“Lean Kitchen” is a very interesting painting created by an artist known as Jan Steen. Today, the painting is located in The National Gallery of Canada. In the foreground you can see colors and values of browns and dark yellows. The background has a more gloomy vibe with grey and brown dull colors. In the painting, you can see objects consisting of a broom, a pot, a wooden bed, and an easel. Some people are sitting next to a table or leaning over it. Others are on the ground. The focal point of the painting is the woman wearing a white rag on her head next to a small child. These two individuals seem to be lit up with a brighter tone than the rest of the people.…
Kitchen Specialties is a national specialty retailer of kitchenware in outlet malls across the United States. Its store format has helped Kitchen Specialties to become the leading specialty retailer in the outlet mall. At the beginning of 2015, Kitchen Specialties, LLC had 232 stores. Overtime, Kitchen Specialties has developed specific approaches to improve the three main retail performance drivers: number of customer visits, percentage of visitors who purchase and the average dollar amount of sales.…
Family consisted of woman and man, who were married to each other, with at least two kids. The author describes, man was always the head of the family and woman was a housewife. Moreover, kids were obedient to breadwinner father, who was going off to work. Not only, kids had to obey man’s rules, but the mother was expected to conform to his regulations as well. In an iconic American family from 1950s, kids were raised by both parents and could leave them after the age of 18. Comparing to the photo from The Donna Reed Show, it is clear to see that picture shows the typical American family. There is a marriage and their offspring. There is a man is presented right in the middle of the picture what reveals that he is a breadwinner. Both parents are sitting on a chair, with a woman on the man’s left hand side. The fact that kids are standing shows the relationship between parents and kids, in other words, presence of respect and obedience towards the father is noticeable in the way that kids are presented as standing. Image of this family seems to be a little stale because there is no such family model present in today’s world anymore. According to the author, kids don’t obey their parents’ rules anymore, marriages are often ended with divorce, and old fashioned heterosexual marriage seems to be replaced by same-sex ones. Moreover, woman is not obedient to her husband anymore and is usually…
Today, family is one of the most sacred values we share in the individualist society we live in. Every family is different and has different rules and values; but in most of them, fathers are supposed to be leaders of the family, and role models for their children. They are also considerate like the one who transmits the traditions of their ancestors in order to carry them on. “Fiesta, 1980” is a short story written by Junot Dìaz taken from his short story collection, Drown, (1996). “Killings” is also a short story taken from, Finding a Girl in America (1980), written by Andre Dubus. Both of these stories are dealing with the family’s subject and provide us different perspectives of it. In Dìaz’s story we can see the relationship among a foreigner family, while in Andre Dubus’s story we see an American average family. In both stories, fathers play an important role; they figure prominently and have a considerable impact on their family but on the story also. The father in Dubus’s story is more family oriented that the one in Dìaz’; moreover the family is more closely–knit in Dubus’s story than in Dìaz’s story. The difference between the behaviors of the two fathers can be explained by their cultural backgrounds, which are not the same. These stories also provide us another perspective of the father’s role in the family, through their strength and their weakness without compromise.…
In the 1960s, society was drastically different than what it is today. In particular, family life was a completely different way of growing up or raising children. Books, even those written in the present day, can express these differences using examples from the past. One book in particular, The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, contains three families who exemplify the differences of raising children in that society to that of the present.…
The author's purpose in writing this piece was to show how happy he was with his family and wantinting to share that with his son and to us the reader.…
Assumptions leads to destruction. An assumption is basically believing something is true without actually having proof. In the book The Kitchen House assumptions is a huge theme throughout the book, characters in the book held judgement on things they didn’t know the full facts about. These assumptions caused them to make decisions they would have thought different about if they knew the truth.…
