Life is like a roller coaster. There are ups and downs to it. If you are unlucky, you might get swatted by a branch. In this case, the branches are the roots of the story- the struggle and pain. Lucy in An Autobiography of a Face by Lucy Grealy from a young age was diagnosed with Ewing's Saracoma, a type of cancer. She was thrown in a world with a fine line between life and death; the cause of her and her family's unhappiness. As for Ben, in Stoner and Spaz by Ronald Koertge, he has a dysfunctional hand because of cerebral palsy and has to go through the loss of his mother who abandoned him. Filled with self pity and rejection from society, they lead themselves to depression but find ways to cope with loss and pain. Lines were drawn…
It is a well known fact to all, that experiencing traumatic war events and sights that aren’t pleasant, changes people. There is an innocence that is forever lost. An innocence that can never be gained back. Change is inevitable. Change, in Mary Anne Bell’s case, is here to stay. It has its way of affecting each and every person it encounters. In the book The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien, he incorporates an innocent city girl into the wild jungle of war in Vietnam; Mary Anne Bell. Because Mark Fossie decides to take a drastic measure and fly his girlfriend to Vietnam during one of the most brutal wars, she gains the soldier’s sympathy and soon becomes the “not so innocent blonde” new to the territory; she is simply an entirely renovated girl living in a whole new world.…
This novel by Susan Shillinglaw, explains the life of a neglected child who got abused, harassed and lied to by his own father. As the novel progresses, Charlie one day escapes the basement in which he has been kept only to be placed in a foster home. Instead of being relieved for being placed in a loving home, he continues to relive the moments of his torment. In order for Charlie to get a fresh start with this loving family, he must accept the challenge of coping with his past but also remember he can not be hurt anymore. The novel tells a depressing reality so individuals know to never let the past go, but instead embrace it since it shapes them today.…
Cora Jenkins is seemingly difficult to define static or dynamic at first. Throughout her story, her character suffers great tragedy, and hardship. Many people might describe Cora’s character as flat, rather than round because she does not fight against the facts of life: her drunken father, sickly mother, demanding employers or unplanned pregnancy from a transient lover. Cora is steadfast in her work and love until it is impossible to keep silent and stifled any longer. She railed against fate when death struck her baby. Cora denounced the women responsible for the injustice done to Jessie, the daughter she adopted in her heart. In conclusion, Cora is a dynamic character because you understand her struggles, feel her pain and in the end, applaud…
. Their ‘alienation’ is also shown by their appearance in Knisley perspective, and never being seen outside of her presence. Without her, they would not be able to partake in the cruise and it wouldn’t be as special according to her grandfather (Knisley 151). Andrews makes a keen observation about the treatment of people after World War II “of voluntary or mandatory retirement from the workforce at a predetermined age” (Andrew 57). In parallel, the elders are identified through age and are expected to act a certain way, following the identity of ‘elder’. Seeing as her grandfather Allen also partook in World War II, it is notable that as a soldier he was enlisted either voluntary or mandatory and left the army when he had the opportunity.…
Having the will to survive is the physiological force to fight, either mentally or physically, for one’s survival. Ellen shows this skill throughout the novel by dealing with child abuse. One example of this is her ability to cope with her father who is a self-destructive alcoholic. In the novel, Ellen is left to live alone with her father after her mother sadly passed away. This makes her life a lot worse because when her father is drunk he expects her to take her mother’s place. For example, one night when Ellen was at home her father tries to grab her and actually calls her by her mother's name, “Get away from me...That is not me. Oh no that was her name. Do not say her name to me. That was her name. I am Ellen” (Gibbons 45). This scene…
