and a smile new American nose” to be an appealing line (Paragraph one).
and a smile new American nose” to be an appealing line (Paragraph one).
In her essay, Scar, Amy Tan analyzes and speaks about several members of An-mei’s family. She spends most time talking about her mother and grandmother named Popo. When An-mei was very young, her mother was shunned and disowned by the family. For as long as An-mei could remember, her mother was even called a ghost by Popo. An-mei grew up with her brother, Popo, auntie, and uncle in a large house in Ningpo. The relationships and personalities of An-mei, her mother, and Popo can all be seen and analyzed throughout the entire story.…
Some things/objects are more than just that, it can have a sense of identification with it. Which is exactly what Boy 21 by Matthew Quick does. The main theme is identity, it helps you find and build your own while reading about people who are struggling to find theirs as well. Finley, a kid who traditionally keeps to himself and focuses on basketball, is asked by his coach to take an all-star basketball player obsessed with space under his wing.…
Reggie Miller. Record Breaking. Crippled. For most of you in the audience, when you think or talk of Reggie, 1 of 3 things comes to your head, UCLA, the Indiana Pacers, or 3 pointers. But did you know that as a child, Reggie was born with deformities in his hips that restricted his walking?…
“Recitatif” is a story about Twyla and Roberta; two characters of different race that accidently meet every couple of years. From the onset of the story, Morrison introduces the story with a racist thought from Twyla, stablishing the story’s main topic is race. The story in general is to get the reader to contemplate on the significance of the story. She does this by never unveiling the race of either character. Instead she uses various social codes to help the reader identify the race of each character. Also, “Morrison has explored the experience and roles of black women in a racist and male dominated society. Besides revealing the hurt caused by racial discrimination and segregation to the black women, she has also described their inner psychological world twisted by the dominated white society” (Li-Li, WANG). Furthermore, Maggie is also another significant character. Twyla and Roberta detested Maggie and thought Maggie deserved all the hate and suffering. Most importantly, “Recitatif” is a “work exposing society’s unspoken racialized codes” (Stanley, Sandra Kumamoto). Therefore, the message Morrison is reflecting is the issue that lies in our society. In…
Gifted author of Fish Cheeks, Amy Tan, assures young girls that being different is not only acceptable, but also advantageous. Rhetorical strategies-such as imagery, tone, diction, and appeals (logos, ethos, pathos)-were the brushes with which she painted a portrait of self-acceptance for teenage girls everywhere. Tan uses a sympathetic tone to relate to the awkward teenage reader that is experiencing the same thing and the nostalgic adult reader that has experienced.…
“Deliberate” by Amy Uyematsu is a satire of American teenagers who adopt African-American youth culture in a bid to deny their own backgrounds.…
The author certainly set himself up for women to respond to his attack on the female race; although it seems peculiar at that point in history that a 19 year old…
As a black woman I felt somewhat belittled by the tone that this author uses in this poem. She speaks about the idea of being a black girl as being someone who is constantly trying to become someone she is not. It made me feel as if her thoughts were that being a black girl was all about wanting to be a white girl. And I did not agree with that at all. She writes “it’s dropping food coloring in your eyes to make them blue and suffering their burn in silence. It’s popping a bleached white mophead over the kinks of your hair and primping in front of mirrors that deny your reflection” (Clugston). I feel like all girls are not happy with their reflection at some point in time. Being unhappy about you hair, your weight, or your clothes is all about being a girl. To seclude that feeling to just black girls is reducing the character of black girls. The tone she takes is also negatively reflected when she speaks about black girls and men. Smith writes “it’s finally having a man reach out for you then caving in around his fingers” (Clugston). The language uses here when she says “finally” strikes me. As if to say this at last a black girl finally “got a man” but then goes to say that she basically sub comes to him. It paints the imaginative picture that black girls are weak and needy. This is not true!…
