Stanislaw Lem's novel Solaris tells the story of Kris Kelvin, a psychologist, who goes to the ocean planet Solaris to study the phenomena taking place there. Upon arrival at Station Solaris, which hovers over the surface of the planet, he is warned by the scientists on board that they have been receiving mysterious visitors. Kris first encounters one of these visitors outside of Gibarian's room, but does not have one of his own until he wakes up to see his deceased wife, Rheya, sitting in the room with him. The entirety of Kris's first encounter with Rheya not only gives us some background information on Kelvin's life, but also foreshadows many of the things to come later in the book.…
Si Robertson had a lot of challenges in his life. Si and his family were very poor, but they knew how to live off the land and also had a very good relationship with the almighty God. He spent most of his childhood hunting and being around his family. After school he went to the military and met his wife and had children of his own. Eventually after retiring from the military he started to work for his brother, Phil, at Duck Commander.…
Verna Estelle Pladsen provides nutrition for the malnourished, which is equivalent to treating people with respect. Never give up. Hard working people of all ages find reasons to stay devoted or vindications to give up. When one works at a job that touches many life’s they are not giving up the occupation but rather, they are giving up on the lives that were impacted. Proper food served to the dying helps reestablish the feeling of life they once had. Don’t let a day go by without giving a portion of life to someone close by.…
Everyone at some point of their lives will experience a Chicxulub. Something that will change your entire life for the better or the worse. It’s what you choose to do with that change that will build your character. Take Maureen and Ted for example. Late, one rainy night, they get their Chicxulub. A call that delivered the heart-wrenching news of their daughter, Maddy’s accident.…
Mel Martinez is a great example of a Hispanic-American who had played an important role in both the development of Florida and the citizens of. He had provided much needed hope and inspiration to immigrants, has set a wondrous example for all people, and has provided Florida and the nation with robust policy that changed many people’s lives for the better.…
“Every time a crime was committed by a Muslim, that person's faith was mentioned, regardless of its relevance. When a crime is committed by a Christian, do they mention his religion?”(Eggers 37). Dave Egger states in his novel Zeitoun. Zeitoun is a nonfiction book written by Dave Eggers about the main character named Abdulrahman Zeitoun and his Muslim family that lives in New Orleans. During this time, Hurricane Katrina is about to run its course through New Orleans. Zeitoun decides to ride the hurricane out and tell his family to leave without him. Throughout the rest of the book, the Zeitouns will face many struggles that they may or may not be able to overcome. Although he has good intentions, Zeitoun makes the wrong decision by staying…
The book of Zeitoun is like none other that I have read before. Through this captivating story, the characters are faced with so many challenges with the coming of Hurricane Katrina, prejudices, and losing everything that you’ve come to know and love. Every day Zeitoun is faced with problems due to being part of a culture that is often looked down upon and discriminated. Three cultural differences that he encountered were getting rejected from clients because of his name, accused of being a terrorist, and his religious beliefs.…
The first character that I will discuss is Mabel, which is Norma Jean's mother in the story "Shiloh." Mabel is very controlling and pushy when it comes to her daughters life. She is also very straight forward with her daughter about what she has done wrong in her life and what she should be doing with it now. Mabel has very strong roots from the south since that is where she grew up. She takes pride in being from the south and part of the confederacy even though the Civil War was fought almost one hundred years before this story was written. With Mabel being proud of being apart of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, she felt like her life needed to be almost perfect so she didn't approve of how her daughter was living her life.…
Considering the fact that Roberta is another race, Twyla is stereotypical at first, based on her mother, Marys opinion about other races. She thought, ... one of the things she said was that they never washed their hair and they smelled funny (201), so before really knowing Roberta, she assumes she smells funny. I would say Twyla is more focused on race rather than friendship in the beginning of the story, because of what her mother has told her. Not long after meeting, Roberta and Twyla became the best of friends. Twyla began to look pass race for a moment and say, So for that moment it didnt matter that we looked like salt and pepper standing there...…
