Preview

Amelia From The Magpies Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
865 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Amelia From The Magpies Analysis
"Because there’d been this other person, a person who would have never joined a club or chased a girl who didn’t want to get caught. Who never would have let herself get made a fool of.” (McCreight, 318). This excerpt captures the feelings of Amelia, the protagonist, as she struggles to find her identity after it had been stolen by her socially elite club, the Magpies. ☺ After her mysterious and premature demise, her mother dives headfirst into the case; determined to prove to everyone that the death was not a suicide but in fact a tragic murder. I will be questioning the loose ends that the author did not specifically resolve, such as the aftermath of the climactic finale. I will be clarifying how technology played a crucial role in her life …show more content…
When Amelia is being harassed by the Magpies, the majority of the harassment come through over her phone. Amelia is sent numerous texts from anonymous or blocked numbers. This drives her into a state of depression and a sense of not belonging. Though some harassment in school is physical such as throwing her books away and writing derogatory words on her locker, the technological approach is much more efficient because without face to face contact, the oppressor does not feel like they are doing anything wrong. Technology also impacts Amelia when she develops a relationship with “Ben”. Ben is a guise that her father, Jeremy, uses in order to contact and get closer to Amelia. But this connection severely impacts Amelia’s relationship with Sylvia by distancing the two from each other. Kate is also affected by Amelia’s technology use because Amelia’s old texts, e-mails, and Facebook updates are the only clues that Kate is given to solve the case. By looking at the clues, Kate is able to get a small peek into her daughter’s club, friendships, and dour situation. I think the book purposely emphasizes the importance of technology to an average teenager and how little parents, teachers etc. could potentially know about their secret …show more content…
This can be connected to Sartell High School’s system as well. Though Sartell does not have such a drastic case, there is no denying that the school has both popular kids and wallflowers. The athletes are typically the respected kids at Sartell but the club members are the respected ones at Grace Hall. Acceptance into clubs in “Reconstructing Amelia” can easily be compared to Sartell’s royalty tradition. In order to get into a club at Grace Hall, one needs to be selected by his or her peers. At Sartell, homecoming and prom royalty is decided through a voting process. Inevitably, the kids at Grace Hall with a lot of connections will be ‘tapped’ by the clubs. The kids with a lot of connections and friends at Sartell will be voted into royalty. I would also compare Amelia’s identity crisis to students at Sartell. By joining the Magpies, Amelia ends up succumbing to peer pressure and carries out actions she would normally avoid completely. This is seen every day at Sartell High School. Students put on a mask while around their friends and beg for their approval. A blogger in the book even says “Since there are 176 definitions of the word loser on urbandictionary.com. Don’t Be a Statistic” (McCreight 1). This post just proves that peers push others to not be themselves a.k.a. losers. ☺ At school, a

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In “A Model for High Schools” by David S. Broder, the author discusses the prejudice that many students face throughout their lives and within the education system. In particular, Broder discusses high school dropouts as they take part in debates over the sections of the writings of Plato and Malcolm X and states, “The oddity is that these teenagers were all high school dropouts, kids with attitude problems, behavioral problems, drug or alcohol problems, kids whose teachers and families had often marked them off as hopeless losers” (Broder, para. 2). Here, Broder accentuates the prejudice that high school drop outs face throughout their education from their teachers and families alike. To those around them, these students are nothing more than…

    • 305 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eagle Two Eyes Sheltered himself the best he could for the night within a hilly out crop, covered with branches and a buffalo skin. He didn't attempt to make a fire, but this decision had more to do with shame than survival.…

    • 562 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    For this summary, I will be writing about the entire book “Women Without Class” by Julie Bettie. One of the very first things the researcher notices when she is observing the students at Waretown High School is all of the different social classes. There are the skaters, chicas, smokers, preps, etc. Each group accepts students based on their economic standing, as well as their overall personality and looks. None of the groups really get along well, because they all have different standards and backgrounds that align with their specific group. Aside from their parent’s economic standing, their “social capital” is what defines these girls and puts them into these separate groups. For example, the smokers all have similar clothing styles and attitudes…

    • 244 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    There are many different ways to classify a person, some good and some bad. In Rosiland Wiseman’s essay “The Queen Bee and Her Court” she says, “We need to give girls credit for the sophistication of their social structures”. She’s right, the way girls separate each other into different cliques is very complex and multilayered, but sometimes it can be very harmful to some of the girls. If you classify someone has a “Queen Bee”, or “The IT girl”, they are going to feel empowered and special. But what about the girls you call “Losers”, or “Wannabe’s”. They are going to feel depressed, like they don’t fit in, or that they’re weird or not as good as those other girls.…

