Joy St Clair Hester, or Joy Hester, was born 12th August in 1920 in Elsternick, Melbourne. Hester was an Australian artist during a time period where the work she produced was exceptionally unappreciated. After dying of cancer at age 40 (4th December 1960) she has become acknowledged. Hester’s work particularly is largely made up of human faces. Hester’s “Girl” and “Cancelled Sketch of Pauline McCarthy” display the use of human faces and her artistic style.…
The poem “How I Discovered Poetry” by Marilyn Nelson presents the theme of finding an interest or passion for something. Also another theme that can be wrapped around this poem is the power of words. The speaker is Nelson who is in the classroom while her teacher, Mrs. Purdy is reading from her desk. Mrs. Purdy becomes one of the main influence of her finding her passion for poetry. Mrs. Purdy seems to be a very genuine and loving teacher who cares about her students. This is shown when she brings in a poem specifically for the speaker and asks the speaker to read it in front of her classmates. The speaker also seemed to be different than her classmates in a way where she is more attentive and studious than them. This is portrayed when the…
Phillis Wheatley, African-American poetess, was born in Gambia, West Africa, (Now known as Senegal,) on May 8th, 1753. At age 8, she was kidnapped and enslaved. However, slave traders thought she was too young for the grueling slavery of the West Indies. She was then brought to Boston on a slave ship. She was bought by Susanna and John Wheatley and worked as a maid. She was very intelligent and was taken under Susanna's wing and, unlike most slaves, was taught to read and write. She received many classes including theology, English, Greek and Latin. At age 12, she could read many difficult passages of the Bible.…
Anne Bradstreet and Phillis Wheatley were two major women poets who wrote about the obstacles they had to overcome in their lives. Some obstacles these women had to overcome were being able to produce and publish acceptable work as well as gender and racial difficulties. Anne Bradstreet was the first published poet in the New World and Phillis Wheatley was an African slave. Both of these women wrote brilliant poetry that is still read today.…
Through her words she allowed you to feel her joy, sorrow and everyday struggles. In “To the Memory of My Dear and Ever Honored Father Thomas Dudley Esq. Who Deceased, July 31, 1653, and of His Age 77” Bradstreet writes about the loss of her father, and her strong belief in an afterlife and seeing her father again, “Where we with joy each other’s face shall see, And parted more by death shall never be” (214). She expresses her deep love for her husband in “To My Dear and Loving Husband” when she writes, “If ever two were one, then surely we” (226). “In Reference To Her Children, 23 June 1659” Bradstreet writes about her eight children, “I had eight birds hatched in one nest, Four cocks there were, and hens the rest” (228). This poem describes her hopes, dreams, and fears for her children, “If birds could weep, then would my tears. Let others know what are my fears” (229). ). In her poem “As Weary Pilgrim” Bradstreet describes a Pilgrims end to suffering and struggling and their deliverance…
Born in Weymouth, Massachusetts on November 11, 1744, A. Adams was one out of four kids (2-3). Being a daughter of a Congregational minister, A. Adams grew up as a devout Christian, eagerly embracing her faith. Her father’s position also allowed her the luxury of being literate, though her education was not up to par with that of a man’s. Richard Cranch, A. Adam’s future brother-in-law, greatly influenced her through his passion for scholarship; she began expressing herself intellectually and emotionally through literature (8-10).…
Lewes uses rhetorical strategies, including pathos and logos to connect with Peirce on a personal level and teach her in a descriptive manner about the life of a writer. Even though most of Lewes’ letter was about the downsides of being a writer, she shifted her passage…
In the passage from Eudora Welty’s autobiography, One Writer’s Beginnings, Welty depicts how her love for reading was influenced by the challenges Mrs. Calloway, the librarian, presented by guarding the books and by her mother’s example of continuous reading. The zeal she has towards reading creates a motivational tone for the passage, allowing the reader to deeply connect with the meaning of the text. Welty conveys that the willingness to read is established at a young age. She uses many rhetorical devices to emphasise her opinions on reading, such as figurative language, distinct syntax, and unique diction.…
