Where she was from. Kids. Husband. Circumstances include her husband’s cousin was accused of stealing turkeys so they beat him half to death. Ida and her husband grew tired of living unfairly and in fair. Ida mentally couldn’t take it. She was also pregnant with a child now and can’t live in the fear she has grown accustomed to. Explain her father’s death. Woman in society…always could hang with the guys and stood for what she believed. Quote on page 31.Explain the well incident. Explain Carter shooting. Living in constant fear was Ida’s challenge, which carried a cloud over her head, and now that her family was growing she grew tired. Ida’s journey was a process but mainly cause and affect. Insert quote to add illustration. Page 34,…
As the only woman on a ranch surrounded by men that view her as a temptress, Curley’s wife faces little to no chance of friendship. Despite Steinbeck’s portrayal, Curley’s wife emerges as a complex character through the quotation, “‘I get lonely’” (82). This declaration to Lennie shows Curley’s wife as more than the stereotypical enchantress, but as an actual person who possesses feelings, particularly loneliness. The line becomes noteworthy as the reader begins to notice the character of Curley’s wife developing more depth and feeling.…
Have you ever thought of having a world with no pain, loneliness, or love? Well in the book The Giver, by Lois Lowry Jonas never thought of a world with it. His world was perfect. Until the day he turned twelve. Jonas had been given a job to work with The Giver. All is well until JOnas has to have the things in life he never knew of, even though those emotions are why Jonas has become the person he did at the end of the book. The GIver shows how valuable emotions like pain, loneliness, and love can change a person.…
Consumed with the idea of having an “abundant” life, young Dorothy Day seeked happiness through men, partying, and smoking; however, in the end Day realized that all those things did not fill in the empty space in her heart. Many people today face the same problem Day dealt with- trying to fill in the missing piece in your life with something materialistic. Between guys and trying to earn a living, Day tried to fill the gap in her life. In the end I do beleive that Day reached an abundant life through the works of mercy. By living like Jesus would, Say found pure happiness in feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, and sheltering the homeless. Through the Corporal Works of Mercy day achieved her ultimate goal- a fulfilled life. For instance, in the last scene, Dorothy expects that most of her friends would leave her, but her co-workers decide to stick with her and embrace the arduous journey together.…
The story of J. D Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye, is a view into school student, Holden Caulfield’s life in the times leading up to his nervous breakdown. David Fincher’s The Social Network, is a recount showing the creation of Facebook, primarily from the view of Mark Zuckerberg. One of the personal dilemmas seen in both The Catcher in the Rye and The Social Network is loneliness. Salinger and Fincher explore loneliness using a number of techniques, including setting, costume, camera shots and characterization.…
Abramham Maslow explains motivation through a hierarchy of needs. He believes that humans are born with a desire to grow and reach self-actualization, but to do so must first gain physiological needs, safety needs, affiliation, and esteem. The landlady in Roald Dahl’s The Landlady portrays the characteristics of someone who has not achieved affiliation, the need for belonging and relationships. Loneliness is her prime motivator, everything she does steams from this. Loneliness can cause one of two things, and sometimes both things at the same time, to become predominate in a character. They become kind and/or dangerous. Loneliness is desperation filled with emptiness. This emptiness can cause people to do wonderful things, like become more…
Novelist Edith Whorton states that a novelist “must rely on what may be called the illuminating incident to reveal and emphasize the inner meaning” of the book. In the novel The Awakening by Kate Chopin, the illuminating episode is when Edna has an epiphany after swimming out into the sea. She comes to the realization that she can speak freely and share her emotions openly as she finds it liberating. This moment functions as a casement that reveals the overall meaning of the work as a whole that women should feel free to practice individuality over conformity and sexuality over repression.…
In the short story “A Story of an Hour”, Mallard is portrayed of being alone due to the “death” of her husband. That “alone” feeling starts to clear away as she notices that she was confined and followed everything that her husband told her to do. Even though Mallard was confined in a room, she starts to see how her husband was acting like a dictator and was moving Mallard as a puppet. At first, when she thought how freedom was coming towards, she dreaded it. But, as freedom arrives and enters her mind, it fills Mallard with an overpowering joy and comfort that she’s not controlled. Yet, she still experiences this mental and emotional freedom still in a small confined room all by herself when staring at the window. “She said it over and over…