In order to properly view a story from a feminist perspective, it is important that the reader fully understands what the feminist perspective entails. “There are many feminist perspectives, and each perspective uses different approaches to analyze and interpret texts. One is that gender is “socially constructed” and another is that power is distributed unequally on the basis of sex, race, and ethnicity, religion, national origin, age, ability, sexuality, and economic class status” (South University Online, 2011, para. 1). The story “Girl” is an outline of the things young girls reaching adolescence must do in order to conform to society’s expectations in an era before feminist laws. “In this section, we examine some of the literary means used to depict the world of the child from the child’s point of view and the world of the adolescent — “the folly of youth,” as the cynical Ambrose Bierce would have it — from an adolescent point of view” (Pike & Acosta, 2011, p. 351). As the list of society’s standards in the story “Girl” can be related to an era in which a woman was defined as the caretaker so to say, these types of rules no longer pertain to the role of a woman in our modern day style of living in society today. “In American culture today, for instance, women have access to broader roles than those outlined by the narrator” (South University Online, 2011). Jamaica Kincaid (1978) published the story “Girl” as to show her knowledge of a feminist perspective when relating to a mother’s fear of breaking traditional gender roles, and the tension it may cause on the mother and daughter’s relationship.…
Firstly, in life, males and females are often fascinated by each other, because of the differences in their nature. Males are drawn to females because of their differences and vice versa. In this sense, to each other, the genders are the unknowns. In James Joyce's "Araby", a little boy is deeply infatuated and virtually enchanted by his friends' sister. He watched her and thought a lot about her, as was stated, "every morning I lay on the floor in the front parlour watching her door when she came out on the doorstep my heart leaped" (p.288 Echoes). This shows that the boy was deeply infatuated and obsessed with a girl he did not converse with. The boy was shy and "had never spoken to her" (p.288) He was simply drawn to her because of the fact that she was an unknown to him. She was a girl whom he did not completely comprehend and this intrigued him. In comparison, Nino Ricci's, "Going to the Moon" was also about a boy, who was attracted to a female. The little boy was deeply taken by his teacher who stood out significantly from all the others in the school run by nuns. Miss Johnson was described as a, "burst of colour in a grey landscape, coming to school in…
The novel “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” written by Sherman Alexie is an inspiration to the younger generation. The novel targeted young adults when Alexie was writing it; however, she has got a positive response from many people. The fans of the book include students both teens and pre-teens who wrote letters to Alexie expressing the love they have towards the book. It was a surprise to Alexie when she received autobiographical letters written in crayon from young adults (Alexie, page 7). The positive response from the children is the evidence that the book is appropriate for the young adult despite the critics many people present.…
The audience is for anybody who reads her story. I think this essay is for everyone of all ages.…
Throughout history and in all cultures the roles of males and females vary. Relating to the piece of literature "Girl" written by Jamaica Kincaid for the time, when women's roles were to work in the home. By examining gender roles, then one may better understand how women and men interact and how better to build relationships at home and in the world of business. At the time that this work was written, women mainly stayed at home and did housework while few of the very poorest households required the woman to work in an industrial job. Kincaid wrote of the specific roles and…
In Alice Munro’s “Boys and Girls” the story is about a young girl’s resistance to womanhood in a society based all upon gender roles and stereotypes. Initially, the girl believes that she can be of great value to her father in his work, then the destruction of her dreams occurs when she realizes society's view and expectations of her being a female.Therefore, she loves working on the fox farm with her father as she also, loves the attention she gets from her father while working. "Wait till Laird gets a little bigger than you`ll have a real help"(pg.194) indicates that the mother did not consider the girl help at all but to her, she is merely a replacement for Laird until he is old enough to do the farm work himself. However, her mother wishes…
Throughout the short story “ Boys and Girls”, Alice Munro takes us through a young girl’s journey to break away from the typical life of a woman. Munro suggests that although we would like to define our identity, it is society who defines who we are.…