advised him while he was sacrificing, to beware of a danger which would not be delayed…
In My Favorite Chaperone by Jean Davies Okimoto, Maya Alazova, a young immigrant, and her family must adjust to life as immigrants in America. Her younger brother Nurzhan faces bullying at school for his accent, Maya struggles to fit in with her American peers, and Mama and Papa learn to accept that American culture is different than in their home country of Kazakhstan. Being an immigrant in America is as challenging today as it has always been. No matter where you’re from, you face discrimination for not speaking English, or your accent, or not being accustomed to American culture. This was true for European and Chinese immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and is true of Asian, Middle Eastern, and Hispanic immigrants today.…
A dictionary defines the word addictive as being: wholly devoted to something, a slave to another and in a state of wanting more.…
Each of the passages within the passage explain a tragedy and how the people involved experience trauma and try to avoid the issue. The message this story is trying to…
Those two lines reference the overall theme of not submitting to death or,in other words, to not give up. In addition to, the phrases “dying of the light,” and “good night” are metaphors for death, this only proves my statement further. Seeing how…
Within this passage, both the Miller and the Host have two quotes. The Miller begins both of his quotes in the name of God saying, “By armes,” (line 17) and “By Goddes soule” (line 24). These references to religion portray the Miller’s contradicting attitudes and the irony of his drunken insistence up telling a noblest tale. The Host’s first dialogue of the passage, speaking to the Miller, repeats the word, “Abide,” which portrays his desire to keep the story-telling running smoothly. The Host acquiesces to the Millers demands in his second quote, “Tel on, a devele way!” (line 26). This quote, referencing the devil, rather than God, shows the recurrent themes of this passage, which are the contrast and ironic disparity between the Host and the…
One of the goals in life is for people to learn important lessons from other people and to also learn important lessons from themselves. Life is like a bumpy road and it tends to have many obstacles, which can lead to people not doing the right thing. Sometimes, people cannot even tell if they are doing the wrong thing. Imagine if in heaven people could learn lessons from other connected or related people in their lives. In The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom, both Eddie and I have been affected by the lessons of there are no random acts in life, lives are sacrificed to save others, and forgiveness and letting go of anger.…
The ethnography The Afterlife Is Where We Come From by Alma Gotlieb (2004) explores the culture surrounding babies in the Beng village in West Africa. Gotlieb situates the Beng village at a place in the Ivory Coast that is somewhat in-between: it exists at the border of two different ethnic and geographic regions. The Beng people are forced to exist within a cultural membrane; allowing the practices of other cultures to flow in and out while containing their beliefs within the boundaries of the village. The geographic location of the Beng village inspires the Beng people to flexibly accommodate outside practices into their lives while maintaining their traditions and values. This ideology is reflected in their appropriation of Western medicine…
In Chronicles of a Death Foretold, Gabriel Marquez illustrates an elaborate story incorporating the invaluable theme of theatricality. The excessive pride expressed by the males in the Colombian society indicates their wish to stand out and be prominent. The dramatic actions taken by men to preserve their honor dramatically involves the whole community in their affairs. As well as the male bravado put on in the society, where the theatrical actions garners attention from the community. The theatricality of the men is shown often in everyday Colombian society, so they could gain significance within the community due to the cultural standards.…
Have you ever imagined what it’s like to live in the afterlife or even if there is one. Well in the book, The five people you met in heaven, an old retired war veteran finds out that there infact is a heaven. In the book the five people you met in heaven, written by Mitch Albom, is an Inspirational fiction book that talks about how a man named Eddie, who has lived a very uninspired life, witnesses his life flash before his eyes. The book takes place by a pier where Eddie spent most of his life working at an amusement park named Ruby Pier. But on Eddie's 83rd birthday, a tragic accident kills him as he tries to save a little girl from a falling cart.…
Humans are desirous of numerous things. Money, power, pleasure, satisfaction, and surprisingly, celebrities are all things that lead to obsession. As people focus into these things, the result is utter and blatant madness, and eventually becomes the destruction of themselves and others. In the novel Misery by Stephen King, the mental instability of Annie Wilkes and the imprisonment of Paul Sheldon shows how obsession can lead to the destruction of others.…
A significant poem by Claude McKay's "If We Must Die", he was a Jamaican-American author who advocated black self-determination and believed that African-Americans should rely on themselves to become independent and free. He was born on September 15, 1889, and died on May 22, 1948. McKay's poem presents a significant material in comparing and contrast a good impression of his belief. And also my point of view and my personal experiences on his poem's "If We Must Die". Throughout the poem, he states frequently that blacks must willing to die for their rights.…
Racism was considered to be the norm during the early 1900s. The many horrors that came along with were published frequently by both white and black newspapers. Claude McKay was all too familiar with the situations that came about from this ongoing race war. One of his more well-known poems, “If We Must Die”, was published during the summer of 1919, better known as the “Red Summer”. This name was given for this time period to symbolize the blood of the many people that we killed.…
The poem “Because I Could Not Stop for Death” written by the well-known poet Emily Dickinson takes us along the deceased speaker’s memory of their journey to their death. The most abundant literary term throughout the poem is the use of symbolism. Dickinson uses various literary terms to convey the idea to us, that death is something that is inevitable and death’s arrival is for only death himself, as personified in the poem, to know. The speaker’s death was a slow, smooth journey rather than an unpleasant, sudden death, which we know based on how the speaker calmly describes her journey from beyond the grave. Dickinson conveys the idea that the speaker embraced death and was ready to receive their fate.…
As people read fairy tale or romantic novels, they often observe a tale full of adventure seasoned with conflict; however, other people, such as scholar Marcia K. Lieberman, ask, “to what extent [do] they reflect female attributes” (259)? The short story “Happy Endings,” by Margret Atwood takes the reader for a ride through a myriad of scenarios: which consist of the American dream, as depicted in part A; the real-life endings, seen in parts B and C; and other non-typical scenarios viewed in scenes D, E and F. A common theme among the parts is the depiction of the romantic fantasy. The romantic fantasy depends on women being passive and domestic, ensuring that women remain without autonomy and…