Julia Alvarez “arrived in the United States at a time in history that was not very welcoming to people who were different.” Alvarez was stereotyped and hurt because of her ethnic background. Her tone emphasized the depressing nature of the situation and the disappointment of losing everything and the treatment receive in the USA. Her tone of depression and disappointment emphasizes the pain she experienced because of the judgment in America. As her essay comes to a close her tone shifts to hopeful and relaxed. Alvarez is accepted into America “through the wide doors of its literature.” Her introduction to literature allowed her to begin to feel accepted into society. Since Alvarez is accepted into society because of her assimilation through literature she becomes hopeful for her new prospect and relaxed to finally be understood. Overall, the tone shift from depressed and disappointed to hopeful and relaxed is significant because it emphasizes the central idea of mistreatment occurring within a new society and leads to acceptance with assimilation.…
It wasn’t until she was twelve years old that her and her younger brother would be reunited with their parents in Brooklyn, New York. Danticat’s formal education was in French, but while at home she spoke creole and started writing at the age of nine years old. After moving to America she found it difficult to adjust and turned to literature for comfort. She believed that writing was her way to express her deep thoughts and to relate as well keep up with her ancestors.…
In her letter wirtten in response to an American woman, Marian Evans Lewes utilizes an array of rhetorical strategies to convey her belief that the development of a writer is an ongoin process which is pressed on by "some force." Instead of having a condescending tone, Lewes puts herself on the same level as the woman, taking a pathological route in addressing the woman. By using words such as "us" and "we", Lewes sympathizes with the woman and reassures her that she has been in the same position. This sympathetic approach not only informs the woman that what she is goin through is normal, but it lets her realize that no matter what status; well-known novelist or unknown woman; everyone goes through difficult times, and "the only hope is to try and unite the utmost activity with the utmost resignation." Supporting this pathological route, Lewes utilizes first-person enriched syntax to illuminate her experiences and her beliefs on the developmental process of the reader. By stating how she "began writing [works] with no great glory at all" and then flourished into the reknowened novelist she is now provides insight to the woman that, quite frankly, you go to start somewhere. This gives the woman "hope", which is a necessity to all writers. Moreover, Lewes uses chronological syntax to illuminate that the development of a writer is ideed a time consuming matter. Stating the she "entered [with] struggles", the "began writing" and the wrote "ficiton which has been thought a great deal of" conveys her belief that the development of a writer is not a mere overnight happening, but is a long, drawn-out process. In her response to Melusia Fay Pierce, Marian Evans Lewes illuminates the fact that the development of a wirter is not ephemeral, but , just like her synatax, chronological, and time consuming, and to be successful, on must have "hope".…
October of 1970 Julia Childs and published mastering the art of French cooking, volume 2 with co-author Simone Beck. With becoming such a culinary notable Julia made many regular appearances on the ABC’s Good Morning America show. In addition to being a regular with good Morning America Julia also stared in her own television programs throughout the 1970s into the 1990s. Julia stared in the culinary series The French Chef, which aired in color. The first season was given a description of being, “a tour of the French Classics, a refresher course for experienced cooks and a jet-assist take off for beginners." With this first season having such success a second season was aired that showed its viewers how to cope with cooking for family or unexpected guest joining for dinner. And how to get the kids involved in making a wholesome family meal. This…
(E) The author feels ashamed because her thoughts go back and forth between the stories she’s read and her life, and she truly realizes things about social class, and how she has it better than some people.…
Initially, in the Time of the Butterflies, Julia uses craft to explore issues of cultural significance to create a background more interesting through the use of diction, especially, Spanish words. Julia herself writes, “...The big celebration over at the museum, the delegations from as far away as Peru and Paraguay, an ordeal really, making that many little party sandwiches and the nephews and nieces not always showing up in time to help. But this is March, Maria Santisima! Doesn’t she have seven more months of anonymity?” In other words, Julia believes that time is spending quick. This connects with the “Voices of Modern Culture” because in this quote Julia talks about the how is the modern culture at this time. (Julia, p.3)…
In the book call me Maria by Judith Ortiz Copen . Maria accepts who she is as a person and where she lives and the language. When she reads her poem she learns to be more confident threw her poems. Also her friend whoopee helps maria settle in new york. And also since maria can speak two languages it makes her feel more accepted.…
The overall theme in the anecdote on Carmen Anton’s immigration is acceptance. Through patriotic music, she infused her Spanish culture into her American lifestyle. When her teachers invited her to sing our national Anthem, her classmates, along with the “melting pot” of America, welcomed her and accepted her culture. As a violinist, the technique I use in Sarabande help build a base for the stylistic choices I made. For example, I must be perfectly in tune so the many chords I hit sound pleasant. The placement and area of my bow help produce the rich sound needed for this piece. For example, the dynamics are very dramatic, so I must play all of the fortissimo dynamics with heavy pressure towards the frog, but all of the pianissimo dynamics…
