A community is a place where people around supposed to be able to live and thrive together. When one thinks of a community, the image that most likely is visualized is one of a place where each person lives harmoniously with all the other members of that community. While this may be the typical image of a community, it is not the realistic view. In reality communities can share both good and bad aspects. In Place Matters: Metropolitics for the Twenty-First Century Peter Dreier, John Mollenkopf, and Todd Swanstrom make the argument that the place a person lives ultimately matters over all else; the place which a person lives effects the choices that that he/she makes and determines his/her ability to obtain a high quality of life.…
Scott Peck, author of The Different Drum: Community and Making Peace, describes community as "people living together in both freedom and love." Communities cannot be formed around people (individualists) who are busy satisfying their own needs first and who are not willing to work hard to make love work. Upon entering this class I realized that a community is not an automatic thing. It does not just appear out of thin air. A group must work together to build bonds between each other. The community in which we are trying to build upon is compiled of many different types of people varying in age, race, sex, class, career, etc. It is going to take some time to build the trust, communication, freedom, and love that we need to form a community.…
In the middle of the novel Johnny is shown as more responsible through the quote "we're going back to turn ourselves in" [Pg 87] Johnny's statement shows that he takes responsibility for own actions; it also shows that he is not afraid of the consequences for his deeds. Also in the middle of the novel Johnny is shown as being brave through the quote ""Hey Ponyboy!" I hadn't realized Johnny had been right behind me all the way."[Pg 91] This shows that Johnny will follow you to the ends of the earth just to help out a friend. It also demonstrates that he is willing to risk his own life to save someone else's.…
Johnny is Ponyboy's best friend and the 'pet' of the Greasers. He's 16 years old, and lives with his alcoholic and abusive mother and father. Johnny was jumped and beat up by a Soc wearing heavy rings. Ever since then, Johnny has been paranoid about the Socs and always carries a switchblade. In the story Johnny uses his switchblade to kill a soc member named Bob because they where drowning Ponyboy in a fountain and where getting ready to beat Johnny up. Johnny knew they needed to get out of the city and so they went to Dally to get help. Dally a member of the gang gave them a gun, and told them to go to a church on top of Jay Mountain. At the church all they did was read, “Gone with the Wind”, play poker, and smoke. But at the church Ponyboy realizes that Johnny is different from the gang, just like him because he knows that not anyone in the gang is willing to take time and look at the sunset. Well after five days, Dally goes to the church and takes them to eat. They stopped to eat at Dairy queen and Johnny tells Dally, “We’re goin’ back and turn ourselves in.” Then Dally says,”Johnny, I ain’t mad at you. I just don’t want you to get hurt. You don’t know what a few months in jail can do to you. Johnny, you get hardened in jail. I don’t want that to happen to you. Like it happened to me.” Johnny then said ”Would you rather have me living in hide-outs for the rest of my life, always on the run?” Dally never answered and they went back to the top of Jay Mountain. Once they got there they saw the church on fire and Johnny and Ponyboy got out of the car immediately and…
Ponyboy was the youngest of the gang while Johnny was the gang's little pet. In the beginning Ponyboy gets jumped by the Socs and is extremely scared, this changes him because now Ponyboy is more aware of how cruel the Socs are. Johnny was changed early in his life when his parents neglected him at an early age. Ponyboy and Johnny accidentally fell asleep at a outside theater, Johnny’s parents wouldn’t care but Darry would. Because of this Ponyboy rushes home then gets in trouble by Darry, so he runs away.…
He comes from an extremely abusive home and needs the greaser gang just as much as they needed him. He needs them for protection and a sense of purpose. While the gang needs him because Johnny gives them a sense of purpose and justification of their violence without Johnny, the gang would be next to nothing. Johnny has big black eyes, a tanned face, jet-black hair with grease in it and has a slight build. Due to his father constantly beating him and his mother who always ignores him the greasers are always looking out for Johnny and trying to protect him. Dally who is the leader of the greasers especially watches out for Johnny, in return he hero worships Dally. Throughout the novel Johnny changes at various times. First a usually mild and quiet Johnny murders Bob and then takes control of the situation proven by when he told Ponyboy to go to Dally knowing he will get them out of trouble and when he goes out and gets supplies. Later on he changes in his relationship with Ponyboy, during their five-day stay in Windrixville they both grow extremely close, even closer than they were…
