In David Guterson’s short essay “No Place like Home,” he visits communities like Green Valley and meets with residents to discuss the lifestyle of the average suburban family, typically four members in total, who live in the walled in, well watched, prestigious sounding, city sized western version of our local community Landfall. While the essay begins with a sunny sounding tone the reporter almost attempts to portray the community as a facade with something dark lurking in the deeper corners, he does this by phrasing certain things with a suspenseful tone in the first paragraph. David does, inevidetly reach some of his darker topics as he address crime and a certain area of politics. His point, after all though, seemed just to be to inform…
One of the key features of Butler’s story is to highlight the broad characteristics that constitute the idea of human-ness, and to question whether our understanding of what it is to be human will change, or whether it can…
I chose the book My Thirteenth Winter By Samantha Abeel for my independent reading project. In this memoir, the author shares her struggles with dyscalculia which is a learning disability that affects an understanding of concepts like math, spelling, and grammar. In My Thirteenth Winter, Samantha is a 12 year old who’s life is controlled by her contstant panic attacks and her continues struggles in academics. Every day she wakes up terrified about what she’ll be expected to do in class, and never being able to sleep a night without an episode.…
What makes humans different from all other animals and machines? Humans have feelings, have hopes, and have awareness of our own identities. However, in history, some groups have targeted other groups based on their collective identity. Therefore, wars and violent clashes have occurred between opposing groups. In the history of Germany, the hatred against the Jews caused them to carry out a widespread genocide. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, the German’s hatred for the Jews led them to subject the Jews to a cruel process of dehumanization during the Holocaust.…
There are approximately seven billion people living on the Earth. Each person is different. The journey of finding one’s self is a path that one must take with little help from others and built from their own experiences, creating an identity that must be established by themselves and can only be taken away by themselves as seen through the texts A Separate Peace by John Knowles, Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, and Night by Elie Wiesel.…
The poem ‘Migrants by ‘Bruce Dawe ’should be included for the core text for journeying as it portrays journeying through the perceptions and experiences of a migrant group. This poem depicts feelings of ignorance and disrespectfulness encountered by the migrant group as they are treated with a lack of concern by people living in Australia.…
“We Are Still Only Human” by Verlyn Klinkenborg is an analysis of expectations and human nature in which there is too much of a positive outlook for the future of society. Klinkenborg uses a serious tone that makes his essay fit for a speech. He also uses many techniques to show tone including diction, imagery, details, language, and sentence structure.…
Bruce Dawe's poem, Migrants, portrays a long quest from the perception of a migrant group. The particular group is acknowledged as “they” as they were met with indifferences from the locals. “They” reacted to this treatment with surprise and confusion which is made evident in the line, “indifference surprised them..” which creates a sense of ambiguity and lack of identity. This mystified poem depicts feelings of ignorance as well as disinterest as “they” are treated with a lack of concern.…
The title human can have many different meanings, and can be used in different ways. Today I’m going to be telling you about what it means to be human in the classic text Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, and the epic film Blade Runner by Ridley Scott with reference to contexts. Humans are known to exploit the world and people around them for their own benefit, but at the same time humans can love fiercely and show compassion in the most unlikely of circumstances. These traits are part of what makes humans so difficult to box and understand.…
Who am I? That is a question every man has faced, one way or another, since the beginning of life. It is simply the question of identity, yet it never is that simple. When you ask a human population to answer this question, a majority of the people questioned will not have an answer. This shows the struggle to find your own identity. With this struggle comes another option. Instead of finding your identity within yourself, why couldn’t you look to and emulate others for your identity? It is a valid option, yet the consequences can be tremendously terrible. Playwright Arthur Miller elucidates the idea of the struggle of identity in his most famous play. Throughout the story, hundreds of identities are being questioned,…
How do we as humans work, think, feel, communicate, celebrate, fashion objects,and reshape our world?…
At times I feel as though I'm trying and failing to be a human being. But what makes us human? I feel although I'm a human-shaped shell made out of pieces of things I find interesting. Instead of a real identity. Just layers of things that I hope will make me different from others. But am I? We rely so much on the opinion of others. But why? Why do we crave acceptance of others? If people were to look closely, they'd notice there really isn't anything there.Just a mess of a person trying to find their ‘place in the world. All we want is to be remembered. Just to prove we are something , we where something. How will I be remembered? Or will I fade into oblivion? Is this the meaning of life? To spend it hoping we have some significance in this…
Just as each individual person has theoretically separate components, all humans though separate individuals are likewise connected into a unified whole otherwise known as humanity. Recent research in…
Increasing someone’s knowledge is different from getting them to make lasting changes in their on the job behaviors and it requires a different model of learning which is what Boyatzis’s theory offers [1]…
Identity is created by the factors all around us, and also how we respond to them. In the article by Beverly Tatum titled The Complexity of Identity: “Who Am I?” she discusses how we as a society can get past our differences through understanding who we are. She gives multiple examples of how we relate to our environment and how a better understand of that can bring us closer together and even open new channels of communication through discussion. Tatum gives us a very well laid out way to ask the right questions, to get an outside perspective that ultimately helps us understand who we are and how we can relate with others.…