There was a big deal with depression in the 1800’s because one who was taught to have a mental illness didn’t get the treatment they needed. Society didn’t believe mental illness was a problem so therefore family members secluded loved ones who might show signs of any mental illness from the outside world. They also had mental hospitals in which patients displaying mental illness where put in. Benjamin Rush and Dorothea Dix discovered that these institutions were mistreating many of the patients and acted more like jails. There were many writers with very controversial novels such as William Faulkner and Charlotte Gilman. These two were well known…
Explore the theme of lonliness and icolation in of mice and men. Notes page for gcse exam.SOPHIE HUGHES.…
In this chapter, Dorothy Lee’s reading gave us a good view of different types of cultures and the personal autonomy of the people .Lee believes that “the principle of personal autonomy is supported by the cultural framework" (lee,5) She explores this by comparing our Western society to several north American aboriginal societies. When we think of our society we are only free to do things to a limit. Whether that limit may be good or bad, otherwise our individual autonomy is restricted in this society. The key problem that Dorothy Lee is addressing in this reading is the conflict between individual autonomy and social structure. Lee presents different material from a number of different societies to show “how the principle of personal autonomy is supported by the cultural framework” (lee, 1). She shows that this conflict has been resolved in the aboriginal society. In this essay I will talk about the respect the Natives have for each other’s individual integrity. Lee says “In every society we find some organized social unit; but not everywhere does the social unit provide freedom to the individual or the opportunity for spontaneous functioning; nor do we find a value for sheer personal being” (Lee, 7). In particular I will show how this situation has been resolved, when she talks about child bearing in the Wintu Indian society.…
Loneliness and companionship is imminent throughout the book. It starts from the beginning when George sets the tone by repeating to Lennie that life on a ranch is the loneliest life there is, for example Steinbeck states “Guys like us that work on ranches are the loneliest guys in the world’. This shows us that men on a ranch rarely have any companionship or safety however George and Lennie have each other and this contradicts the idea that ranch men are always lonely. As the story develops we see that there are other characters that experience loneliness one point in the story like Candy, Crooks and Curley’s wife all confess to it. Crooks and Curley’s wife find a companion within Lennie and share their fears for example with Crooks, Steinbeck states ‘don’t make no difference who the guy is, longs he's with you. I tell ya, I tell ya a guy gets too lonely an' he gets sick". This shows the effects that loneliness can have on a person and Crooks admits that he is extremely lonely and companionship of his kind is impossible. Also another lonely character is Curley’s wife, she is forbidden to talk to anyone but Curley however instead she approaches the ranch hands by looking for Curley as an excuse to talk to them. Only result of this is that she becomes more disliked and Curley gets more jealous. Unfortunately her loneliness leads to her untimely death by making the error of confiding in Lennie and teasing him. This all leads up to George’s decision to shoot Lennie as he knows that the hope of such companionship with Lennie dies as the cycle will be repeated and it seems that George’s original belief becomes true as he shall now walk through life alone.…
Many forms of behavior can be better understood if one recognizes them as merely variations of basic human nature and personality. Because of this, it is necessary to have a general theory of human nature, personality and behavior before one try to examine any specific variation. Dorothy Dandridge responded very strongly to the emotional tone and atmosphere around her, and can be dominated by her fluctuating and unpredictable moods. Dandridge often appears irrational to others because she could not always explain the reason or source of her feelings. Her feelings and emotions were something of a mystery .It was often difficult for her to share what she was feeling with others. She frequently withdrawal from the world and needed a healing, peaceful environment in order to blossom and come out of her own world.…
Both “Up” and “Dorothy Day” share many similarities to “The Road to Emmaus.” All three are stories of a spiritual journey, all going through these journeys in different ways. However, all three go with others through the journey. They a mentor joins and teaches them. Following that, there usually is an invitation for the mentor to become more involved in a person’s life. The teaching becomes an “aha” moment, where the people on the journey now understand something they did not before. Finally, the people tell others what they have heard. These elements make up a spiritual journey and each story studied has followed these elements.…
The article illustrates how the novel Mrs. Dalloway depicts the effects of World War One. One of the major topic is the war has “created a parallel between time and deaths in one’s intense consciousness”. Septimus in Mrs. Dalloway has experienced the dangers of war, after witnessing the death of his best friend in trenches, he realizes how vulnerable life is, and death can happen at any time. He is sensitive to time passage that every time the Big Ben strikes, he would think of the horrifying war, and he would recognize death and aging is inevitable, so he chooses to end his life to be freed from this fear. “Clarissa is the only character who comes to terms with death and the fleetingness of time”, she is pleased to the hear the news that Septimus…