In the short story “Scarlet Ibis” James Hurst shows the scarlet ibis a symbol for Doodle by describing how both bodies were in death broken and on the ground. In the story a storm brought in the scarlet ibis from the tropics. The bird falls off the tree hits the ground and dies Aunt Nicey said “Dead birds is bad luck… especially red dead birds!” this sysmbolies that aunt Nicey knows that it’s not a good thing to have thing to have a red bird die in front of your house. Also, both doodle and the red ibis die with the same devastating was “it’s long graceful; neck jerked twice into an S, and then straightened out. And the bird was still. Then brother leaves doodle running after him in the storm brother comes back to find that doodle “had been…
Throughout Native American culture, they have always used everything and not waste anything. For example if they hunt a buffalo, the Indians make sure everything from the buffalo is used. They use the skin for clothing, bones for tools, and meat for food. Everyone is equal except the wise old men and the shaman. Native Americans use the nature to guide them through the day. They know the meaning of respect and never rebelled against authority. Indians never cared how their clothing looks to their peers; they always wore what was given to them. The American culture of the 1950s is the exact opposite of the Native Americans. The years after World War Two were generally prosper and stable for the middle-class Caucasian. The United States manage to turn the post war into a consumers culture with a snap of a finger. During immediate boom of consumerism, suburbs, and economy it overshadowed the some poverty. This rising prosperity didnt apply to everyone. During this time everyone was obsessed with consumer goods such as automobiles, television, stereos, dishwasher, etc. There was subculture of greasers that originated in the 1950s. They tend to own expensive classical hot rod and motorcycles. Greasers tend to be very conscious about their appearance. They wear leather jackets and comb back their hair with an abundance of hair wax. Rock and roll is the music of choice for Greasers. These two comparisons are very similar to Cinderella and the Rough-Faced Girl. There are major differences between the Disneys Cinderella and the Rough-Faced Girl.…
That ostentatious pink flamingo now lies at the bottom of a landfill crumbling from its former glory into the obsolete beacon it is now, replaced by new hopes of a bright lavish future no longer found in a neon lawn ornament. The plastic pink flamingos of the 1950’s in American culture are simplistic enough in the idea behind their extraordinary growth, but gaudy enough to have to ask why. Pure and simple, they are what the future could look like. Just like we in the present day see the future as bright, chrome-coated, and reaching to the sky, the pink flamingos are our skyscrapers. They represent the hope that the new America has for the future, the prosperity and opportunity they received, and the future of what could be. Price is entirely…
In the 1950s the newly introduced plastic, hot pink flamingo was not only a yard ornament but also a symbol of a progressive and forward-thinking generation of Americans. In “The Plastic Pink Flamingo: A Natural History” Jennifer Price uses the bold symbol of the flamingo to reveal her view of United States culture.…
First impressions stick with a person for a long time and appearances do matter. When it comes to living in America, everyone wants to live the American Dream. Everyone wants a big house, luxurious cars and a white picket fence around your property. In Christine Page’s paper A History of Conspicuous Consumption, she talks about conspicuous consumption and how it refers to the ostentatious display of wealth for the purpose of acquiring or maintaining status or prestige. The thought process is you have to show how worthy and successful you are by buying expensive things. If you are rich buy a new 2016 BMW M6 class or a new Rolex to show off your success as well as your status with the elites. The thought process, “Look at all my stuff, I am successful!”…
Following World War II America saw an extreme decade of both conformity and nonconformity. A strong post-war economy meant there was money to spend. Settling down, raising a family, and owning a home were the established goals of the American dream. Many tried to attain the ideal family depicted on TV shows such as Leave It to Beaver and Father Knows Best. Deviating from this popular culture was the "Beat Generation."…
In “The Plastic Pink Flamingo: A Natural History,” by Jennifer Price the adoration of pink flamingos in the fifties is shown through the amount of flamingo souvenirs purchased and the commensurate claim to boldness. Price in many ways demonstrates her pessimistic feeling toward our culture and the trends we undergo. Much figurative language is used such as “flocking” and “splashed.” Not only are those very particular words to choose they are also mocking words.…
