Sometimes not all people have hope and are happy but other people that are spread that to them. Some of this happens in the historical fiction book Fever 1793 written by Laurie Halse Anderson. There could be many options about this like it couldn't affect another person. But I believe that my reason is the one that makes the most sense.…
In Tim Winton’s collection of short stories Minimum of Two, Jerra and Rachel Nilsam are ordinary people who we may see on the street and the battles that they face are battles that we ourselves may fight. Relationships and financial stability provide a constant distraction and having a baby adds to the emotional burden. When faced with adversity it is the support and understanding that we receive from our family that helps us to survive and carry on.…
Like Tanner, Wiley seems to paint real people whereas Lawrence’s creations seem more cartoonlike. Wiley and Lawrence are similar in that neither of them have scenic portraits; Tanner creates landscape too. Wiley’s paintings portray men in a stance that shows strength, courage, and demands respect and honor. Wiley draws attention to the individual by placing him in the center and enhancing the background with a design that is “popping” to the eye. Wiley, Lawrence, and Tanner all create art about African American…
Bonnie Smith does achieve most of the stuff she set out to do in her book such as illuminating the evolution of sexism in western historiography and the varying definitions of masculinity and femininity. To demonstrate her points, Bonnie Smith uses naïve tales of queens and famous ladies of the past to show how women were viewed as superficial and trivial in the past. She uses this to analyse women’s work and to show their amateur status in historical studies. Bonnie Smith used the language of sexuality to show how it became crucial for breakthroughs for women in the study of history and how it helped women to be seen as credible in this field and not just incapable. She encourages thinking about historical practice by applying the gender issues…
Ernest James Gaines was born in Oscar, Louisiana on a plantation in 1933. Of African American heritage, he was a good sport with his family and understood that hard work was a necessity in life. At the young age of only nine he aided his parents in the field working for fifty cents a day. He looked up to his handicap aunt, Augustine Jefferson, as she was his role model in his early youth. She inspired him and opened his eyes to setting a strong path for the generations to come. His mother and step father uprooted and moved to California when Gaines was fifteen. This was a great opportunity for his passion to read and write since the public library was for all races. The lack of African American study or authors pushed him even more to fill the shelves with the history of his race. At seventeen he sent his first novel to a publisher, but this was soon rejected and sent back. Later in his life he rewrote this and sent it again. While attending San Francisco State College he wrote a short story that was published in 1956. Two years later after graduating he studied creative writing at Stanford University until 1959. Gaines has written many short stories, novels, and has won many of awards as well, including the National Books Critic Circle Award. He was given most of his attention from the public after he published Of Love and Dust in 1967. Four years later The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman declared him as a literary icon for American fiction.…
In the short story "The House on Mango Street" Sandra Cisneros unfolds her childhood memories where she and her family struggled with poor living conditions on the way to their own house, and she seems to suffer from it more than anyone of the family. When one day they finally get the house of their own and her family seems to be ready to settle with it, she continues suffering because it 's not "the house we 'd thought we 'd get" (501), the one she imagined and built up in her dreams. At that point Cisneros obtains her dream to be fulfilled: she decides that whatever happens, she must have the house of her dream. This difference between her dream and reality is quite obvious and seems to upset her a lot; however, the impact of it is tremendous because it caused her to obtain the energy necessary for a dream 's fulfillment.…
Is “The Medicine Bag” and “Apache Girl” the same or different? It is important to learn about Indian traditions and culture because it is important to learn about the people that came to this world before you. “The Medicine Bag” and “Apache Girl” compare to each other and contrast from each other.…
Clara Brown was an African-American woman who was a born a slave in the early 1800s. Although she was separated from her family in her mid-30’s due to a slave auction, Brown’s kind-hearted nature drove her to serve as a well-respected community leader. She was the first African-American woman to venture to Colorado during the gold rush. Her economic gains were used to aid other former slaves.…
Has someone ever given you their opinion on something that made you second guess or change your initial thoughts and feelings? When someone has an opinion from a different perspective and has valid reasons you could not believe in your initial thoughts. Their opinion on a certain topic could be the complete opposite of yours, which in the end you could be fully persuaded onto the other side of the argument. Also, by doing simple research on a topic could influence you to change your thoughts because you are becoming more educated on a topic that interested you. Finding out new perspectives and different ideas on a concept could force you to form a new unique opinion. In Ernest Hemingway’s short story “Hills like White Elephants” and Kincaid’s…
In this piece Aspects of Negro Life: From Slavery to Reconstruction (1934), Douglas is expressing the Negro movement by showing the transition of African Americans from his own experienced. He is showing his political activism and artwork, and revealed ideas and values given during Harlem Renaissance. The 1920s and 1930s brought changes to the lives of many African Americans. They migrated north, trying to escape from slavery, racial prejudices and economic hardships, but also to try to attain social and economic status. This migration transformed the streets of Harlem, New York, and gave…
A fresh, personal, bottom-up approach to the women’s labor movement in the early 20th century…
Her work is a beautiful combination of collage and assemblages her work is mostly inspired by old vintage photographs and things she has found from flea markets and bargain sales. She finds these old photos and the people in them are the inspiration. Her work is based on forgotten history and it is up to her imagination to create a story about a person in the photograph. She believes that there is an endless possibility which is what makes her work so interesting and inventive.…
“I think a hero is any person really intent on making this a better place for all people”, Maya Angelou. This quote says everything I think of heroism a person just trying to make the world a better place for people. Heroism is someone who puts others before him/herself and is caring about others and what others think. This is a great quote and it is true some people try to make the world a better place and some don't.…
Helen Keller’s, “The Story of My Life” is a look of her early life and how she remembers it. She describes how she became blind and deaf, her early life, her family, and how she communicated despite her disabilities. Although she was timid about writing her life story, she becomes very creative and more open as she grows older and writes more of her story. Even though she can remember very little of things she saw and heard, she describes everything in much detail.…
The book, The Awakening explains about a woman true wish to find her inner self. As the journey to find herself becomes an issue among friends and family. While she battles the stereotypical standard of woman during the time in the 1890s. The main character whom is Edna Pontellier's, is a wife that lives a life of luxury. In a Creole society that is upper-class that she’s lives with her husband and two sons. As the story takes off in Grand Isle, as the family is vacationing for the summer. The summer that begins Edna's process of "awakening" and self-identify that soon lead to a selfish decision.…