Insanity in society is generally described as a person's inability to reason logically. In an acclaimed story, "The Sound of Hollyhocks" by a Canadian writer, Hugh Garners, the protagonist William Cornish Ranson (nicknamed Rock) displays qualities of a psychotic person in a desperate attempt to avoid reversing his chronological lifestyle patterns of returning to the dominance of his mother. This is effectively conveyed through Rock's speech and actions.The life of Rock, a young banker is drastically churned when his new wife, Sandra, perishes in an automobile accident. The devastated, desolated young man is immediately surrounded with comforting family. This is quite normal on first glance, but the extent of Rock's mothers pacifism is truly intrusive for a grown man to be molly-coddled to feel junior, "She would treat me as her little boy. She never mentioned Sandra's name again. I moped around the house and garden all summer, and it was then when" he allows the declensional world of auditory hallucinations take over his every thought in a despondent attempt to differ his frustrations from the shackles of maternal control to a serine world of flora. Mrs. Ranson's overbearing enforcement induces her son's mutineer accord. Rock is instituted in a psychiatric ward, as time passes his (suggested) condition appears to be improving, his social libido has arisen once again, as Rock begin to start conversing with other patients and taking part recreational activities. In hindsight the decisive moment begins on Sunday morning when visitors are allowed in the clinic. The reader quickly learns that the visitors are Rock's parents. Not before anything else is said, Mother assumes her overbearing role. When the visitors leave the reader learns the extent of irritation the reunion has on Rock, he appears to undergo a complete mental health relapse, or perhaps a dramatic performance to inform all that he is far to ill to go home. The first-person narrator…
The concept of belonging to a place has been shown through Billy’s perspective in the poem ‘Longlands Road’, it has shaped his identity as well as given him a reason to hate the place he grew up in drawing a lack of connection to his father. Billy tells the readers how much he hates the town he lives in and feels that he doesn’t belong “deadbeat no-hoper shithole lonely downtrodden house in Longlands Road, Nowheresville.” By the use adjectives, negative tone and expletives it shows Billy’s resentment he has towards his home town as well as suggesting negative experiences he’s encountered. Billy feels he doesn’t belong and even though there’s a sense of history, it has been a negative experience and has urged him to leave. At the start of the poem Billy describes that the house “this place has never looked so rundown and beat” showing the physical degradation of the house not being looked after symbolising the way Billy wasn’t looked after. Furthermore, suggesting that he doesn’t belong or have a positive connection to Longlands Road. By Billy’s actions of throwing rocks onto the roofs of the houses in Longlands Road additionally adds his negative attitude he has towards his street and the rest of the place situated in it. The increase of negative diction in the quote “I throw one rock on the roof” highlights his…
1.Beacuse Rock is a madman, and he wasn’t. in page 8, Mr. Armstrong siad i wasn’t too happy to discover i was to share Rock Hudson’s sleeping quarters.…
On a Wednesday morning at 11:00 AM, I attended a lecture at Leffler Chapel titled Fred Rogers as Peaceful Neighbor. My professor Dr. Long was lecturing the audience, took on a different title. He took on the title of Michael G. Long the author of Peaceful Neighbor. Michael Long was there to show us on how one man, Mister Rodgers, helped shape a more understanding culture. Dr. Long started off the lecture by telling the audience of a story about Fred Rogers as a Child. When Fred Rogers was a child he was over weight, insecure, and was bullied. To build he told us how his parents were really paranoid about young Fred getting kidnapped because their family had wealth growing up. The story leads to one day when Fred was playing on the fence on his grandfathers land were…
Honore de Balzac, a French novelist, once said, “Equality may perhaps be a right, but no power on earth can ever turn it into a fact”. Tomson Highway’s story “Hearts and Flowers” relates the despairing experiences of an eight-year-old Cree boy whose personal achievement at a small-town music festival takes place on the same day that Parliament provides the franchise to Native people. To begin, the white people were ignorant towards the Native people. Secondly, the white people treated the Native people with a lack of respect. Finally, Native people are revoked from their right to vote as well as being thought of as non-human.…
