Writers who challenged the wrongs of the Gilded Age are often referred to as "muckrakers." This term describes journalists and authors who exposed corruption, social injustices, and the excesses of industrialization and capitalism during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Notable muckrakers include Upton Sinclair, whose novel "The Jungle" highlighted the appalling conditions in the meatpacking industry, and Ida Tarbell, who investigated the monopolistic practices of Standard Oil. Their work played a significant role in prompting reform and social change.
Gilded Age was the period that was roughly followed from the 1870s. The term gilded age was coined by the writers by the names of Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner.
Gilded Age is a term coined by Mark Twain to describe the post-Reconstruction era.
its Mark Twain and Charles Dudley
The term is credited to a social satire by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner (1873).
terrible or awe-inspiring beauty
Gilded Age was the period that was roughly followed from the 1870s. The term gilded age was coined by the writers by the names of Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner.
Gilded Age is a term coined by Mark Twain to describe the post-Reconstruction era.
Mark Twain
Robber baron was the term that was used for someone who became wealthy through dishonest means during the Gilded Age. The Gilded Age existed from the 1870s to roughly 1900.
its Mark Twain and Charles Dudley
diction
How about "the chronologically challenged".
The term is credited to a social satire by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner (1873).
Leaders of big business
republic
That would be "developmentally challenged".
"Samuel Langhorne Clemens" better known as "Mark Twain"