In the book, “ The Absolutely True Diary of a Part- Time Indian, A kid named Junior, tells us his life story. He starts off in his reservation. Later in the book He finds courage and transfers schools to Reardan. Reardan is a school that is located outside of the rez, with all whites. Even though there are some disadvantages about going to a school with people that are a different race, He had some good outcomes. He went to get a better education. Not only did He get a better education, but He had an opportunity to do sports. Junior succeeded in that department tremendously.…
In this section of the novel, Rowdy and Junior reconcile over a discussion on how most Native American’s are no longer nomadic as their ancestors used to be, and the only nomadic person on the entire reservation was Junior. Knowing that he and Rowdy would part ways someday or another, Junior started tearing up. Rowdy tells him to stop crying and throws him a basket ball, and the two play until the sun sets. This illustrates the emotional side of Junior by showing that he often can’t control his feelings and emotions. Junior realizes himself that he can get emotional at times, and this can be seen on page (FILL IN THE PAGE WHEN YOU HAVE THE BOOK), where he says,” And that made me cry. Man, I’ve always cried too easily. I cry when I’m happy or sad. I cry when I’m angry. I cry because I’m crying. It’s weak. It’s the opposite of warrior”. The…
With the lack of parental guidance he had become immersed in the violence-taking place in Los Angles. He grew up looking up to drug dealers and pimps. His first job as a teen was to patch the and feed dogs used in dog fighting rings. The dog would evenly be beaten or shot by the owners and gamblers and hustlers. The betting had become to young boys fighting, Williams was paid to enter the fight and beat the other challenger to the point they were unconsciousness. William would hide the horrors he had saw and performed.…
Throughout the process, Antwone Fisher was able to confront secrets from his past. Dr. Davenport was able to help discover the roots of Fishers anger but most important the broken family that left him behind. Antwone Fisher is experiencing healing and there are few factors. For instance, his father was murdered before he was born; his mother gave birth to him while she was in prison and never claimed him. Since his mother did not claim him, he lived in an orphanage for two years. Eventually, Fisher was adopted by a cruel family. Mrs. Tate, the foster woman, referred to all her foster children as “nigger” and beat the children regularly. The baby sitter, who is the friend of the family, had abused him as a child. When finally standing up for himself, he was thrown out of the house.…
Jurgis sees his American dream of a decent life dissolve into nightmare as his job hauling steer carcasses in the stockyards leaves him so physically drained that he was unable to support his family. This was not the life this immigrant expected when arrived in America. He loses his job when he beats up his boss, angry about finding out he had raped his wife, then in a sense held her hostage as his mistress knowing that Jurgis wife is doing this to for the sake of her family. This character then loses the wife to disease and his son to drowning.…
I really enjoyed reading Alexie’s essay. What he writes about is very expressive, and you get the full point of what he is trying to express. The main part that touched me is when he is explaining how he was treated, and what he had to go through just because he was smart, and wasn’t afraid to express himself. The other children would beat him up; he was looked down on, and also treated as an outsider because of this. Alexie didn’t care though because he knew that there was something other than the reservation in his future, and that the world was much bigger than the reservation that he lived on, and there was more to be gotten on the outside. He wasn’t going to let the other Indians keep him down, and stop him from learning. It’s awesome that when Alexie is an adult he goes back to reservations to help the children, because when he was a child there was no one that was there to support him, or to look up to other than…
Another theme mentioned throughout the article and is present in the comic strip is the “suggestion of widespread disloyalty among Japanese Americans” (Chang 51). While Lane and Kent are visiting “Camp Carok”, Major Munsey explains that “loyal Americans of Jap ancestry… would be glad to sabotage out national welfare” (Chang 51). In the next scene, one reads how a group of Japanese is trying to escape with firearms. Later in another panel, the internees are about to hurt Lane, “the feminine America”. These scenes demonstrate Japanese American are disloyal to the United States and a threat to American citizens.…
Seeing these traumatic events has dramatically changed Junior as a person on the rez. On the rez when you lose hope you lose everything. Junior tries to make it away from the rez; he tries to escape. By going to Reardan, Junior is spurning his family and culture to get a better shot at life. Every time he tries to fly, the Rez drags him back down to reality. It acts like a massive red wakeup sign saying “Hey I’m always gonna be here and I’m never going to let you leave”. The loss of hope on the Rez is what makes people stay. The Rez is very confining and Junior tries his best to get away from it despite many fruitless…
Upton Sinclair depicts the lives of Jurgis Rudkus and his family to closely resemble the true lives of the working-class of America during this time period. The word bitter best describes the challenges faced Jurgis’s family. For instance, mostly whenever anything happens to Jurgis’s family mostly everything has a negative outlook on their lives. First, a large portion of Jurgis’s family has to undergo the cumbersome working conditions Packingtown has to offer. Ona, Grandpa Antanas, and little Stanislovas acquire work in order to bring more money to the table, but the working conditions they get exposed to in Packingtown lead to their literal demise. Due to these conditions, every single one of these people eventually…