One of the noticeable aspects from the short story is that king depicts Aboriginals as migrating birds, in which he uses parody to find humor their culture and identity, one example from the short story is that feathers are used to identify the aboriginal tribes. “Amazing, says Bob. How can you tell? By their feathers, says Bill. We got a book” (King page 204) through this satire, it belittles Aboriginal culture and identity through reducing their its significance by identifying their culture through the feathers of birds. By finding humor in down playing the identity and culture of one group, even after knowing that idenginous people have been terrorized by white settlements makes this short story less impactful when king is supposed to convey his arguments. Through out the short story the majority of the dialogue is spoken by White characters consiting of Bob, Rudy, and Bill, however no dialogue is given to the Aboriginal people except the sounds of “Whup! Whup!…
“Mangroves, red dirt… pearls” all feature vividly in almost all of the characters’ blood in Broome. The easy life in the wet season and the young kids desires to run off to the romantic carefree world of the cinema in Sheba Lane marks what is lying underneath. Even from the very beginning of the novel, it is clear that racial tensions and intolerance are simmering just under the surface. The mention of the front row seats set aside for the Aboriginal and Islander customers hits at the point to some racial intolerance: “What were two white kids doing with a Japanese kid? What were the three of them doing with a drunken Aborigine?” Clearly, this is no multicultural society. Ida Penrose’s pointed dislike of Mitsy and dismissal of Derby Boxer relate more to their ethnicity than to any inappropriate behaviour, like Derby’s drunkenness. Magistrate Killian epitomises the weld-held belief of the whites at the time, of their ultimate superiority and control: “Good English stock.. not your continental rubbish.” There is a total lack of understanding of other…
The movie Rosewood had a lot of impact on black and white people throughout the century. Rosewood stems from a small town located in central Florida. It co-existed with 120 people, mostly blacks who owned and farmed the surrounding land. On New Year's Day of that year, Fanny Taylor, a white woman in the nearby predominantly white town of Sumner, ran out of her house screaming, bruised and battered, claiming that a black man had assaulted her. In fact, the beating had been at the hands of her white lover. Fanny had lied so that her husband would not find out about her adultery. Fanny claimed that an escaped black convict from a local chain gang had done this. This led to tension and resentment to all the local townspeople of Sumner. The County Sheriff led the whites to revenge letting nothing stop in their path of destructiveness. At the end of the week, seventy to two-hundred and fifty blacks were killed in the area and the town of Rosewood had been completely destroyed.…
Prejudice and discrimination are found across the entire world. For example, my dad once showed me the song, “Strange fruit”, it sounds like a silly name but actually leads up to gruesome metaphor about lynching in the South. The song lyrics describe the dead bodies so well that they almost make me sick. They describe the look of the hanging corpses with“The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth”. The song ends in silence after the singer refers back to the fruit metaphor with “Here is a strange and bitter fruit”. The ending haunts the listener and brings them back to think about the violence that resulted from prejudice. The subjects in to kill To Kill A Mockingbird perfectly describe the violence resulting from prejudice. In To Kill a Mockingbird,…
Do others ever think how others feel before speaking? In To Kill A Mockingbird, Harper Lee explains how the color of your skin affected a person or favored a person. Harper Lee talks about a trail that took place with a black man named Tom Robinson, and a white young lady named Mayella Ewell. Tom Robinson was accused of rapping Mayella Ewell, because he was a black man he ended up losing the trial. Tom Robinson was sentenced to life prison, and later on was killed during one of his breaks.The message in this story is that people in our world are treated very different because of their color of their skin and can be accused of things for the way they look without knowing if they are innocent or guilty. Harper Lee utilizes the literary elements character, setting, and conflict to show the theme that when a person comes of age they start to realize their surroundings and feeling of others.…
All of the characters in this book played a pivotal role in developing the themes of the book: justice, racism, prejudice, and sexism. The use of rhetorical devices allows for the author’s ideas to surface and enable the readers to encapsulate the concept of the text. Harper Lee used…
