Melba Beals in Chapter 2 has went through a lot. The Brown vs Board of Education was sent to the Supreme Court so her school teacher sends the class home early and told them to hurry. On her way home a man sexually assaulted her and almost rapes her if it wasn’t for Marissa saving her. In chapter 4, Melba attempts to go to Central High School for the first time and it doesn’t go well for her. When Melba and her mother got there she could see a group of white people crowding around Elizabeth Eckford and trying to stop her from entering the school.…
In the book Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott, she writes an excerpt, Shitty First Drafts, which is about the impact and importance of the first drafts of writing. Anne explains in the beginning of this excerpt that all writers write shitty first drafts and the drafts get better as you write more and work on the writing more. Lamott claims that “writing is not rapturous,” she explains that the only way that she can write anything well is to write a very bad first draft and just work on fixing that. She explains that sometimes you just have to type and get your ideas written out to be able to write a good piece of work. Once someone has been writing for so long, they have to have the ability to be able to just trust their writing process and understand that the first draft isn’t going to be perfect. Nothing is perfect on the first try, you have to keep working at it. Sometimes the first draft will be the worst thing someone thinks they have ever written, but they just have to go back to it and try to make it better and revise what is wrong. A writer has to start somewhere and they work from there. Just because the first draft is a bad draft doesn’t mean that the final work will be terrible. The first draft is the terrible draft, the second draft is the slightly better draft that has been picked through lightly to better, and the final draft is the “dental draft.” The dental draft is the draft that you really pick through and make sure that everything is perfect. In other words, the final product is checked “dentally” to make sure that it is “healthy” so that the final product is perfect. Lamott’s entire excerpt is just explaining that whether or not your first draft is perfect or not, the final product will definitely be better and more acceptable.…
In the thought provoking novel, Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich explores the life of low-wage workers in America’s society. While speaking with an editor one day, the question of poverty and how American’s survive off six and seven dollars an hour played in Ms. Ehrenreich’s mind. So as a journalist, Ehrenreich goes undercover working several minimum wage jobs and tries to survive off the earnings. Seeing and living the lives of these poverty-stricken workers, Ehrenreich learns that hard work doesn't always lead to success and advancement in today's society.…
The part that standouts to me the most was when Barbara says, “...I rejected the idea, even after all my upper middle-class friends had, guilty and as covertly as possible, hired help for themselves, because this is just not the kind of relationship I want to have with another human being…” (pg. 91). The author disagrees with the idea of having a maid to clean her house and not wanting to have this sorta connection with other human being. I would remember this because Ehrenreich has viewed the maid as human not a slave. Ehrenreich has understand the mind of a maid and knows how stressful it could be. A maid's body would rot quickly and consequences on health can be later shown as she grows older. Most maid’s have gone to work on upper class…
If I didn't know any better, I'd say she'd used muti on you. - Everything she says, goes. - That's not true.…
Barbara Ehrenreich is the author of Nickel and Dimed on (not) Getting By In America. It is about how lower class people cannot make it in America because they do not make enough money to provide for themselves. If anyone could interest a reader it would Ehrenreich because of her style. At times she can be offensive with her hyperboles, satire and metaphors but I could not help my self from turning page after page. Ehrenreich paints a vivid picture in the reader’s head using a broad and appealing diction. She truly makes the reader feel like low wageworkers are isolated from the world because of the yearly income they bring in.…
In a narrative format, discuss the key facts and critical issues presented in the case.…
Matthew Crawford and Barbara Ehrenreich both obtained a higher education; Crawford with a PhD in political philosophy and Ehrenreich in biology. The two are very educated individuals who were now experiencing, "lower class jobs" yet they have very different attitudes toward the line of work that they pursue. Barbara enrolls in working at a restaurant named Jerry's, she tells the reader all about her horrid experience. She applied to work at a restaurant like Jerry's as an experiment, to see how others live, the brutal conditions they undergo. She speaks negatively about the job, expressing the terrifyingly horrible conditions employees face on the daily. While Barbara experiences a nightmare, Mathew Crawford dips into the line of mechanics,…
