Black also expresses the importance of taking control of anger, as he states when listing things to do before taking action. Before you take action: Calm yourself, Shift your emotions. If you get mad, use that anger as energy. ( Black 17) expresses the idea that having the ability to take control of emotion and using it to help you will help to keep everyone in the situation safe and unharmed, and explains how shifting emotions such as anger from using them for violence and destruction to controlling them and using anger to leave the emergency unharmed. The excerpt from the biography Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand is about a group of men stuck in the ocean after their plane crashed during World War II.…
Within paragraph eight of William F. Buckley Jr essay "Why Don't We Complain?" Buckley portrays the idea of "passive compliance" and "heedless endurance. "His thought expresses that there are things he brought into what should be known and how much exertion it take for the strength it takes to get a point over. I am for Buckley's circumstance.…
When I saw the prisoner step aside to avoid the puddle, I saw the mystery, the unspeakable wrongness, of cutting a life short when it is in full tide.” (Orwell 596) This revelation in thought by Orwell shows how a society’s sense of justice can change the moral character of a…
Growing up the lesson, was we are capable of so much with determination. That is broad and containing the Invisible Knapsack. Will begin to make all obstacles visible to the most advantage. This is a great imagery because it is not the fault of the individual rather to influence or education of miss learned privileges.…
Thus, the true problem in society is that the older generation is immensely underappreciated. Although they may have outdated ideals, or different values than today’s younger generation, their sacrifices and great contributions to the world should not pass by, unnoticed. This young generation tends to be very egocentric, and therefore, a majority of respect towards authority has diminished. A prime example of this behavior are the numerous riots taking place across America. If young and old generations can never see eye to eye, disrespect will only become stronger with each new…
"When I was done I rushed out of the building because I did not want these people to see me cry " (pg xvi). This extract is just one example from the introduction of the text which shows the use of an anecdote to emotionally manipulate readers to feel sympathy for Moore. The entire introduction is an anecdote about Moore's struggle to publish the book, the problems which Moore faced and his unwillingness to give up, positions readers to view him as a victim and agree with his views because of the sympathy they are positioned to feel for him. The use of anecdotes in descriptions promotes social activism; emotionally manipulating readers to feel sympathy for Moore and feel guilt for doing nothing when this one man has done so…
It is a universally renowned sentiment that when an individual is met with the face of injustice, standing up for oneself is known as the ultimate reflection of ones self-regard. This notion stifles a contrasting approach where one is to remain silent when facing prejudice individuals in order to portray superiority in the face of their words. However, this method of expression is often mistook as a lack of reverence and is therefore not seen as a clear form of resistance. Thus, In Night by Elie Wiesel it is portrayed that the external manifestation of rebellion in the face of injustice invokes empowerment and allows oneself and those around them to hold their integrity regardless of the conditions they are met with.…
All of us at one point in our lives are thrown into situations that are not easy, and we’re forced to steer through the disorder and chaos. Ralph Emerson said “To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.” In the essays “Salvation” and “Shooting an Elephant” authors Langston Hughes and George Orwell convey the similar message that anything of importance, can’t be forced on anyone, they rather have to find it for themselves.…
In a letter from Birmingham jail, Martin Luther King wrote these famous words to encourage protesters to fight oppression. “Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor, it must be demanded by the oppressed.” These words carried a significant meaning to people around the world, especially to the millions oppressed because their inability to speak up and take matters into their own hands. Audre Lorde, the author of “The Transformation of Silence into Language and Action,” reveals to the readers of a woman named Winnie Mandela. Through Mandela, Lorde is able to demonstrate that silence will only continue oppression, and oppression can only be stopped if the oppressed speaks up for themselves. Lorde’s argument of oppression through silence relates to Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by portraying the ideas of tyranny and freedom, which is also supported by my own portrayal of silence in the face of an oppressor.…
It also tells of how people often wait on others to take action instead on doing so themselves. He says this is because we are afraid to make our voices heard and afraid that someone will get their feelings hurt. He also says that when we do complain, we shouldn’t do so in a calm voice like you are scared but in a bold, demanding voice that lets the person know that you mean business. He says that Americans are not comfortable taking actions in difficult situations because we live in an age of technology where we rely on machines and computers to do things for us, but in earlier times, if we needed something we got up and did it.…
Weisel, a writer, understood that “there must never be a time when we fail to protest” (Wiesel). While protest on the streets is often looked down upon, protest literatures effectiveness is often hidden within the pages of the book. Protest literature, as evidenced by Climbing the Stairs, is an effective form of protest because of its ability to point out raw, unhindered truth buried under the deep cultural roots in an…
Ignorance and materialism negatively affects humans some way or another, and society only increases these lifestyles. Whether or not we believe it, ignorance and materialism is a daily part in our lives today; thus, we cannot live without it. We try to ease our problems by blindingly accepting society’s norms and trends. Because we cannot formulate our own ideals and ways of life, we live in a false sense of justice and peace. In Tony Hoagland’s “Hard Rain,” the speaker witnesses these faults in our behavior at a shopping mall; however, he, similarly, is not able to escape that reality. The larger meaning of this poem, that we have no sense of individualism and morality, is specified by the author’s usage of diction and the disappointing, humorous, and controversial tone he uses to prove it.…
“...Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented” This means that if you continue to stay silent, people will continue to be tormented, if you don’t stand to make a difference, the world will remain the same.…
Thoreau, Henry David. “Civil Disobedience.” The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Sixth Edition. Julia Readhead, Anne Hellman, Brian Baker. London, England. W.W. and Norton Company, 2003. 834-900. Print.…
In the beginning, the personal anecdote about the author not only acts as an attention grabber but also creates a mutual understanding between the author and the audience. After engaging the audience the author appeals to the readers’ logic by using statistics, quotations, and historical precedents to support his argument that if no collective action is taken to reduce the social gap, history would…