Scout learns a lot about her town and how everybody feels about different issues. Race is a major factor of being discriminated. However, how much money your family has is big in being discriminated. Scout attempts to tell their new school teacher, Miss Caroline, about how Walter Cunningham won’t borrow money because “The Cunninghams never took anything they can’t pay back- no church baskets and no scrip stamps. They never took anything off of anybody, they get along on what they have. They don’t have much, but they get along on it” (22). Scout and Jem ended up bringing Walter home with them for lunch that day and she realized that Walter was a complex individual with his own burdens and dreams. Another example of people being discriminated would be Dolphus Raymond, a white man who is married to a colored woman and lives with the colored folk. He and his wife have lots of mixed children. Jem explains to Scout that the mixed children are real sad because “they don’t belong anywhere. Colored folks won’t have ‘em cause they’re half white; white folks won’t have ‘em cause they’re colored, so they’re just in-betweens, don’t belong anywhere” (184). Scout realizes then that her town judges on skin…
The purpose of Alice Walker’s novel The Color Purple and Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is to demonstrate the hardships that are met when ignorance and tradition bring about the influence of sexism, racism and genuine prejudice to the general public. Ignorance is the root cause of prejudice as it prevents one to see beauty, so when it comes to dealing with the discriminating behavior held in this social order, the vast majority of people are judged by the label and stereotype society has given them, not by the kind of person they are inside. Nevertheless, through these corrupt societies, the protagonists are able to experience incredible journeys of courage, growth and love. Bravery and love is crucial in both novels in order for the protagonists to break through their limiting boundaries and stand up for what they believe. Bravery in both is also essential for fighting against discrimination and when both protagonists transcend from innocence to experience, they becomes more aware of the harsh realities of prejudice and ignorance projected in the world. Through proper guidance, they come to understand what genuine evil is and what is simply given the label of being evil. Love is demonstrated to be capable of conquering the ignorance and courage opposes the notion of being disregarded. For instance, Scout comes to love Boo, conquering the ignorance that Maycomb has projected into her mind and Celie comes to fall in love as well as idolize Shug for her dominant ways, freeing herself from becoming indulged furthermore with the ignorance her surrounding present to her. The characters in both novels begin to use their certain dominance and authority in order to take matters under their own wings; in means of attempting to speak up for what their moral claims to be right. By elaborating on the epic journeys that the characters from both novels venture on, I intend to prove how the two corrupt societies are fueled by ignorance and…
She makes sure that the reader understands that racial issues will be a major theme in the essay. This topic is first introduced amidst a happy memory of eating a home-cooked meal in the train, when Lorde is reminded that they cannot eat in the dining car with the excuse of financial and sanitary reasons. Lorde writes, “My mother never mentioned that black people were not allowed into railroad dining cars headed south in 1947. As usual, whatever my mother did not like and could not change, she ignored,” (Cohen, 255). In order to protect her children, Lorde’s mother ignores the fact that racism exists. This is accompanied by the information that Phyllis was unable to attend the Washington D.C. trip with her classmates because the hotel would not allow Black people. Her casual and curious tone suddenly escalates to anger when the family is kicked out of the ice cream shop. “No one would answer my emphatic questions with anything other than guilty silence. ‘But we hadn’t done anything!’ This wasn’t right or fair!” (Cohen, 257). She catches the reader’s attention by visualizing her pain by placing her reaction next to her family’s subdued reaction.…
Lee illustrates the prevalence of discrimination and racial profiling in America’s 1930’s. That is still the case in world today. Attitudes towards inequality in a negative way can bring out an ugly side of a person, one message Lee shows in her novel. An example of a negative attitudes towards minorities are racial slurs. Racial slurs, also used in the book, are tossed around like they do not mean anything. This exemplifies that the race or group being discriminated against are still inferior like in the book that is based in the 1930’s.…