Readers are positioned to react in a warm, positive manner towards Ahn 's Mum. This has been achieved through the use of dialogue in the event where his Mum invites their distant cousin and her daughter 'to stay ' when Ahn is fifteen and his family is 'pretty close to being…
A modern woman in her late 20’s named Dana time travels back in the nineteenth century when the 13th amendment did not exist, yet. Based on her knowledge, she firmly presumes the reasonings for her voyages is due to her ancestor, Rufus. It seems to be that whenever Rufus is in a troubled situation, Dana goes back in time. On one of her perilous journeys, she brings her husband, Kevin Franklin. But, Dana did not want Kevin to be apart of this horrendous trip. While, Dana was getting dizzy, Kevin held her. She tried pushing and shouting at him to get away. But, it was too late. Once, they arrived at Rufus’ time period, she stated, “ In this place, he was probably better protection for me than free papers would have been, but I didn’t want him…
This literary analysis will be of Octavia Butler’s 2005 novel, Fledgling, exploring the role of the narrator and protagonist, Shori Matthews. The question to be examined is whether or not the voice of the sympathetic character comes across as reliable, or unreliable to the reader. For Shori’s role to be properly analyzed, it is important to become acquainted with the author. Ms. Butler is a master storyteller, extraordinaire. She is also a black feminist, known for spurring conversations in book clubs and classrooms across America. In Fledgling, like many of her books, women hold an esteemed place of authority. Women rule. Women dominate. Women in Butler's stories have an audible voice,…
Kindred tells the story of a 1970s African American woman traveling through time to an 1815 slave plantation. The author, Octavia Butler, portrays how the main character, Dana, uses resistance to survive in both time periods. She uses Dana to address the social and cultural issues of the Antebellum South and post-Civil Rights Movement. As African American woman, Butler was subjected to racism and oppression in her life, and translated her experiences into Dana’s character. The setting switches back and forth between both times as Dana narrates, painting a picture of slavery through her eyes better than any factual essay or lecture about the topic…
In “When the Emperor Was Divine”, Julie Otsuka uses syntax, childlike tone, and evocative imagery to show the relationship between the father and the son affecting the boy's coming of age.…
(Warning: This novel contains some explicit language. If this is an issue for you or your child, please contact the English Department Chair at karthur@bcps.org to discuss. An alternate assignment can be created.)…
Professor Cox English 211-009 Irma Lozada 3/30/09 Essay #2-Kindred by Octavia butler a figurative representation of the cultural meaning and construction of gender and race in her society. In its metaphoric interpretation, the loss of her limb therefore signifies something much stronger and darker. It acts as a powerful statement on the sacrifices that black Americans, especially black female Americans, have to make in order to coexist in a hostile world. live in a world that enables them to avoid discussing race and class. Their relationship is based sees the marriage as a rejection of personal, social and racial identity), Dana and Kevin marry alone in Las Vegas. Their decision to marry without the presence of their families stands for the…
And it delivers plain emotions of worry, anger, frustration and fear for his son’s future. The story offers abridged portrait of authors life at home focusing on fear of growing up with belief…
She witnesses many horrors and sorrows, and experiences them as well, that make her ponder the human nature and the hypocrisy of religions, even her own. Yet through it all surprisingly she does not succumb to anger or hatred; she wants only to be together with her husband, Chekura, their children, who are all taken from her and her homeland.…
A child has many interactions with different people throughout his/her life. A child learns to protect his siblings, to respect his mother, and to look up to his father. However, depending on what has happened between the child and the other person. In the poem “A Story” by poet Li-Young-Lee, he uses the third person point of view and structure of the poem to define the complex relationship of a son and his father.…
Throughout the story there were two main characters; the narrator (assumed Granddaughter), and Mataji the Grandmother. Both characters would be best described as “dynamic”, as they both have many personality traits, ranging from good to bad throughout the story. As the story itself follows two plots being present and past, similarities were noticed between the Granddaughter and Mataji’s actions. Proving the strong relationship between the Granddaughter and Mataji.…
Writers has been some of the most influential people in society for centuries. Whether as recorders of history, media, science, or tales. Reflecting and interpreting his or her society is a constant job that they uphold. This is why the world has a vast variety of them. With their different minds, genres, styles, and themes. No single person can say writers such as William Shakespeare, and Octavia Butler are one in the same.…
The novel Fledgling by Octavia Butler analyses race relations and eugenics in society. Through the use of another intelligent species Butler lets the reader experience what happens when humans are not at the top of the food chain. While making the reader question the controversy over the use of eugenics and genetic engineering, Butler uses the story as a parallel of race relations in America.…
Kambili’s relationship with her father is stressful because she fears she won't live up to her father’s expectations. Soon after Kambili got her report card and saw that she took second in her class “written in figures: 2/25”. She knew that “Papa would not be proud” despite all the nice things her teachers had to say about her. But not only did she feel upset by letting her father down, but also the fear of what was to come from letting him down. Later that night, after dinner was finished, Papa instructed her, “‘Kambili, come upstairs’”, this was the moment her fears became heightened.…
Growing up and preparing for adulthood, having a stable family dynamic and at least one loving parental figure is essential for a child’s development. Of course, not having any type of parental figure is not always detrimental to a child, however, stability allows the child emotional stability in their adult life. In James Joyce’s, “The Dead,” the protagonist, Gabriel, was raised by his two aunts, who, after being described by the narrator, accentuate the worst qualities of Gabriel. “The Dead,” written by James Joyce depicts a conflict between the protagonist, Gabriel, and the parental figure, his two aunts, in terms of the aunts extracting the worse aspect of Gabriel's character and shaping his personality and insecurities during his interaction…