The first major difference in the communities along Germantown Avenue that the author
The first major difference in the communities along Germantown Avenue that the author
Night is by a Jewish teenager named Eliezer Wiesel. When the life begins, Eliezer lives in his hometown of Sighet, in Hungarian Transylvania. Eliezer likes to study the Torah and the Cabbala. His teacher Moshe the Beadle has been deported. After a few months, Moshe returns, telling a terrifying story; the German secret police force took charge of the train and led everyone into the woods, regularly slaughtered them. But nobody seems to believe Moshe, who is taken for a maniacal. In the spring, the Nazis take over Hungary. The Jews of Eliezer’s town is forced into small ghettos within Sighet. They were forced onto cattle cars, and a dreadful journey occurs. After days and nights of exhaustion and starvation, the passengers arrive at Birkenau, the gateway to Auschwitz.…
There is a lot that we can learn from people who have experienced history. Bella Spewack, specifically, is a great example of the struggle immigrants endured while trying to survive in America after immigration. Today, it is beneficial to learn about the personal views of people who lived in the past so we can gain a better understanding of how communities today were developed. Reading “Streets”, you can understand what the post immigration life was like in New York in the early years of Bella’s life. Bella included a lot of details in her memoir that allows the reader to understand how difficult life was for an immigrant. Even though “Streets” was written from the perspective of Bella, we can still rely on her opinions to give us an understanding of the difficulty immigrants faced while starting a new life.…
At first glance, Dr. Brenda DoHarris’ Calabash Parkway appears to be a novel about a Guyanese woman meeting an old friend from her native land, in New York, after several years. Upon further reading, the novel has resilient records of feminism in the protagonists Agatha, Evadne, and Gwennie. The three are emasculated by poverty, neglect, and abuse. Living in a masculinized country the three women refuse to succumb to their struggles of life. These powerless characteristics of the three young women are overcome after immigrating to New York and Canada.…
When Alice Goffman began her research project on the neighborhood of 6th street that eventually evolved into her thesis and this book, she dropped herself into a society and reality she was unfamiliar with. The men and women and 6th street lived by a very real set of rules and guidelines that helped them navigate external and internal pressures Alice and living in a less prosecuted environment would consider bizarre. Yet these actions are so ingrained in the community that they aren’t just learned over time, but actively passed down and taught from generation to generation, mentor to pupil, as a way to live and survive.…
The novel “Night” was written by Elie Wiesel and is a memoir of his life during World War II. The book starts with his life living in Hungary with his family. It then tells of how they were taken away to concentration camps throughout the war. During Elie’s stays at the various camps you see the sacrifices he makes and how the experience changes him.…
1. What is Tin Pan Alley and why is the history of Tin Pan Alley important to the history of rock 'n' roll leading up to the 1950s?…
Arnold Gesell was born on June 21,1880 to mother Christine Giesen Gesell and father Gerhard Gesell the family lived in Alma, Wisconsin. He was an American Psychologist,pediatrician,and a professor at Yale University,he was known for his research and contributions in child development. He later wrote a book analyzing his experiences and the book was called The Village of a Thousand Souls. He was the eldest of five children.His first experience was watching over his younger siblings while his parents went out and had a great…
I am presenting this evening my Informative Speech. That was then….and this is now. I call Culpeper, Virginia home. Though, the small town I knew growing up was Springfield, Virginia. I would like to tell you and share some of my memories about growing up in Northern Virginia and of its changes that have occurred over the decades. Growing up Springfield really was small town USA. The normal commuter was traveling south onto interstate 95 from Washington, D.C. which is now is exit 169A and a permanent memory etched in my brain. Throughout the 1970’s there was only three very small strip shopping malls the served a country setting population. Then the 1980’s came, and flooded the suburbs with malls. People still went into Washington, D.C.…
Summer reading at New Town High School is changing. This year, the entire school will be reading the same text. This book was chosen specifically for its content and its connection to the area in which we live. This assignment will be due the last week of September. Please see your English teacher for a specific due date.…