Price begins the essay by directly telling the readers that two major characteristics of the pink flamingo made it so impressive. The simple, direct sentence of "First, It was a flamingo" in lines two and three seems so obvious that it catches the reader's attention quite effectively. Giving some information on what flamingo meant in America, Price thoughtfully uses the word 'flock,' intentionally drawing an immediate parallel between Americans and the bird itself. Her use of 'wealth and pizzazz' and the example of hotels in combination with the already established image of "flocking" vacationers creates a somewhat comic image of a group of eager consumers ready to flock to institutions of grandiosity, and so prepares the readers with a basic idea of what the pink flamingo may symbolize.The example of Las Vegas, the ultimate symbol of extravagence and entertainment in America, makes the idea quite concrete.Then she adds that this commercial popularity of plastic flamingos came after the indiscreet hunting of real flamingos, suggesting that it is "a little ironic." This irony correlates with the many hypocrisies ever-present in American culture. Now the readers would think that whatever the Americans love about pink plastic flamingos has nothing to do with the real flamingo,…
During the 1920s America established an extravagant way of living that involved buying and spending to show wealth. We, as Americans, have taken this upon our everyday lives. So much of our lives in America revolve around a social ladder that we fight to climb to the highest rung. Every man, woman, and child for themselves. Our rude manor has been brought out of this nation's mask. Often we, as Americans, betray our own life long friends and family to reach this idea of the ´top´.…
From the start, Price’s attitude expressed how she felt about the use of the flamingo. The title, “The Plastic Pink Flamingo,” could be taken in a couple different ways. Plastic is describing the pink flamingo, yet plastic has two meanings. It could mean plastic as in the material the flamingo is made out of, but I think Price was intending to use plastic as a play on words and have plastic mean fake or superficial. This definition would represent Price’s attitude of how she thinks America is so superficial and devalues objects, such as the flamingo.…
Jennifer Price used her own style of rhetoric exceptionally well to demonstrate her own individual perspective on the United States. In her essay, “The Plastic Pink Flamingo: A Natural History”, Price compares such a minuscule object as a flamingo, with the vast widespread culture of the American society; clearly depicting how American culture was highly based off of the desire to be bold and in vogue with the rest of society. The flamingo lawn ornament created a spark to epidemic of materialistic viewpoints based off of bright, flashy, pink colors. The new pink trend that was engulfing the nation was influencing every aspect of the daily life. From cars to washing machines, and from famous people to famous places, the flamingo and especially the color pink alone were shaping the new American culture. Ironically, such an outbreak of vibrant and flamboyant colors that were now sweeping the nation, came about after the Depression; such a melancholy period of national devastation. Price’s essay has adeptly portrayed her standing on how American culture can be strongly influenced by materialistic and trending ideas, just by introducing the influence of a subjective object like the pink flamingo.…
The 1950s was an exciting time for many, the war was over and the economy began to flourish once more. Men were back home and ready to work and women were back to doing their womanly duties again (cooking and cleaning) this reflected the social position of the women following the war. The 1950s was all about family and being home and the clothing changed because of it. Women were back at home no longer needing to work and wearing clothing that would prevent them from doing anything but womanly tasks. Society was putting women back “were they belonged,” with the males back in town and working. Also the distinction of clothing and class was being brought back to the table after being forgotten for the wartime periods. Women were excited about…
From the start of the novel, Marquez uses the presence of birds to represent danger and temptation. He establishes this motif early on, with the death of Dr. Juvenal Urbino in the first chapter. The novel states, “Dr. Urbino caught the parrot around the neck… at seven minutes after four on Pentecost Sunday” (Marquez 42). The parrot’s role in Urbino’s death defines the bird as a symbol of darkness throughout the rest of the novel. In addition to Urbino’s death, Marquez’s description of the crows in Fermina Daza’s childhood home, help foreshadow the role of the animal throughout the rest of the novel. The narrator says, “But no one could bear the continual flapping… with the reek of funeral wreaths (Marquez 22); further instilling a morbid association to birds.…
Because of its numbers, ubiquity and association with human settlements, the sparrow is culturally prominent. It is extensively, and usually unsuccessfully, persecuted as an agricultural pest, but it has also often been kept as a pet as well as being a food item and a symbol of lust and sexual potency, as well as of commonness and vulgarity. Though it is widespread and abundant, its numbers have declined in some areas. The animal's conservation status is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.…
modern Americans in what could arguably be a classic symbol of British history—and underscores the "modern"…