The Narrator is treated like a child, believed that she can not care for herself, being that “…he takes all care from me” (The Yellow Wall-Paper 75). John also is ignorant as to how The Narrator actually feels and assumes her feelings, for “John does not know how much I suffer” (The Yellow Wall-Paper 76). The Narrator is oppressed by males and society, “But I must say what I feel…” (The Yellow Wall-Paper 80). John also gives The Narrator degrading names, like “…little girl?” (The Yellow Wall-Paper 81). John makes The Narrator feel insignificant in the real world, putting her down and treating her like a child. This is symbolic of almost all marriages at the time.…
On the hand, E. M. Forster ’s society’s view on marriage is a little different. In A Room With A View Mrs. Honeychurch, the mother of the protagonist Lucy Honeychurch, is the matriarch. Mrs. Honeychurch is from the victorian era, making her beliefs about marriage more about economic reasons, but as the novel goes on the reader can see a change in her attitude. At first, Mrs. Honeychurch is seen wanting her daughter, Lucy, to marry a man named Cecil because, “he’s good, he’s clever, he’s rich, he’s well connected” (Forster, p. 86). And it also becomes even more clear that Mrs. Honeychurch really wants this marriage to take place when she finds out how her son, Freddy, responds to Cecil when he asks his permission to marry…
The discoverers called Lucy, Australopithecus afarensis which stands for “southern ape of the Afar region”. This genus was one of the earliest species of hominids; the family of bipedal primates also includes homo hablis and homo erectus. While Australopithecus and Homo species vary in many ways, both hominids share common characteristics that define them as a group. The most distinct of these traits is bipedal locomotion, which means…
John is the typical Victorian husband. He is authoritative, strict, head of the household. He is a physician of “high standing”.…
Through the play, “we are made to share Wilde’s view of the ludicrous and sinister realities behind the fashionable façade of an over-civilized society where nothing serious is considered serious and nothing trivial trivial” (Reinert 17). In the interactions between people who subscribe to Victorianism, such as Gwendolen and Cecily, the trivial matter of addressing each other while having a conversation is turned into a manner of enormous social importance. In contrast, in the interactions between people who subscribe to Bunburyism, or the total rejection of Victorianism, matters as serious as pretending to have a dead brother Ernest or sick friend Bunbury are treated lightly. Gwendolen and Cecily’s Victorianism leads them to become enraged at each other without reason, while Jack and Algernon’s Bunburyism very nearly leads to their mutual loss of the women whom they love. In this way, Wilde shows that moral ideals should lie in the middle between Bunburyism and Victorianism because of the consequences of taking both ideas of extremes (Reinert 18). Jack sums up the moral best in the last line of the play when he proclaims that he has “now realized the vital Importance of Being Earnest” (Earnest 313). Through this play, Wilde states that the key to success is to simply behave without thought for social…
Setting – The setting for Sense and Sensibility is in England in the early 1800s, somewhere in a country setting. During this time, your social class and wealth was very important. The main classes were the wealthy people or the ‘lesser gentry’. The Dashwoods were part of the lesser gentry.…
The opening chapter of A Room with a View sees Lucy in the Bertolini, her first impression is that “it might be London” and this is significant due to the closed-minds of the other guests. Malcolm Bradbury believes Forster was able “to unmask the illusions, repressions, snobberies and hypocrisies of British Social life” and in A Room with a View this is immediately introduced through Miss Bartlett who is constantly “repressing Lucy”, moreover we get the impression that she is being “narrow-minded” which is also reflected through the setting around them.…
Gilman makes it clear that John’s patronizing and paternalistic conduct toward his wife has little to do with her illness. He dismisses her clever opinions and her “flights of fancy” with equivalent scorn, while he demeans her innovative compulsions. He speaks of her as a child, calling her his “little girl” and saying “Bless her little heart.…
Mark Twain, author of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, writes about a young boy named Huck Finn, who experiences many tough decisions and meets a variety of people. Huck meets those whom he can trust and those he cannot. Growing into who he is meant to be, Huck starts to find who he is and his stance on topics. Throughout his journey down the Mississippi, Huck encounters Crooks, Caregivers, and Racists who positively influence his moral growth.…