In the novel, Night, by Elie Wiesel, Elie betrayed himself, his religion, customs, values, and even his father, if only in his own mind. Betrayal was a major aspect of life for Jews in the Holocaust, especially Elie. Elie felt betrayed by the Germans for treating Jews like they weren’t humans and taking away the Jew’s self-worth. Elie also felt betrayed by his own god, who allowed Elie and his fellow Jews to be treated the way they were by the Germans. Betrayal started the sequence of poor events in Elie’s life and affected him during the Holocaust and from then on.…
If an individual lives in an immoral or ruthless community, they are subjected to immoral and ruthless actions. One may think a community is just a place where one resides but it is much bigger than that, it’s a second family. It was stated that “The basketball court is a strange patch of neutral ground, a meeting place for every element of a neighborhood cohort of young men…We were all enclosed by the same fence, bumping into one another, fighting, celebrating. Showing one another our best and worst, revealing ourselves—even our cruelty and crimes—as if that fence had created a circle of trust. A brotherhood” (pg.45). The streets can teach one various life skills that a parent cannot, especially in a rough neighborhood in the heart of Maryland. The author Wes and his family moved into his grandparents’ home and the same rules that applied to his mother applied to him. “… My grandparents figured if these rules had helped their children successfully navigate the world, they would work on their grandkids too” (pg.42) states the author Wes as he discussed how he had to be in before the street light would come on. His family was sterner on him and his sister because they wanted what was best for them. They lived in the nicest community and went to the nicest white school for the reason that their mom wants her kids to stay away from all the trouble and how bad Harlem had changed since she left. Not saying the other Wes’…
In the story, Young Goodman Brown comes from a puritan community that has a strong sense of dystopia. Everyone must be the same and have same faith. However, just outside the edge of the community lays a darkened forest demonstrating the role of the devil , the role of otherness. Yet within all communities come curious individuals such as Goodman Brown who search for meaning beyond the boundaries of his community. Hawthorne notes “ he took a dark a dreary road, darkened by all the gloomiest trees of the forest”(Hawthorne, 1). This goes to show that the forest is seen as a place that one should not enter for bad things lie within this devilish outside world for “ a devilish Indian may be behind every tree”(1). Hawthorne’s setting illustrates the role of otherness by painting a dark and frowned upon outside world. The setting attempts to limit the characters to the boundaries of their community through the use of eerie surroundings. Regardless of this setback the main character continues to feel ostracised and thus searches the otherness that surrounds his everyday life. The community of salem is holding onto their traditional outlooks on otherness, pushing away the things they can not relate to, the outside world. But, as a community they would be stronger if they were to be more inclusive and took the time to learn from these beyond…
Mrs. Fullerton, one who is of the older generation, is an individual that does not fit in with her new, younger neighbors. Despite that, Mary gives her and her story credence. However, Mary feels the division between Mrs. Fullerton's generation, and the younger one that she is a part of, as she felt as though she was going through barricades when going from Mrs. Fullerton's offbeat house to the subdivision's uniform houses. Mrs. Fullerton is like her house; different, self-sufficient and lasting.…
1. Using the photograph of the back steps of apartments on Chicago’s South Side and the excerpt from a Chicago commission report, explain the appeal of suburban life for Chicago residents in the 1940s and ’50s. How does your answer relate to the experiences and ambitions of the Younger family in the play?…
Peter Skrzynecki is of Polish/Ukrainian background and was born in 1945, in Germany, shortly before the end of World War II. He emigrated to Australia in 1949 with his parents. Most of Skrzynecki’s poems are about his life and the change that he has experienced from moving to a different country. In 1951 the family moved to Sydney, to the working-class suburb of Regents Park, where a home had been purchased at 10 Mary Street. The poem “10 Mary Street” represents change as it shows the comparison between Skrzynecki’s life in Poland and his new life in Sydney and how he and his family have had to adapted to their new way of life and how the physical change of moving countries has changed them emotionally. Change is present in this poem as the poet uses the simile “Shut the house; like a well-oiled lock” to appreciate the order of daily ritual when departing in the morning. It indicates that the house is secure and protects the family. The simile “like adopted children” shows that the garden is not like any other garden to them.…