The narrator in, “The Yellow Wallpaper,” suffers from depression, although her husband, who is a doctor, does not consider it an illness. Therefore, he keeps her on a strict rest cure. She is not allowed to do work of any form, not even care for her baby. All she allowed to do is rest in her room and breath in the air as prescribed by her husband. Because she spends most of her time in her room, she becomes obsessed with the yellow wallpaper in the room and it drives her to insanity. The lack of creative stimulation and relationships with others causes the narrator’s obsession with the yellow wallpaper which leads her to believe she is trapped behind bars in this yellow wallpaper.…
Equiano retells the transition from the familial conditions of slavery from Africa to the brutalities of the slave ships during the Middle Passage, and not only did he incite sympathy from his audience, he uses the British’s own beliefs to demonstrate his achievement to moral superiority. Equiano’s description of the brutality in the Middle Passage portrayed the severe reality of the slave trade to his once blind eyed audience as it displays true feelings of terror, separation, and dread. Equiano elaborates about the “loathsomeness of the stench” below the ship’s deck that made him “become so sick and low that he was not able to eat,” and when he refused to eat the food offered to him by the crew members, they tied him down by his hands and…
In eighteenth-century Jamaica, the driving forces behind the institution of slavery were power and fear. Thomas Thistlewood, part plantation owner, part foot soldier for the British Empire, was a young man fueled by an immense desire for wealth and independence. In Jamaica, Thistlewood was thrown into a society in which wealthy white men subjugated blacks from Africa in cruel bondage to turn extraordinary profits. Because of their skin color, whites held a collective equality over the slaves and used their power to instill fear into their counterparts. On the other hand, it was their own fear of the slaves rebelling that caused the owners to inflict inconceivable amounts of torture and punishment. This struggle for power between slaves and masters led to a trade-off. The slaves recognized they would have to obey their masters or face the consequences. At the same time, slaves also realized that their situation could be manipulated and that they could help their own cause by cooperating. Thistlewood’s differing relationships with his slaves showcase how some were able to exploit this trade-off while others fell short. His diary shines light on the lives of Lincoln, Coobah, Sally, and Phibbah who each had their own ways of dealing with life on the plantation.…
Grassian realized “these people were very sick.”(Maclyn Willigan “What Solitary Confinement Does to the Human Brain”) Researcher Stuart Grassian who interview many men at Walpole State Penitentiary in 1982. she found that the men talked with symptoms “such as hallucinatory tendencies, paranoia, and delirium”( Maclyn Willigan “What Solitary Confinement Does to the Human Brain” ) Grassian characterize them as “SHU Syndrome” this syndrome has symptoms of PTSD, insomnia and uncontrollable feelings of rage and fear.…
In this synthesis I will discuss the quotes from Yaeger, Soto, Fanon, and Davis. Both Yaeger’s and Soto’s quotations parallel one another in a way in which the laborer is dehumanized. The slave or laborer no longer has an identity to him or her, but is instead just a faceless human who performs labor-intensive duties to provide for him or herself or to the family. Yaeger describes the slaves in the triangular trade just as flesh, not an actual human being, therefore accentuating the loss in the sense of identity to each slave. The “flesh” on the slave ship is nothing more than just an object that can be overworked and thrown out once it no longer functions. The white-man/owners do not care for this loss because there is an excess of the supply of slaves coming in from West Africa. Soto’s character is a lot like the slaves that Yaeger illustrates because the Chicano is overworked and suffers from fatigue much like the slaves do in the New World. Mexicans come into the Americas looking for a new living and a new source of income, and they sometimes have no other choice but to settle for such a labor-intensive job. The Chicano is overcome with such fatigue and emptiness that they begin to strip their own sense of identity from themselves. Both the slaves and Chicanos focus on one thing, and that is the prospect of a…
An unknown that is, concerning a fellow of letters, one who shook up the people back in 1789. British readers were fascinated by his first-hand account of being abducted and imprisoned at age 11 and hauled from Nigeria to the New World in a horror-filled captivity vessel. Equiano's story has long been seen as the conclusive version of the notorious “middle passage”, one of the very first captivity tales, a detailed account that gave the inexpert abolitionist crusade a ringing ethical authority. The only problem is that it may not be…