Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Hoboes and Tramps :: Unemployment Poor Essays
Hoboes and Tramps Hoboes and tramps represented significant figures in Americaââ¬â¢s history. The phenomenon of ââ¬Å"Hobohemia,â⬠the world of hoboes that was subject to its own indoctrinations, tells us much about the social and cultural climate of the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century. Moreover, in examining the ââ¬Å"othersâ⬠of society, we gain a far better perspective of what circumstances modernist writers were working under. A hobo is defined as a migratory worker who is usually unskilled. Although a tramp is basically defined in the same manner, a certain distinction exists. It is often said that the difference lies in the fact that a hobo wandered and worked, a tramp wandered and didnââ¬â¢t work, while a bum, another similar term, neither wandered nor worked. Becoming widespread in the depression of the 1890ââ¬â¢s, the term hobo may have come from the slogan for farmhand, ââ¬Å"hoe-boy,â⬠or the phrase for ââ¬Å"good man,â⬠ââ¬Å"homo bonus,â⬠or from simply yelling ââ¬Å"Ho! Boy!â⬠while on the road.[1] The most important aspect of the rise of hoboes and tramps was the advent of railroads and the ability to move to different parts of the country. After the Civil War, many veterans were out of work, restless, and displaced; thus, they set out to travel and find new means for a better life. Described as a ââ¬Å"tramp army,â⬠these early vagrants were not viewed positively by the general public. Many Americans were unfamiliar with the problems associated with wage labor, mainly unemployment. Therefore, the tramps were not regarded as people who were simply out of work and looking for a new job, but at times as savages and symbols of evil.[2] As the nineteenth century came to a close, many of the tramps had already been on the road for close to twenty years. Their endless pursuit for a better life became in itself a way of life known as ââ¬Å"Hobohemia.â⬠Another distinction between tramps and hoboes is seen at the turn of the century. Tramps represented the earlier migrants in the post-Civil War times, while hoboes were tramps who had lived a large part of their lives as vagrants, thus interacting with other hoboes and forming a type of sub-culture that was independent, organized and at times political.
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