Analysis of this graph shows that this is a first order reaction. This is because Log log([HXinf]-[HXt]) vs time yielded a straight line, characteristic of a first order reaction.…
You can also see the themes of divorce, political injustice, and child abuse quite often. In this specific novel, all of these themes are present in some form or another. Motherhood is present with Taylor taking care of Turtle and feminism is present by having all the main characters being female. You can also see divorce through Lou Ann’s divorce with Angel, while political injustice is represented by Estevan and Esperanza’s illegal status, and child abuse in present with Turtle and her scary past. In many of Kingsolver’s other books, including The Poisonwood Bible and Pigs in Heaven, she also conveys these…
The first example I want to discuss is when Barbara was working as a waitress at Hearthside. She and a few of her co-workers were talking about their housing situations, and her Gail was telling her about sharing a room. "Gail is sharing a room, and her friends roommate is flirting with her, making her go crazy, but she says if she didn't have a roommate the rent would be impossible alone" (Pg.25). Then there is the Haitian cook who lives with his girlfriend, and two other unrelated people" (pg. 25). Tina and her husband pay $60 per night to stay at a Day's Inn, and Joan who lives in her van (pg. 26). All of these individuals mostly live in these types of situations because they cannot afford to pay…
Fear, drink driving, family relationships, friendship, conflict, grief and loss are all important themes of this book. Choose two themes and describe/discuss how they are portrayed in the book. (We will work through an example answer in class)…
It is evident throughout both novels that the characters live in a life of poverty. Growing up Jeannette and her family were very poor and often found themselves jumping from place to place. “Later that night, Dad stopped the car out in the middle of the desert, and we slept under the stars. We had no pillows…”(Walls 18). This shows the poverty stricken life that the family lives, and the sacrifices that they have to make. Similarly, Sonny Hickam also finds himself living in a poverty filled mine town. “All around me, Coalwood was always busily playing its industrial symphony of rumbling coal cars, spouting locomotives, the tromping of the miners going to and from the mine. How could that ever end”(Hickam, Jr. 46)? This shows how mining has impacted the town and consumed the lives of everyone in it. It is clear that poverty is a reoccurring theme in both of these novels.…
Even though, the authors all portray lives in poverty they explain it in unique ways. Jeannette Walls describes her life in poverty; however, she also teaches life lessons throughout her memoir. For instance, when the Walls family moves to Welch, West Virginia the brick buildings are crowding in close on both sides of the street. Welch is shabby and worn out with a film of black coal dust covering store signs, sidewalks, and cars (Walls 134). Regardless the fact that the town is dirty and needs some improvements, the family is just happy to have somewhere to live end enjoy life together. On the contrary, Mark R. Rank also depicts lifestyles in poverty, yet he clarifies the causes and effects of poverty. To illustrate, he informs that events like losing jobs, having work hours cut back, experiencing a family split, or developing a serious medical problem all have the potential to throw households into poverty (Rank 2 of 3). In spite of the fact Mark R. Rank describes poverty stricken families, he does it in a contradictory way than Jeannette Walls. Furthermore, Jade Walker’s purpose of writing this report is to describe the deprived people’s living conditions, but also to encourage ways to improve homelessness. In particular, she says remedies for child homelessness should include: an expansion of affordable housing, education and employment opportunities for homeless parents, and…
the themes is society and class that is represented throughout the book where it mostly takes…
Lost Angels: Skid Row Is My Home is an investigative documentary that gives us the untold story of the homeless and disadvantaged living on Skid Row. Skid Row is a name given to fifty blocks radius in Downtown Los Angeles whose residents tends to have a lower income or are homeless. Many people view the homeless as being dirty, poor and even lazy; it is very rare that we wonder why how they came to be in such a predicament. For many on Skid Row their battles are mental illness and grave poverty. The documentary introduces us to eight different but very similar individuals living on Skid Row; they tell us their very different stories and then explain their similar experiences living on Skid Row. We meet a transgender Caucasian male, an African- American mother of three, an old Caucasian female and her African American “fiancé”, they all suffer from mental illness in one form or the other and there is even an ex Olympian who battled through substance abuse. The only difference between these people and us are certain circumstances and situations. The film just sheds light and gives understanding to the fact that yes they are homeless, yes they lie in the street but they are people just like me and you. Watching this film had me literally questioning why we are socialized to believe being homeless is demeaning and a social taboo.…
Themes of the book and the novel have similar ideas since poverty and wealth are both present. Rich men and poor men both have different values and outlooks on life depending on past experiences in their lifetime. The greatest wealth is to live content of…
The most prominent and significant similarity of both novels is the idea of racism. Entwined throughout the books, the theme of racism is the backbone, which reflects the hardships African Americans experienced throughout the 1960’s. In the novel, Coming of Age in Mississippi, the main character, Anne, and her family, are African Americans. Along with the other "black" plantation workers, her and her family live in shacks without electricity or indoor plumbing. On the contrary, the "white" family's houses have electricity and indoor plumbing. This is overbearing discrimination as the black families work unbelievably hard on the plantation just to live unsanitary while the white families live comfortably through them. In the novel The Help, the main character, Eugenia "Skeeter" Phelan, asks different black maids, referred to as the “help”, domestic questions. She discovers her friend’s attitudes about the "help” and her friend, Hilly Holbrook, made something for her home called a "Home Help Sanitation Initiative". This initiative is for separate bathrooms for black maids because they carry different diseases. Hilly's thoughts reflect extremely racial judgments. Treating the African Americans as though they are not people, she often depicts them as dogs or wild animals that are bringing diseases and infections into her house. Both novels involve the public having an opinion that African…
of the themes is that some of the people aren’t satisfied with the way they live. The motif of…
Even though one could argue powerlessness and the impossibility of the American dream are as strong in the story as loneliness, the evidence speaks for itself. Between Lennie's alienating condition, Curley's wife's lonesome situation, and emphasis upon migrant workers, the result is borderline indisputable: loneliness is perhaps the most unwavering theme of them…
The flat they all live in is crowded because there are 8 of them to share 3 bedrooms and a small lounge and kitchen. The lift in the flat is broken so the children can't go out to play and get exercise. Also when the lift isn't working the twins cannot attend the nursery, so they will not learn all the simple things you learn in nursery. The mother cannot leave the flat to shop for food, so they will have to eat less food for each meal to last them until she can get to the shops. Also their father cannot leave the flat because he has a severe disability and he has to stay in bed. He can’t even work because of it, and the mother can't work because she has to look after the children and Wayne too, so they have to live on benefits.…
For you to understand how big of an impact poverty has on people, we will quickly summarize Crane’s novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets. This is the story of a very poor family growing up in New York City. Mary, is the mother of Jimmie, Maggie, and Tommie. Mary has a husband, but he’s never home and spends most of the time being drunk. However, Mary isn’t any better. She’s also a belligerent drunk and physically, and verbally abuses her children when she is intoxicated. She even gets into brawls with her own husband in front of her children. Soon after she’s…
To understand the role of the poor in society, we must look at the home of the Wilsons and the events that occur there. First, the environment in which the home is situated represents the struggle the poor find themselves in. Fitzgerald describes…