It is a term inclusive of both physical and nonphysical factors. The physical factors include the people in our town, the town’s infrastructure, its services, its conditions such as level of sanitation, and more. The nonphysical factors include the amount of money earned by the population, the interaction and support the town offers, and other social determinants. This is a broader definition of community than offered by the documentary, Unnatural Causes. Unnatural Causes does not explicitly define “community” but shows through many examples that a community is one’s immediate surroundings, predominantly the group of people by which someone is surrounded. From watching the videos, a community to me became more than what is around someone’s house; it became everyone and everything that affects a group of people, whether connected through geography or…
Community. Aggregate of people sharing space over time within a social system; groups of aggregates with power relations, and needs, or purposes (Nies & McEwen, 2011).…
Johnny felt as if no cared and that even if he lived in a gang his parents wouldn’t do anything. Another example is when Darry hits Ponyboy for being late home and Ponyboy runs away. Darry…
He was small, tan, and had black eyes and black hair. He was a nervous, suspicious, and quiet type of person. Johnny was the one who always got jumped by the Socs. Johnny’s parents don’t love him. Johnny wanted to run away from his house.…
Community: Social groups of any size whose members reside in a specific locality, share government, and often have a common cultural and historical heritage. A social, religious, occupational, or other group sharing common characteristics or interest and perceived or perceiving itself as distinct in some respect from the larger society within which it exist ( Stanhope & Lancaster, 2012).…
First of all, Johnny overcame is lifelong fear in order to save his pal, Ponyboy. Johnny had brutal and tragic past. Johnny’s parent abused Johnny every single day. Johnny was also brutally beaten up by the socials. “Johnny’s face was cut up and bruised and swollen, and there was a wide gash from his temple to his cheekbone.” (pg 32) Johnny was covered with blood and he was threatened to death by the socials. Despite this hurting past, Johnny stood against the socials. When Ponyboy was drowning by the socials at the park, Johnny stood against the socials and stabbed Bob, who was the formal leader of the social gang. This is one heroic quality Johnny has. Not only the hero should be able to fight and defeat the villain, the hero should be able to fight and overcome his/her own fear. By overcoming their fear, they will grow, learn and eventually become stronger and invincible.…
He dreams of “‘...someplace without greasers or Socs, with just people’”(42). He can see beyond social ranking and sabotage, instead preferring a world without labels. He can even tell that the abuse he suffers isn’t permanent, and chooses to live away from his parents. Johnny is one of the younger members of Ponyboy’s gang, but he is smart enough to see that his misfortune was never caused by the Socs. Johnny learns that he doesn’t need the acceptance of his family or of his fellow greasers, and decides to make a leap of faith that will give him the freedom he has always desired. Johnny killed Bob not out of hate for Socs, but in order to save Ponyboy’s life. This showed incredible awareness and sincerity for his friends, which is very heroic. Later in the novel Johnny saved multiple kids’ lives by pulling them out of a burning building. He was “...red marked from falling embers and sweat streaked, but he grinned…” showing he wasn’t afraid of doing the right thing (79). If he never went into the building, he wouldn’t have died and nobody would have forced him to help. The reason he ran back in was to try to compensate for killing Bob and forcing Ponyboy to be on the run with him. This was a sign that Johnny was mature enough to sacrifice his life in order to protect other innocent ones. His complete and utter respect and selflessness earned him a title in the newspaper as a hero, and on his deathbed he wasn’t afraid to leave. Johnny’s love for his closest friends caused him to die peacefully and with a cleared name, which he earned even when he didn’t think he…
According to the Webster’s Dictionary the definition of community is a group of people who live in the same area, have several things in common or a group of different nations. Having a community is common in a work place. Several people work together for forty or more hours a week. These people have at least their place of employment in common and there can be several different parts of the company that come together often for varying reasons. This is what a community is.…
Roald Dahl’s short story Poison weaves an intricate web of emotions, including anger, fear and embarrassment. Its title certainly embodies more than simply the snake’s venom, though it may seem that way on the surface. The lesson of the story may seem trivial, such as “be mindful of your surroundings” or “be thankful of those helping”. But the true moral of the story lies in the parched and barren desert of racism, and the effect of the British colonization on the people of India.…