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Writers of the late 19th and 20th centuries

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Economist and social philosopher who wrote, in Progress and Poverty, that a single tax on land would provide the best way to fund the government since land ownership was concentrated in the hands of the few   Henry George  
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Essayist and journalist whose most famous work was the Utopian novel, Looking Backward 2000-1887   Edward Bellamy  
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Social reformer, journalist, and photographer who wrote one of the most influential documents about tenement housing, How the Other Half Lives   Jacob Riis  
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Assaulted the values and lifestyles of the Gilded Age by mixing economic and sociological theory in his book The Theory of the Leisure Class; coined the term "conspicuous consumption"   Thorstein Veblen  
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Historian who wrote that the frontier had provided a safety valve and had influenced the development of a unique American character   Frederick Jackson Turner  
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An opponent of business monopolies and one of the pioneer muckrakers of the Gilded Age in his work Wealth Against Commonwealth   Henry Demarest Lloyd  
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Eminent American reformer and leader of the muckrackers; documented corruption in American cities in The Shame of the Cities   Lincoln Steffens  
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This muckraker attacked the railroad industries in The Octopus and the wheat industry in The Pit   Frank Norris  
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He exposed the unsanitary working conditions in the stockyards of Chicago in The Jungle; his book led to the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Pure Food Act   Upton Sinclair  
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Black poet known for the use of jazz rhythms in his poetry; he became a prominent figure during the Harlem Renaissance   Langston Hughes  
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Developed the theme of the monotony, emotional frustration, and lack of values in American middle-class life in his book Babbit   Sinclair Lewis  
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Editor of the magazine The American Mercury he satirized the shortcomings of democracy and middle-class American culture   H.L. Mencken  
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Won the Nobel Prize for his poem The Waste Land which expressed his conception of the contrast between modern society and societies of the past   T. S. Eliot  
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A writer of the Lost Generation, he wrote his masterpiece, The Great Gatsby, about the dissoluteness of the 1920s   F. Scott Fitzgerald  
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A moving force in the development of naturalism in literature, he was the author of Sister Carrie and An American Tragedy   Theodore Dreiser  
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Depicted the lives of people who lost their faith in their values by World War I in A Farewell to Arms and the Spanish Civil War in For Whom the Bell Tolls   Ernest Hemingway  
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This writer wrote in the style of realism depicting life in the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl in The Grapes of Wrath   John Steinbeck  
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A Swedish economist, he wrote about relations between the races in An American Dilemma   Gunnar Myrdal  
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Wrote about middle class women's dissatisfaction with lives that centered about nothing more than their husbands, children, and homes in The Feminine Mystique   Betty Friedan  
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Famous beat poet who wrote Howl   Allen Ginsberg  
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Beat author of On the Road   Jack Kerouac  
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His book, The Other America, detailing the persistence of poverty in America despite the affluence of much of society inspired LBJ to push for his War on Poverty programs   Michael Harrington  
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