    • 519 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A “quintessential 80’s movie,” The Breakfast Club is a film rich with psychological principles. This movie is about a group of high school teenagers filled with personal angst who spend a Saturday serving their detention sentences in the school library. Each teenager from a different clique, they didn’t expect to relate as much to each other as they thought. As they begin to get to know each other, the vengeful assistant principal Vernon starts to single out Bender, the rebel of the group of teenagers. Initially, none of the other teenagers help Bender. This demonstrates the bystander effect because they don’t help Bender; this effect can be explained by the absence of group membership and cohesiveness because the 5 strangers don’t really know each other yet. But when assistant principal Vernon locks Bender in a closet, the group has already established trustworthy relationships among its members, so they decide to help Bender escape. Also, assistant principal Vernon debatably exhibited deindividuation when he proceeded to threaten Bender and to lock him inside a closet. Normally, an assistant principal of a high school wouldn’t speak cruelly or do such things to a student, but because of the situation (their history together and how Bender always seemed to have won), Vernon acts this way. Finally, each teenager demonstrated conformity in his/her own way. Bender covered up his scars from the abuse he received from his dad so that he wouldn’t be judged as weak for them; Andy, the jock, covered up his hatred for his father because he didn’t want to be seen as abnormal; Brian, the geek, contemplated suicide but never told anyone because he didn’t want to be perceived as depressed; Allison, the outcast, lies compulsively because she has to keep up a reputation she has created; and Claire, the popular girl, hides the fact that she is still a virgin because all of her friends are not virgins and she doesn’t want to be considered…

    • 328 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    1984 And Syme Comparison

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Being excluded in today’s society is one of the hardest things people can endure. In high school, hearing that one of your friends is having a get together without you can cause you great fear and distress. When events of this nature happen more often, people start to gain this fear of missing out, and it sometimes can cause people to become depressed. It is said that today, “some kids are pushed into a social ‘no man’s land’ by the exclusionary efforts of their peers. This isolation is itself a problem, as its victims can easily become disconnected from the moderating forces of mainstream society” (1). The same way that outcasts are pushed into a social “no man’s land” is the same way that Syme was pushed out by his peers and seen as a possible heretic. The social exclusion of outcasts in 1984 is very similar to the way outcasts are excluded and “socially vaporized” by teens…

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Lizzie Doten Analysis

    • 2243 Words
    • 9 Pages

    In 1909, New York Timesnewspaper published an article in its November issue under the name Laureate of Spookland: Strange Case of Lizzie Doten, Writer of ‘Spirit Verse’ praisingthe medium Lizzie Doten’s ability in communicating with dead poets and publishing their poems in her book Poems from the Inner Life(New York Times, 1909). Even though that forty-five years had passed since the publication of her book, Doten still received notice from one of the leading newspapers. Her popularity derived from communicating with spirits was not uncommon. Along with being seen as a movement that helped in promoting radical political and cultural beliefs such as women’s rights and abolitionism, spiritualism, the belief in the possibility in communicating…

    • 2243 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Jackp

    • 2563 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Coming into the detention session, each character is fixated in a stereotypical high school role. Claire is the "princess"; an upper-class, popular socialite…

    • 2563 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Ragged Company

    • 474 Words
    • 2 Pages

    moderation. In Amelia’s case it seems to be a bit harder to survive under the circumstances that…

    • 474 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The most disliked teenager that runs the halls is a popular blonde-.... She's tall and slender, with a waist as supple as a willow... slatternly tongue that devastates other kids with such insults.... She has two or three friends exactly like her, and together they dominate their realm. This is the typical popular girl as we in-vision partly because of the movies, but the movies must have gotten the foundation for such a character from a real life all American girl. And although not all stereotypes are true, this one seems to have quite a lot of truth to it. As he goes on into his theories he describes several “everyday American teenagers” from the bitchy popular girl to the gothic kids. But he ends up revealing this character in such a way as the,” male counterpart”. As in movies the typical football player is represented as muscular but dumb, with a face like a of a male model/ pretty boy and only two ways of speaking- in a conspiratorial whisper, to a friend; or in a drill sergeants sudden bellow. Not only does he get into the descriptions of the girls, but the typical jock. If one was too compare and contrast the people in their high school to the ones that Denby is speaking of, they will be able to pin point them perfectly. Denby uses many examples of stereotypes, but also presents ethos. He takes many movies and compares the characters from both views, so in a way he is…

