I just did something that probably every eleven year old in the world knows how to do.
To illustrate Marx's argument that profit is not in fact the wages of management, I wanted to tell a little story I made up about the 19th century mill owner in the small hill town of Haydenville, MA who owned a factory on the Mill River and built himself and his daughter a pair of impressive white homes with Greek columns across the street from the factory.
So: using GoogleMaps I cruised Rte 9 until I found the factory and the homes [which I used to drive past in the '60s on the way to a little country home I briefly owned.] Then, guided by an informative video found online, I took a screenshot of the factory and homes, copied it onto my desktop, loaded it onto the website of my UNC course on Marx, and sent a message to the students to check it out before next class.
Here it is:
Wednesday, February 12, 2020
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6 comments:
You understand how important visuals are to students!
I doubt that most 11YOs know how to do this. The received wisdom about "tech savvy" kids is highly exaggerated.
As much as I despise Google, I enjoy the virtual stroll in Maps. Sitting in Southern California, I've shown my 92YO mother the Toledo, OH, home in which she grew up. I also use it to locate sites I'm reading about even in old literature, e.g., Boswell on Johnson.
Great use of google maps. I used Google Earth to map all the important locations of both my parents' lives. After they passed away, I inherited all their journals and paperwork and from those, I mapped the houses, schools, places of work, etc. and shared the kml files with family and friends. I even located (it's still there) a tree my mother wrote a poem about.
I have driven by there a hundred times. I even worked on the "factory side," making dyed T-shirts. The dye went directly into the brook. After talking up this problem and not pulling my weight, I was fired.
There was talk, 35-40 years ago, that they would develop the old factory buildings into boutique retail. Glad everything looks the same.
Jerry, that is fantastic! I think it was boutique shops for a while. Thanks for the memories!
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