"The Daughter of Invention" is one of the stories from the novel "How the García Girls Lost Their Accents "(1991), which relates the experiences of the author's experience of her family's immigration from Dominican Republic to America, the author, Julia Alveraz, uses her personal experience to show the intercultural idea of identity formation, the struggles an immigrant family do to the new culture, and the internal and external conflicts such as the change of people's minds, people's minds toward a new culture, and so on...…
The novel My Antonia by the author Willa Cather is set in the late eighteen hundreds. In the story it described an age of change indicating a progression in the social rankings of foreigners. During that time, immigrating to America was quite popular among European nations. There were several factors that inspired this mass movement. Immigrants found opportunities throughout the United States but preferred that of the rural west compared to those of the settled east. This idea brought on a diverse metamorphosis to cultural aspects of the west.…
“The longest journey is the journey inwards. Of him who has chosen his destiny, Who has started upon his quest for the source of his being”--- Dag Hammarskjold.1 This individualist journey, Hammarskjold refers to, consists of two very important elements which contribute to individualism: (1) having the awareness of personal accountability before the Lord and Savior and (2) having a self-sufficient nature as a fountainhead of a person’s individuality which was required to settle the American frontier. These key ingredients mixed with an untamed land tempered the settlers into what we know them today as Americans which may be observed within Willa Cather’s My Antonia as the reader follows the lives of three key characters: Lena, Jimmy, and Antonia. Cather herself searched for her own individualism which she juxtaposed in this 1918 literary work with the character Jimmy. Both he and the author of the story were born in Virginia and at an early age were sent to Nebraska to join their grandparents. And much like the author, he had the pleasure of growing up with a variety of immigrants and stories. Such narratives inspired the author throughout her writing career. My Antonia follows the endeavors of the female protagonist, Antonia, and her foil, Lena, as they struggle in a new country, language, and culture seeking happiness and fulfillment in their lives which Cather so often observed in her childhood immigrant neighbors. Likewise, the reader learns about Jimmy with his own personal struggles as he strives for autonomy in a rugged territory with strict moral codes. Willa Cather’s My Ántonia addresses the notion of individualism which is best seen through direct and indirect characterization of three dynamic characters: Lena, Jimmy, and Ántonia by means of analyzing three stages of life: childhood, youth, and adulthood.…
In Module 3, the class was presented with reading regarding the French Revolution and how it affected writing during that era. In the discussion board, I analyzed Charlotte Smith’s The Emigrants. Our textbook, The Norton Anthology of English Literature, states that Smith was ostracized in a conservative piece written by Richard Polwhele for writing about the plight of refugees during the French Revolution (p. 1448). Generally, she was revered as one of the greatest poets of the Romantic Period, which was a huge feat considering that there weren’t many well-known female poets at the time. By examining The Emigrants further, I hope to better understand the female voice during the French Revolution and the Romantic Period.…
Dorthea Lang photographed “The Migrant Mother” in 1936, during the middle of the Great Depression, in a black and white style portrait. I assert that single mothers, during the Great Depression, struggled harder back then compared to now. Social services, food, or housing programs were not yet established within the local, state, or the federal government. On the contrary, single mothers today have many government and non-profit agencies that lend aid. Lang’s picture clearly channeled my sympathies by drawing my attention to this family’s plight. A haggard tent, filthy hygiene, and worn out old clothing point to severe stages of poverty. Once full of joy, the beautiful eyes of the mother, tell a different story of a life full of worry, doubt,…
The Weeping woman, by Pablo Picasso, indicates a very similar situation to that of Julia and to that of much of the thought-criminals of Oceania. The woman in the picture is sad with a sort of distortion in the picture. In the picture, she attempts to make use of the materials that she has to make herself happier, but the hat and the flower on the top of her head and the way she tries to dress herself does nothing to help the way she feels. She is by herself when it comes down to her goal of getting rid of the situation of being at the bottom of society. Julia in the book is a rebel in society that tries to get around the party rather than try to destroy it at its roots which makes her different from Winston.…
The Chinese game, mahjong has been played since the 19th century. Many people have gathered around a mahjong table, ready to win or lose, but they all shared their experiences, and their stories. The mahjong tables became a place where the past could live once again. The green velvet transported people back in time, to their youth or to a lost love. The game also connected people, it connected strangers, or brought families closer together. Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club portrays the effects of immigration on the family relationship. Tan depicts the lives of these women, and the struggles between them when forming bonds. Through her vignettes, Tan weaves together a tapestry of stories, showing the vast differences of the mothers and their daughters,…