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Sandlot

    • 257 Words
    • 2 Pages

    An adolescent’s peers can be the most influential social relationship in their life. Strong peer relationships help achieve two of an adolescents most critical tasks: finding independence from their parents and developing their own personal identities. Therefore, peer relationships are a crucial part of development. The movie “The Sandlot” accurately portrays the role of peers in adolescence by the main character, Scotty, who is transformed by those he hangs-out with. For example, Scotty had never chewed tobacco or even knew what it was until it was introduced to him by his peers. The influence of his peers and the absence of knowledge from his parents caused him to fall to peer pressure and chew tobacco. Scotty’s group of friends would be considered a clique because they excluded others from joining unless approved by the entire group. Also, there was a specific leader of the group of friends in “The Sandlot” named Benjamin Rodriguez, this is another defining feature of a clique. Finally, because the group of friends only hung out with each other and did not associate with other groups, this marked them as being a clique. It is important that young people associate with the right people because studies show that the people you hangout with will be the same characteristics that you adapt. Cliques are a part of growing up and is typically seen among middle and high school aged students, the immaturity of being exclusive and non-inclusive will dissipate throughout life, in most cases. It is important to choose friends…

    • 257 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Mean Girls Sociology

    • 1265 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In the movie Mean Girls, released in April of 2004, you see the traditional story about the new girl in school and the stereotypes that engulf the adolescent environment. Cady Heron, played by Lindsay Lohan, shows us what life at a corrupted school could be like for teens that are not so familiar with the American ways of socialization and "surviving" the potentially threatening lifestyle it could lead on. Sadly, children succumb to it as a result of a dire need to fit in. In the film, we're first introduced with the impression that high schoolers and the staff are super strict and have no sympathy for the new students. As it subtly resembles almost a 'prison'-like feel, Cady finds herself in a situation every teenager feels in their life; isolation and the feeling of being outcasted. We also see that Cady was like any other new girl, just wanting to make friends and fit in with everyone, thus the pressure of peer acceptance. She finally gets into a clique of her own, which honestly would've been the best choice just to stick with that group and not get involved with the "queen bees" that ruled the school.…

    • 1265 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Leon Botstein explained most of this from his perspective as the President of Bard College and as the author of Jefferson’s Children: Education and the Promise of American Culture. The article called “Let Teenagers Try Adulthood” first appeared in the Op/Ed section of the New York Times in 1999 after the Littleton (Columbine) shootings. Botstein writes that the categories of insiders and outsiders that are so popular in today’s high schools are shaped the way they are because there are damaging cliques that hold sway because of superficial definitions of attractiveness, popularity, and sports prowess. He points out that when student’s graduate high school and go on to college they finally understand what opportunities they missed and how much time is lost (21). Botstein writes that high schools as they are now are obsolete because they were made as a place to help young adults mature but that is not happening anymore because they grow up faster now than they did when high schools were made. Botstein points out that adults should realize that just because they don’t like dealing with young adults doesn’t meant adults should isolate teenagers that are growing up physically and hormonally in a high school setting to hide them from the real world. Given the poor quality of teachers and school administrators, who are more often chosen because they were coaches before, this means that when…

    • 1088 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Deviance on Television

    • 1049 Words
    • 5 Pages

    There are two major sociological terms demonstrated on Secret Life of the American Teenager. The first term is deviance, a behavior, trait, or belief that departs from a norm, is projected through these four characters. Amy Juergens is a fifteen year old “good girl” in high school who plays the French horn and wants to someday attend Juilliard. At summer band camp, prior to starting her freshman year, Amy…

    • 1049 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the current time, there are all kinds of groups/cliques. There are: the jocks, the nerds, and the goths in high school, and the upper class, the middle class, and the poor in society. Each of these groups has their own set of customs/rules that are followed. None of these rules are written. They are just understood. If an outsider comes to a clique and doesn't follow their rules, the group excludes them. If a member of a clique does something wrong, then the clique uses that person as a scapegoat "in order to alleviate dissension and restore harmony within its ranks".(Girard 365) The same things happen in Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence. The high society of New York, a.k.a. the New York 400, selects certain members of the society to use as scapegoats. One such scapegoat is Beaufort. The New York 400 also chooses people to exclude completely from ever joining their ranks such as Ellen Olenska and the Struthers. They gain a sense of power from people wanting to join their ‘elite' and ‘prestigious' group, which is made even more ‘elite' and ‘prestigious' by excluding the people wanting to join. The members of the New York 400 think they are superior to others and don't even want to deal with those people deemed unworthy by them. An Example of this is May's unwillingness to have M. Riviere to dinner even though Archer wants him to come. She makes the comment that he is just common.(123-124)…

    • 1383 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays