As I read through several reviews, I found it amusing how many people assumed the main focus of The Chaperone would be over Louise Brooks. It was pretty obvious to me, by the title and summary that it was going to be about “The Chaperone”. Due to this reason, I chose Mandy Boles’ review to be one of my three. The first things Mandy noticed, was that…
The essay I choose to write about was Maya Angelou’s “Sister Flowers”. I believe that the purpose of this essay was to describe an important part of this person’s life that helped them to become a better writer/poet/reader and also describe what I think to be this persons mentor. This essay talks about how Mrs. Bertha Flowers decides to take Marguerite Henderson home with her to give her good books to read and to read her an excerpt form a book. I think it is a very well written and extremely descriptive essay, it makes you feel like you are there with them listening to the pages turning and almost taste the tea cookie or smell the vanilla from Mrs. Flower’s home.…
Gloria Jiménez wrote an essay at Tuffs University in 2003 named, “Against All Odds and Against the Common Good (Jiménez 116). The purpose of this essay is to persuade and support the following thesis: “Still, when all is said and done about lotteries bringing a vast amount of money into the lives of many people into the lives of a few, the states should not be in the business of urging people to gamble (Jiménez 116).” The evidence given in support of toward this argument does not point toward the proper thesis identified in the beginning of the essay.…
1. Why does Cisneros father believe College can be worthwhile for her? Cisneros father believes college can be worthwhile for her because it will help her to meet an intelligent husband who will be able to support her and take care of her. Her father really believed in the traditional Mexican values that women were meant to become someone's wife and not to work to support the family. 2.…
1. In "The Chief's Daughters" what appears to be the "moral" or lesson to be learned from the narrative? Do Americans continue to utilize oral tradition to transmit values to subsequent generations?…
In Brother Dear by Bernice Friesen, the author suggests that success can come in many forms, but each form is unique to each person. In the excerpt, Greg is leaving the house, with Sharlene following him and trying to convince him to stay at home.…
Preacher’s Daughters is a reality television show aired on Lifetime. The show follows religious families dealing with typical teenage rebellion and extreme parental expectations. All while following their strict spiritual values. With either one or both parents in the ministry, their daughters are pressured to set a good example for the church at all times. Preacher’s Daughters exemplifies patriarchal dominance by the shaming and pressure the fathers put on their daughters.…
Around the world many people experience the same feelings and emotions. This is an example of universal theme. The folk tales, “The Old Grandfather and His Little Grandson” by Leo Tolstoy and the poem, “Abuelito Who” by Sandra Cisneros share the same universal theme. The universal theme expresses respect and honors your elders. Both stories were about old people being mistreated because younger characters thought they were useless. Additionally, the younger generation felt that the elderly were unproductive and were just extra mouths to feed. Overall, the younger generation realized they had wronged their elders.…
In “Only Daughter” Sandra Cisneros shows her first hand experience as an Mexican-American women, and how she is seen in her family. Cisneros explains how her family wanted her to adopt the typical women roles in society even though Cisneros did not want that for herself at all. Cisneros emphasizes her points by using metaphors “ But somehow I could feel myself being erased”. By using this Cisneros emphasized her feelings by using a metaphor. This shows that as her father would continuously say I have 7 sons, not 6 son and 1 daughter Cisneros felt as if she was being erased out of his life. Yet instead of saying I felt I was being pushed away, using “erased” showed that it hurt her to the point that she possibly did not want to just say it, but she wanted to show it. By having Cisneros used metaphors to show her feelings it can make the reader feel as if they are Cisneros and is feeling the same way as she is. By her feeling she’s “ being erased” it shows that just by her father making a simple translation mistake it hurt he so much. By her father doing this it was like her was taking away her identity away.…
The essay will be about the Novel Throwaway Daughter a fiction that is about a girl named Grace on a journey of finding her identity. The main story is about a young girl Grace Parker, who was abandoned in front of the orphanage by her mother and was adopted by a Canadian family. She is haunted by the fact why she was unwanted by her parents and she denied her heritage until she witness the death of protesters in Tiananmen square. As she continues to mature and grow she becomes more curious about her mother of what happened to her,thus her journey begins in china on a quest of finding the answers and herself.Grace (Dong-mei’s) journey allows her to fully embrace her heritage, finally giving her an identity through her childhood, adolescence,…
The narrator, Amanda Coyne, begins her essay from the mother’s perspective. She describes herself visiting her sister in Federal Prison Camp with her nephew. The story is focused on the relationship of separated children and their imprisoned mothers. The narrator describes the mother’s unusual response to their children in regards to the smell of the flowers bouquet. The way that mothers were referring to the smell so significant gives a visualization of a deep longing and separation in their hearts. The common use of anecdotes and juxtaposition in this writing stands out as a useful tool to describe the characters. The use of a brief narrative to describe kids shows a bit of resentment children.…
Sandra Cisneros in her memoir “only daughter” was writing about her child life, more specifically she is writing about the dynamics in her family and how low she was treated she was “erased” almost. She just didn't feel like she was there and anyone even liked her. However she continued in her passion that she held closely as a child, writing. And it took her to become highly successful to the point where all sorts of people could read her essays. And eventually, her dad read it. He was overjoyed on how good she was. And how interesting and how he could remember who all these people she was talking about were. Sandra Cisneros creates an atmosphere of belittlement by including words such as beneath, no, only and pressure. However, she also uses…
It is through the growth of “moral worth and intellectual improvement” that Maria Stewart believes the African American race will prosper and be accepted by the white community. Continuing on the topic, Stewart qualifies that no person, white or black, is content with their lives if they are forced to perform menial jobs when they clearly obtain the capability to hold jobs that far surpass the skill level of the “servile labor” they find themselves executing. She even goes so far as to say that if her lot in life was to make a living performing such a task and knowing there was “no possibility of rising above the condition of” the job, she would rather die. In the following sentence she personifies chains, such as those in slavery (and the newest, more modern form of slavery – being stuck in menial jobs), as those of “ignorance and poverty,” to once again display the “horrible idea” that would be to support such slavery. For it is impossible to “enrich” one’s life when spending it “washing windows, shaking carpets, brushing boots, or tending upon gentlemen’s tables” in that once you return home from such a job at the end of the day, the motivation to engage in more substantial, intellectual activities dies. To conclude, Stewart makes the point of attempting to connect with her new, white audience by stating that their American blood flows through her. She is careful to say “your blood” as opposed to our blood because she is aware that due to her previous colloquial language used when reaching out to her black audience, her more intelligent crowd is now skeptical to whether or not she shall be accepted into the likes of their group or calculated as another “lazy and idle” member of what they view to be the African American…
1.) When she states that she is the only girl in a family of six sons, Means she was a lonely, her brothers never wanted to play with her because she was a female. This made her think and image and become a writer.…
Once upon a time there was a girl who was kind of an idiot but people still liked her because she was not ugly and okay at sports. She was 17. Nothing was really wrong with her, per say, but was anything really right? Probably not. Anyway, one day in this once upon a time this girl was walking along the road, minding her own business. I should probably mention now that in the world this girl lived, no one could hear. Don’t get too excited, she couldn’t either. Like I said, she wasn’t anything special. But as she was walking along this road, something interesting happened. It was in the middle of the day in a suburban neighborhood, so about as boring as a setting could get. No one, especially not this girl, could ever guess what would happen to her next.…