The story begins with Dina, a girl from a hardscrabble section of Baltimore with “boarded-up row houses the city had promised to renovate,” (210) relating to her reasons for moving to Japan. Aside from high yield economic opportunities that don’t exist in her neighborhood, she pines for a “loveliness” that Japan will offer through its ceremonious bowing, sashimi delicacies, calligraphy, and architecture. (211) Really what she is seeking is a respite from her former environment, where the creed is “Never advertise your poverty. Dress immaculately. Always smell good, not just clean.” (224) Once in Japan Dina soon finds herself in a community of people, also…
The theme expressed in this story is the primacy family. Success is measured by the quality of family life. Making money and having a prestigious career are important, but not as important as maintaing a happy home undergirded with love. Walter's eagerness to live a life of wealth brought not only him but his family down to a poor financial status. His action had a consequence, and in this case he was not the only one to pay for it. However, the family…
Connie is always dependent on the parents of her friends and satisfied with their kindness. In that case, she still faces a lack of interest in her person and in how she spends her time. Connie also cannot count too much on the care and interest of her father who “was away at work most of the time and when he came home he wanted supper and he read the newspaper at supper and after supper he went to bed” (Oates 109). The father, tired after all-day work only sporadically speaks to daughters and wife without considering it a necessity. Focuses on meeting the material needs of the family without bothering the emotional side of the life of daughters and wife.…
Family is a essential social unit consisting of parents and their children, The family is always considered as a group, even if they as dwelling together or not. In this essay I will explain the difference and seminaries of the family relationships. The following stories describe the difference and seminaries. In “ The Color of Family Ties, from the book Rereading American. The essay, The Color of Family Ties, has carried on the comparison in the difference of race, class, gender and elongated family involvement to Whites family, Blacks family and Latinos family to find their relationships between their kinships. This story describes gender, class, and race. The poem “Aunt Ida Pieces a Quilt” by Melvin Dixon is about a geriatric lady named Ida that makes a quilt for a boy named Junie who died from AVAILS. She acquires many different pieces of his apparel that denotes him and makes it into a quilt. This poem shows a bond between nephew and aunt. Every family is different yet alike. Even though there are different gender, Class and race when if comes to family theirs a value followed.…
Yoshimoto, Banana. “Newlywed”. The Art of the Story: An International Anthology of Contemporary Short Stories. Ed. Daniel Halpern. New York: Viking Press, 1999. 650-655. Print.…
In” A Raisin in the sun”, Lorriane Hansberry depicts many aspects of human nature, especially family. Family is expressed in different ways. Mama strongly believes in the importance of family throughout the book. She continues to try to keep them together by fulfilling their dreams before hers. As they go through trying times but come together as a family at the end of the play when they need to most. They are still strong individuals but together they prove they are a strong family.…
Across the decades, there have been countless examples of broken societies in literature . In these places, life has taken on a new meaning than what we know to be true today. These dystopian future novels are often dark, and there is almost always previous event in that timeline that would lead to reason why the system is set up in that particular way. Family is often a big theme in this type of book. Whether it be because that is what the government demands or reprimands, family is almost always an interesting aspect of futuristic/dystopian novels. However, when societies become too controlling or demanding, or when there is a major conflict that affects a large amount of people, the central theme of a whole, happy, and healthy family…
The colonization of America brought about many new ways of life: new living conditions, new skills to be learned, and new land to explore and settle. Relations with the natives provided food and basic skill sets, and it also paved the way for new colonists arriving in such a foreign land. However, life for colonists coming to settle America was no vacation. Depending on your family’s background and where you decided to settle, daily life was an adventure. In Virginia, rapscallions, who had never worked a day in their life, squandered their days drinking and gambling. New Hampshire set up actual town squares; churches, schools, town halls. Soon enough, however, a similar theme started to become more and more apparent as well as more and more concerning. Alcohol and excessive drinking became extremely prevalent in early Americans’ lives. There are many factors that led to such alcoholism, and many factors that led into the increasing numbers of Americans to embrace temperance. Taverns were believed, by the lower classes, to be nurseries of freedom. By the upper classes, they were believed to be seedbeds for rowdy, drunk, and subordinate colonists. Again, due to many factors, alcoholism witnessed an excessive peak as well as harsh opposition from temperance groups.…