The two poems, “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid and “If” by Rudyard Kipling both are about parents giving advice to their children about the real world and the feature they have in front of them. In “Girl” the mother wants her to be a good polite adult and not a “boy crazy girl” that the mother is saying she is set on becoming. In the poem that Rudyard Kipling wrote, “If” is about a father giving true smart advice to his son, so he can become a good, smart man. These two poems both have the same topic and theme, but the perspective of the parents make the stories unsimilar.…
Betye Sarr, Michael Ray Charles, Kerry James Marshal, and Kara Walker are all artists who use race and stereotypes as subjects for their art. Although they tend to use similar subjects for their pieces, they have very different techniques, mediums, and forms. Betye Saar uses an art form called assemblage. Assemblage is similar to a collage, but it is three-dimensional. One of her most famous pieces, The Liberation of Aunt Jemima, depicts a “mammy” doll holding a shotgun and broom. Behind the doll are syrup labels with Aunt Jemima on them. Michael Ray Charles does colorful paintings of black caricatures. His art has a vintage, distressed look. His pieces Sambo, Uncle Tom, and Aunt Jemima are some of his black caricatures which depict a satirical…
She began her writing career in the eighth grade in northwestern junior high school. She use to hand writes her stories for fellow classmates to read and also proud to say some of her classmates are still Brenda Jackson readers…
Ernest James Gaines was born in Oscar, Louisiana on a plantation in 1933. Of African American heritage, he was a good sport with his family and understood that hard work was a necessity in life. At the young age of only nine he aided his parents in the field working for fifty cents a day. He looked up to his handicap aunt, Augustine Jefferson, as she was his role model in his early youth. She inspired him and opened his eyes to setting a strong path for the generations to come. His mother and step father uprooted and moved to California when Gaines was fifteen. This was a great opportunity for his passion to read and write since the public library was for all races. The lack of African American study or authors pushed him even more to fill the shelves with the history of his race. At seventeen he sent his first novel to a publisher, but this was soon rejected and sent back. Later in his life he rewrote this and sent it again. While attending San Francisco State College he wrote a short story that was published in 1956. Two years later after graduating he studied creative writing at Stanford University until 1959. Gaines has written many short stories, novels, and has won many of awards as well, including the National Books Critic Circle Award. He was given most of his attention from the public after he published Of Love and Dust in 1967. Four years later The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman declared him as a literary icon for American fiction.…
A fairly basic question, but when pondered upon, utterly onerous to answer. At the mere age of seven, second grade Chataquoa Nicole Mason wrestled with this thought too, when asked by her teacher. The now 41 year old middle class citizen wasn’t raised with as much privilege and ease as most of us had. Tended to by teenage parents struggling with poverty, Mason was neglected of the luxuries some of her peers possessed, including food.…
On May 24, 1933, a role model, advocate for women’s rights, and a literary star was born. Marian Engel was born in Toronto, Ontario, to a single eighteen year old girl, and put up for adoption. Frederick Searle and Mary Elizabeth (Fletcher) Passmore adopted a beautiful baby named Ruth, who they renamed Marian. Marian spent her younger years growing up in a variety of towns across Southern Ontario as her family moved frequently for her father’s work. Engel began her education at Sarnia Collegiate Institute & Technical School in Sarnia, Ontario, and later continued on to complete a Bachelor of Arts at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. She graduated from McMaster in 1955 and without hesitation, enrolled in a Master’s program for Canadian Literature at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec. Marian was a powerful activist for women’s rights over the years, writing books, short stories, and sharing her experiences with all who would engage. Her evident determination to succeed was first noted at the young age of ten, when her mother told her that the profession of writing was “very hard” and Marian Engel responded to her by saying, “I don’t care.” Marian grew into a strong woman, who was passionately dedicated to her work. She wrote many short stories, and novels that clearly depicted the social justice issues prevalent during her lifetime, specifically the oppression and victimization of women.…
“If you’d care to hold on, I’ll check our records – it’ll be a few minutes.”…
Works of literature are able to influence all forms of society, and the authors of said literature are the forces behind it. Sarah Orne Jewett is a notable author from the nineteenth century and wrote many short stories and novels. Most of these works directly reflect Jewett’s early life in the New England countryside, and the characters take on Jewett’s childhood characteristics. Sarah Orne Jewett is an important author because she displays the many aspects of early country life to the reader.…
How does a positive attitude help avoid conflict? According to Remez Sasson,”It brings optimism into your life, and makes it easier to avoid worries and negative thinking… you see the bright side of life” (Sasson). This shows that seeing the bright side of life will make all worries and negativity dissipate during tough challenges. During World War 2, many people used the method of positivity to endure the misery. From Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank tries to stay positive while in hiding. It was exceedingly challenging getting around without getting captured by the Nazi. Another novel is Dear Miss Breed: True Stories of the Incarceration During World War ll and a Librarian Who Made a Difference from Joanne Oppenheim. One of the many letters is from Louise Ogawa, and she, like all the other Japanese, had to go to an internment camp. To distance herself from the hardships, she tried to stay positive and think of the positive. Having a positive attitude is the best way to respond to conflict, especially during horrendous situations like World War 2.…
The PICOT Model formulates the clinical questions. The PICOT Model has five steps, P: patient/population, I: intervention, C: current practice, O: outcome, T: time. The Iowa Model of Evidence-Based Practice to Promote Quality Care emphasis the importance of considering the entire healthcare system from the provider to the patient and it gives large systems an effective, team-centered approach to implement evidence-based practice in the clinical setting and is used for sweeping, system-wide changes in practice. The Iowa model has seven steps, the seven steps are identify a problem or new knowledge, prioritize the issues and form a team, team reviews, critiques and synthesizes the evidence…
The urge and undeniable desire for the written language can reveal itself from an aspiring writer in various, distinct ways. One’s beginnings can be rooted from any angle in life; for some, it is the fear of “books coming to an end” that compels them to write professionally. In her autobiography, One Writer’s Beginnings, Eudora Welty passionately and authentically expresses where her longing to become a fiction writer originated in the early stages of childhood. Through her explicit language and unique style, Welty conveys the intensity and value of her early experiences that determined her to pursue her love affair in reading and writing.…
Jamaica Kincaid was born in 1949 in a hospital in Antigua. She moved to the United States at age 16 where she went to school at the New School for Social Research and Franconia College. Her jobs include being a staff writer for the New Yorker, teaching classes at various colleges and writing papers for The Rolling Stone, The Paris Review and other publications. The Estrangement was written in 2008 and appeared in an issue of AARP, a magazine about health and relationships.…
Flannery O’Connor is one of the most renowned short-story authors. She often used her experiences of growing up in the south and her religious background as the setting for her stories. She grew up in the mid-20th century in Savannah, Georgia with her family on their farm and used Georgia as the setting for her short story A Good Man Is Hard to Find.…
Humanities can defined as the totality of human being, or the investigation of the natural human processes and social relationships (Webster online). Looking around the world today it is interesting to think about the events of the world that have paved the road for what exists today. Many changes took place in fourteenth century and beyond that helped to shape today’s views of religion, education, politics, and socioeconomics. The purpose of this paper is to gain an understanding of what humanities is, and how the past is reflected in the present.…
The paternity and filiation of a child conceived and born through surrogacy under the Family Code of the Philippines.…