4-When Victor first hears about Arnold's death, he is angry at his father for leaving him, and becomes torn between mourning for his father and hating him.…
In the short story “Indian Education” by Sherman Alexie, the narrator’s life parallels Alexie’s in many ways. The narrator of this story is a boy named Victor who lives on a reservation with his two parents. Like Victor, Alexie grew up on a reservation in the state of Washington. Both boys were teased and bullied by their fellow classmates and initially decided to go to school outside of their reservation for greater educational opportunities.…
Walter White is an underachieving high school chemistry teacher from New Mexico who is diagnosed with lung cancer. After the brutal diagnosis, he begins manufacturing crystal methamphetamine to provide for chemo and his family upon his death. In the ‘Pilot’, it is Walter’s 50th birthday, Skyler, Walter’s wife, makes him a plate of eggs topped by veggie bacon spelling out "50”. Shortly afterwards, Walter drops off Walter White Junior, Walter’s teenage son who was born with cerebral palsy, at the same local high school where he works as a chemistry teacher. Later that day, one of Walt's more disrespectful students, Chad, witnesses him working a second job at a car wash for additional income. Chad quickly takes a picture of Walter cleaning his car on his cell phone and states “Makes those tires shine, huh?”. Chad’s girlfriend who is on the phone with someone comments “Oh my God! You will not believe who’s cleaning Chad’s car”. Walter, who is clearly humiliated, continues to clean the wheel. In this situation Chad and his girlfriend were putting Walter under the stereotype that he was just a lame chemistry teacher who taught them about unnecessary science. As a result, when they saw him working another job that was more embarrassing, they were shocked. This caused Chad to take the picture of Walter and make those comments to him. If Chad and his girlfriend did not think he was just a boring chemistry teacher, they would not have been shocked to see him at the car wash. Subsequently, Walter comes home to a surprise birthday party and during the party Hank, Walter’s brother-in-law who is a DEA agent, invites Walter to accompany him at a drug…
Arnold Spirit “Junior” is the protagonist of our story. Funny, smart, emotional, poor, brave, persevering, all of these are traits that describe Junior. Born at the Spokane Indian Reservation in Wellpinit, Washington, Junior was expected to die during the surgery, but miraculously lived. However his brain suffered major brain damage during the surgery, which gave him 10 more teeth than usual, and seizures. His head was much larger than the usual, and his feet were that of a clown; and as you may have guessed, he was bullied a lot. Fortunately, he can usually count on Rowdy to defend him from the bullies. That is not the case however, when he decides to transfer to Reardan High School, a school full of rich, white kids full of hope and joy; in contrast to Wellpinit, where in Junior’s eyes is the most miserable place on Earth. At Reardan High, he learns that the white kids there are just people like him, people with their own problems. He ends up making friends with many of them, the closest of them…
In the book The Absolutely True Story of a Part - Time Indian by Sherman Alexie The main character Junior has to deal with many obstacles that take a tool on him throughout the book. One of the obstacles that Junior faces is the loss and depression from losing two family members. Another obstacle is that Junior has to leave his home reservation school and go to an all white school can Reardan. The final obstacle that Junior faces is that he has a brighter future and smarter than most kids on his reservation.…
One of the challenges Arnold had during his childhood was being poor and lonely. His family is too poor to afford vet care, so Arnolds dad had to shoot the dog. Junior was born with brain damage and as a result of that he gets picked on by the other reservation kids: “My head was so big that little Indian skulls orbited around it. Some of the kids called me Orbit. And other kids just called me Globe. The bullies would pick me up, spin me in circles, put their finger down on my skull, and say, ‘I want to go there’ ‘ Some kids were calling him hydro names like Hydromatic, Hydrocarbon, Hydrocrack and many more.…
When Arnold describes his hometown of Wellpinit, he often makes it sound like Hell on Earth. Arnold’s first descriptions of his home were, “the poor-ass Spokane Indian Reservation,” (p. 7), and “located approximately a million miles north of Important, and two billion miles west of Happy.”(p. 30). Arnold has a disability, and gets bullied by almost everyone on the reservation. His family is in poverty, and his father is a drunk. Arnold has a rough life, which can create a haze of fog making everything seem dull, and horrible.…
Arnold Friend, is a middle-aged man that uses himself as bait to fool and befriend young Connie. His choice of appearance for himself to project as if he is the same age as Connie is, “light faded jeans stuffed into black, scuffed boots, a belt that pulled his waist in and showed how lean he was, and a white pull-over shirt that was a little soiled and showed the hard small muscles of his arms and shoulders.” With this appearance that Arnold Friend presents to Connie…
The whole white population within Mercer County were partly responsible for the terrible events of Montana 1948. The social environment was one that favoured the white people’s value and discriminated against the Indians. The Indian’s lived away from the whites in little reservations allowing the Indians to have little or no contact with the white people. This had already proved the racial treatment within Montana. Furthermore Ollie Young Bear was an Indian but he was accepted from the whites because he lived as white. He was successful through every aspects of life and married a white woman. But the Indians, on the other hand had regard believing that Ollie young bear wouldn’t “be happy until he was white.” The white societies within Montana were all well aware of the crimes committed by Frank against the Indians. When Wesley and Gail were to take action on the claims made by Marie about Frank’s wrongdoings, David heard a remark made by Daisy McAuley saying “Just the squaws though.” Daisy…