As Gilroy wrote: "The history of the black Atlantic since then, continually crisscrossed by the movement of black people--not only as commodities--but engaged in various struggles towards emancipation, autonomy, and citizenship, is a means to re-examine the problems of nationality, location, identity, and historical memory." The poem by Phillis Wheatley greatly enlightens Gilroy’s thesis, being a strong figure in the fight for freedom and equality within the Black community, also emphasizing the idea that knowledge is power to those Black people who were unable to read and write, seeing the impact she made through her poems. England, unlike the United States, gave Black intellectuals the opportunity to publish their writings. The poem by Phillis Wheatley greatly enlightens Gilroy’s thesis, being a strong figure in the fight for freedom and equality within the…
Ayanna Pressley, the first female person of color elected into the city of Boston’s council in 106 years and more. Pressley, was born on February,3 1974 in Chicago Illinois. The only thing that set her apart from the other kids back then was (other than the color of her skin) the fact that she was raised by her mother and only her mother. This being so, she grew up with a found conation with her mother especially on election day. “ My mother was never cynical about the role that government, compassionate government could play in our lives. On election day, from a very young age, I felt powerful. Pressley was educated in Boston University, but when her mother lost her job their lives to an unfortunate turn and she had to drop out of school so she could help…
Phyllis Wheatley was born in 1753 in West Africa. Wheatley was brought from Africa to Boston by a ship called Phillis. She was then sold to Wheatley family. Hence, the name Phyllis Wheatley. The Wheatley family was supportive of Phyllis education, their daughter and son helped educate her. Her first poem was published in the newpaper in 1767. Pyllis traveled to london, in hopes of meeting the Countess. The countess was unable to meet with Phyllis, but helped her published her volume of poems. When, Pyllis returned home, she was given her freedom. Phyllis was the first published African American woman and poet.…
Piercy was born on March 31, 1936 in Detroit, Michigan into a family that was greatly affected by the great depression. As a child Piercy lived in a segregated neighborhood. Piercy has a half-brother from her mother’s side who is fourteen years older than her. She was raised in the Jewish religion by her grandmother and her mother. Till this day Piercy still remains a Jew. Piercy attended a public school in Detroit and half way through grade school she became sick with the German measles and rheumatic fever. When she got ill Piercy was disabled from doing what all of the other kids were doing as a result she built an unconditional love towards the world of literature.…
William Golding was born on September 19,1911 in Saint Columb Minor,cornwall,England.He was raised in a 14th-century house next door to a graveyard.His mother, Mildred,was an active suffragette.His father, Alex, worked as a school teacher His father. He enrolled in Marlborough Grammar School,The same school he’s father worked in.Also,Golding was a bully in school, Quoted “He enjoyed hurting people”. Later in primary school, Goliding went on to attend Brasenose College at Oxford University,where he studied English Literature. In 1934, William published his first book of poetry called ‘Poems’.After college, Golding worked in settlement houses and the theater for a time.Then he decide to followed his father’s footsteps. In…
Harper Lee writes To Kill A Mockingbird staying true to the sexism that took place during the period of the 1930s. At this time, how women were viewed was a paradox. While women were seen as pure, perfect, and dainty, they were also highly disrespected by men, labeled as dumb, and forced to work in the home and bear children. This paradoxical treatment of women was convenient for men who desired to control women and maintain their submissive demeanor. This mistreatment was highly integrated into society and Harper Lee gives both antagonists and protagonists moments in which they disrespect or otherwise criticize femininity. Jem, Scout’s older brother and young boy growing into adolescence, frequently comments on Scout’s gender, at one point…
This is not to say, that his humble beginning in Portland, Maine, as one of seven children, was not revealing of Henry’s soon to be fame. As a child, there was no tribulation in teaching him Latin grammar. Just as easy was learning how to read, spell, and even multiply, all occurring before Henry’s sixth birthday! After entering Harvard University at a later interval in his life, Henry soon thereafter attempted and completed a peregrination of Germany, Holland, Sweden, England, Denmark, and Switzerland. At the time, Henry’s talents lied in his flute, where he enjoyed making himself as well as others happy, simply through the music produced from the instrument. Not long after, his wife, Mary Stotter Potter, died in Rotterdam, in the South Holland province of the Netherlands. This may very well be where Longfellow drew his love for poetry, for little time had elapsed since Mary had died when Henry released his first book of poems, Voices of the Night.…