“You're an old-time nomad”- Rowdy. At the beginning of the story Junior made the tough decision to pursue hope. Defying all odds he fought his way to a better life. Have you ever heard that song “I would walk 500 miles”? It's about a man seeking the woman he is in love with. Though Junior was not seeking love, he found it well on his quest to gain a better life. Rowdy, Junior's best friend, did not support his decision at the start, and on multiple occasions fought Junior on the matter. By the end of the story Rowdy learned to live with and love the fact that his best friend was happy and safe…
Sherman Alexie applies hyperbole strategy. “Our house was filled with books. They were stacked in crazy piles in the bathroom, bedrooms, and living room.” Using his exaggerated speech it shows the reader how much Alexie read growing up. The stacked up books all over the house shows what a tremendous role books had on his life. “We lived on a combination of irregular paychecks, hope, fear, and government surplus food.” For Alexie growing up was not easy living on a reservation and desperately wanted to escape. This hyperbole emphasizes how hard life is for most Indian children, ultimately wanting all children to leave the reservation and not be a stereotypical Indian.…
O’Connor uses the gun that The Misfit carries to symbolize fear. Until the climax, the family was enjoying their road trip to Tennessee. When The Misfit, Hiram, and Bobby Lee arrive with their guns, the characters in the family slowly begin to show symptoms of fear. “There was a pistol shot from the woods, followed closely by another”, (O’Connor 63). Even though the characters remaining with The Misfit don’t directly see who Hiram and Bobby shot at that moment, they start to fear. The children’s mother begins to make heaving noises as if she couldn’t breathe. When The Misfit asks if she would like to join her husband and son, she replies “‘Yes, thank you,’ the mother said faintly” (O’Connor 64). At that same situation, the grandmother also begins to fear. “‘Pray, pray,’ the grandmother began, ‘pray, pray…’” (O’Connor 63). The grandmother starts to fear even more when she hears the “pistol report” for the second time after the children’s mother and June Star were taken to the dark forest. “Pray! Jesus, you ought not shoot a lady. I’ll give you all the money I’ve got!” (O’Connor 65). She is so consumed by fear that she begins to negotiate for her life. The grandmother is the last member of the family to persist with The Misfit before she is killed. As a result of fear, her attitude has the most dramatic change from how she behaves when the story started. In contrast, Munro uses the gun to symbolize shame. The narrator quotes “I shot two rabid wolves who…
Hemingway leaves much of this story up for interpretation. The work never states many of the inferences that Hemingway’s audience has discovered over the years. The dialogue between Jig and the American is where the characterizations of the two are revealed. They dance around the subject of abortion with meaningless banter. Repetitive comments such as “Do you want it with water,” and discussions of the various types of drinks reveal to the reader the loathsome attitude the couple has concerning the pregnancy (351). The tension becomes obvious, as they awkwardly struggle to avoid the abortion issue. Hemingway’s stripped down style of writing leaves the reader liberty to infer what he or she feels is being expressed. The iceberg theory (giving only the bare essentials) employed by Hemingway is developed from a combination of his writing techniques that are imperative in conveying the theme in this work. The style in which the story is written complies with the attitude that humankind approaches such instances with and moreover reinforces the central theme of this…
But many things happened in the class and Helene was sitting in that classroom. The first thing is that He sat down in the idiot’s seat, troublemaker’s seat, because he was hungry. He couldn’t concentrate. He couldn’t think. The teacher thought he was stupid, couldn’t read, and couldn’t spell. He was a troublemaker. That’s made him ashamed in front of the girl that he loves. The second thing is that a day before the African American’s payday, The teacher asked each student how much his/her father would give to Community Chest. So He decided to give his money from his pocket. But the teacher never called his name. He was confused. He asked the teacher why she forgot to call his name. She turned around and said, “We are collecting this money for you and your kind. If your Daddy can give you $15, you have no business being on relief. And we know you don’t have a Daddy.” (paragraph 20). These words shame the author.…
One of the main obstacles Junior overcomes is stereotypes. Junior is an Indian who lives on a reservation. Indians have many stereotypes that are towards them. For instance one stereotype is that they have no hope. Junior had a conversation with one of his teachers about his future, which involved him switching schools. Junior knew that if he stayed at the reservation high school he won’t be able to make a future for himself. So when his parents got home he asked them who has the most hope, “’White people, (Alexie45)’” his parents told him at the same time. Even Juniors parents believe white people have the most hope. When you live on the reservation people make you believe you have nothing, will get nothing and that’s all there ever will be on the reservation. Junior changed that by leaving the reservation school and going to Reardan with all the white people. Since white people seem to have the most hope, why not go to school with them? Then all the hope they have, you could potentially receive. When he goes there at first it seems hard to adjust but he works that out and makes a future for himself even though he is an Indian living on a reservation. As you see in that quote he doesn’t seem to have much hope in the beginning of the novel, towards the end Junior as the character and us as the reader finally see the obstacles were overcame. Junior points this, “I realized that, sure, I was a Spokane Indian. I belonged to that tribe. But I also belonged to the tribe of American immigrants. And to the tribe of basketball players. And to the tribe of bookworms, (Alexie217).” He finally realizes that there isn’t a certain place or person in life you need to be in life. As you grow up you can adapt and shape your life to fit the future you want. He overcame all those stereotypical obstacles and…