiences of his own life to tell the story of how the roles within the American family transformed due to the Great Depression; strengthened women and their reputation, turned children into the symbol of hope for the future and created stronger working men.
The role that women traditionally held in the household shifted during the 1930s due to the need for financial support within the family. Before the Great Depression, most women did not have a place in the workforce; they took care of home duties and raised the children. However, later the amount of obligations increased when they needed to take on financial

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