Not being in the lower class is a privilege to the people who witness how difficult it is to live in those conditions and imagine what it would be like to live off of lower class jobs. Barbara Ehrenreich saw this and decided that she wanted to experience what it would be like and experience the hardship that they push through. Barbara discusses the difficulty of living in the lower class with the use of her first point of view/ honesty and her use of figurative language. In the novel, “Nickel and Dimed”, Barbara Ehrenreich uses a sarcastic, dramatic tone to support her argument that people who live in the lower class have a difficult time getting by with the present American economy.…
In 1791, the United States Constitution implemented the Bill of Rights to protect the rights of the individuals by listing specific prohibitions of governmental power. The Bill of Rights consisted of the first ten amendments of the United States Constitution, including the Sixth Amendment—the right to counsel. The Betts v. Brady case, Gideon v. Wainwright case, and Shelton v. Alabama case, each demonstrated how individuals wrongfully suffered due to the lack of appointed counsels. Following these three significant court cases over the past 80 years, the Supreme Court set a precedent for all cases to follow, by ensuring the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right which has led to a more just system—one which acknowledges equal rights of all individuals,…
The four-distinct important event in Anita’s life in1961 Anita’s a 12-year young girl who was leaving in the bad tension in the Dominic Republic under the Trujillo dictatorship. She was struggling with life, becoming a teenager and on top of that, she had grown upon faster. She watches her cousin; Garcia girl abruptly leaves for the U.S with their parents. Aniela’s own family are now the only ones occupying the extended family compound. Alvarez group relays the terror of the Trujillo where Anita parent wants to protégé her.…
The experiences she had, the people she met, were ones found in the everyday life. Her humorous tales of working in the real world both inspire me and frighten me. While on one hand it shows kindness like when Ehrenreich explains her co worker Gail, “dips into her own tip money to buy biscuits and gravy for an out-of-work mechanic” (pg. 20). Seeing the kindness of Ehrenreich and her fellow workers during her experiment goes to show that despite living a hard life themselves, many are still full of compassion for others. Coming from a lower class family, I understand how easy it is to give when you have little to nothing yourself. My mother always taught me the importance of giving, no matter what. The more negative parts can be found in Ehrenreich’s brutal reality. “You lose your job, your car, or your babysitter. Or maybe you lose your home because you’ve been living with a mother or a sister who throws you out when her boyfriend comes back…” (pg. 52). While Ehrenreich herself lived a prodigal lifestyle, this experiment taught the valuable lesson of the hardships faced by minimum wage workers. Being stuck in that life means constant hardships faced. Like I mentioned in the beginning, the primary problem I saw came before the experiment itself. Her unwillingness to experience the true life of a minimum wage worker highlights the largest problem America currently faces. The higher classes see minimum wage workers…
I’ve never wrote in a diary nor have a planned on it, but I feel that my experience should be shared with everyone. My name is Edith Goldberg. I was born 1928 in Teschenmoschel for most of my life which is a small village near Kaiserslautern, Germany. My family were farmers that lived in a small village of about 200 people. The village had a very small Jewish community… It used to be bigger, but over time people either had left or died. From what I remember I had a normal, happy childhood with my parents and sister. I remeber my family and I would be hay-making in the summer and tobogganing in the winter. My family always stuck to the Jewish traditions. Man, Those were the goodtimes. I also remembers a time that wasn’t all that good, which…
Precis of Gilman, Charlotte, Perkins “Mrs. Beazley’s Deeds.” In Barbara Solomon’s The Haves And Have-Nots (386-400). New York: New York / New American Library.…
In the play Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare uses a metaphor to figuratively express Romeo’s feelings of sadness from his heart being broken by Rosaline. During Act 1, scene 4, Romeo and his friends were “invited” to a capulet’s party. Romeo was in a state of sorrow because Rosaline turn down his love. Mercutio wants to comfort him and lift his spirit. Mercutio asked Romeo to dance, but Romeo did not move an inch and tells Mercutio, “Not I, believe me. You have dancing shoes with nimble soles; I have a soul of lead so stakes me to the ground I cannot move”(Shakespeare 805). Romeo’s shoes were compared to lead. The metaphor is most effective because it directly compares the two nouns giving the readers a better understanding of what is happening.…