I would talk to him about why he betrayed America and how he could have been a great hero. I do not think he would enjoy hearing about my life because my life is boring compared to his. Arnold likes danger and adventure, though he might enjoy some of my math classes. My favorite character is Margaret Mansfield, because she is so shy and kind, even though she is sometimes taken for granted by Arnold she can get strict like when she thought Arnold had an affair with a Caribbean woman so he had to sleep on the couch until they could rule it all…
One lesson Arnold learns is to be persistent. He learns that sometimes he has to take risks to accomplish his dream. For example, after getting suspended for throwing the book at Mr.P, Mr.P talked to Arnold and told him to leave the rez.. The teacher told Arnold that if he didn’t leave he was going to end up like the others. To have hope people have to surround themselves by those who also share the same dreams. He then realized that he has to leave since people in the rez are hopeless. So he decides to ask his parents who has the most hope, “White people” his parents answered. He then says ”I want to transfer schools...I want to go to Reardan”(45). After he leaves the rez, his tribe sees him as a traitor. He loses his best friend, Rowdy and gets beaten up by him (53). Even though it is not easy for him he decides to play basketball against Wellpinit High school, the school he used to attend before Reardan. While he plays he gets, three stitches and a minor concussions but doesn’t give up (145).…
He came from a hard working class home where he was a hard worker even though his young age. So going through this transition was not easy at all. He was not prepared to the different things he was going to see and experience at school. As he said, “I’d been totally unprepared for the centrality of singing groups to campus life” (p. 7). The Whiffenpoofs, a singing group, was one of the many things Danny was not prepared for. He was amazed how they devote so much time to singing. While living near some of the members of the group he was startled to see how the group consumed so much of their lives. Living with roommates was a new thing too, but he got used to it quickly. Sometimes Max crashed in his bed, but Danny knew what to say for him to leave. His room was a sanctuary as in to do homework, no more action than that happened, there was no other place where he could concentrate on his work. He stated, “unlike most of my friends who claimed they couldn’t get any work done in their rooms, I found it impossible to work anywhere else” (p. 15). There were too many distractions for him outside his room. Moreover, his roommates’ backgrounds were very different from his. Their parents were well known, well studied, and rich people. This was something to which Danny could not relate to because his parents have never been able to own most of the things the…
By disciplining their children, the Asgedom kids always thought about their father’s threat when participating in wrongful crimes. Mawi’s father always used the phrase, “I will make you lost” (59). This phrase scared them into doing that he said because they knew that he was not a man to be played with. He meant business. Following his father's advice to "treat all people — even the most unsightly beetles — as though they were angels sent from heaven" (back). As kids they couldn’t understand the meaning behind it, but as they got older, they realized what being nice to others could do for. Mawi overcomes racial prejudice, language barriers, and financial disadvantage, eventually realizing his dream of a full-tuition scholarship to Harvard University.…
Arnold saw this poverty as a bad thing but when he looks back he can see that poverty is the reason that all the good things in his life happened in the first place. After Arnold threw a textbook at a teacher and got suspended the teacher told him he would be better at a different school; no because he would expel him otherwise but because there was so much potential that would go to waste if Arnold stayed here. That potential would be wasted by the poverty that kept almost every Native Indian on the reservation. Arnold saw this as a terrible thing and thought that he was being punished when he was motivated by Mr. P when he said, “‘Son […] You’re going to find more and more hope the farther and farther you walk away from this sad, sad, sad reservation.’” (Alexie 43) Arnold saw this as an insult that he didn’t belong there anymore because of what he did but it was actually a gift. The poverty sent him to a different, better, more educated school through Mr. P. Arnold was starting to doubt the one good change in his life of switching to Reardon when “[He] only had five dollars, not nearly enough to pay for anything — not for photos, not for food, not for gas, not for a hot dog and soda pop.” (119). This lack of money put him in a deep spot because he couldn’t have any social life at this school that was already so different for him because of his race. He…
When Mawi and Tewolde take a trip to the library during winter they see a guy shivering outside. Tewolde: “ ‘We should give him our sandwiches’. I nodded and took the sandwiches out of my backpack. I offered them to the man. ‘I hope you like aldi ham bro” About a year later Tewolde receives a spare bench press and weights and decides to give them to a friend who can’t afford workout equipment. Mawi goes with Tewolde to deliver the stuff. When they are leaving the man’s apartment Mawi realizes that it is the guy from the library. Tewolde had found him a job, housing, and helped him out with money when he could. He had expected nothing in return. What he got is more important than things or money: Friendship. During Mawi’s sophomore year in highschool, he asks his friend to nominate him for class president. He doesn’t think he has a shot at beating the popular kids, but he figures that it can’t hurt to try. “We closed our eyes and voted. We opened them again, and I was the president… Half of the class wouldn’t have voted for the cool kids if their lives depended on it. Why? Because all throughout high school, the cool kids had made them feel like beetles. I hadn’t. And that’s how I got elected. I had treated everyone as an angel. Being nice to people seems like such an easy task, but most people struggle and some are just mean to others. Mawi was nice to everyone no…