Discussion Question
November 1, 2010


You need to be certain when answering questions that you apply specific examples and details from the readings!

  1. On which group do you feel that the Depression had the greatest impact (ie women, children, the working class, the unemployed, etc)?  On what would you base your argument?
  2. What do the letters to Eleanor Roosevelt tell us about the impact of the Depression on children and families?  As a source, what limitations and/or assets do the letters have and how would you use them for research?
  3. Who would be considered "marginal" Americans and what was the impact of the Depression on them?
  4. In the report to Mr. Hopkins in 1934, what was the reaction of "ordinary" people to the depression?  What was the mood of the people, according to the report?  What is the importance of such a source and how could/should such a source be used? 
  5. How does the report by Hopkins agree or disagree with the other readings about the problems and responses of rural America? (ie Like a Thick Wall, Losing the Business, the McElvaine letters, etc.)
  6. What in your opinion is the most important detail contained in Hopkin's report?  Does the author have an overall point or purpose to her report?
  7. What were the specific problems of the agricultural sector?  What was being done by the government to address those problems, and what were the people themselves doing to solve their problems?
  8. Of the letters from the McElvaine book, which for you provides the most important insights into the depression?   What in particular did you learn from it?
  9. How and why does the movie G-Men differ in content and tone from the earlier gangster movies?  Can the difference in the movie in any manner be explained by the circumstances of the Great Depression at that time?  In answering this you need to place the movie (1935) in the political and social context of the day.