The novel Delta Wedding written by Eudora Welty begins in September of 1923 with nine year old Laura, who has just arrived at her mother's family's house in Fairchild Mississippi. Her 17 year old cousin Dabney is soon to be married to Troy Flavin. The overseer of their cotton plantation. A true tight knit Southern family does not easily accept outsiders. The Fairchild family disapproves of Dabney marrying Troy. They do not think he is not the right man to be marrying their beloveded Dabney. Throughout the novel Troy makes many attempts to get the family on his side, but with all of the family home for the wedding the chaos is at an all time high. Though the family seems to be able to put that aside their disputes for Dabneys special day.…
The novel “the She “ by Carol Plum-Ucci is based on the main character , Evan Barret Evan is just getting over the death of his parents and beginning to push the mysterious occurrences surrounding the event to the back of his mind. And his big brother (now guardian) is helping. Eight years of repressing memories and avoiding belief in a sea man's superstition known only as "The She". But one school project has the power to change all that. When Evan must help a mean girl of the first degree he discovers that they might have more in common than he'd thought and that there might be more to the disappearance of his parents than anyone had ever dared admit, who is living with his older brother Emmett, a philosophy graduated student. Also, eight years before, his parents were lost at sea. Evan’s parents died in a tragic…
In the book ‘By the River’ written by Steven Herrick, the voice of the book is Harry. Harry experiences a wide range of issue though out the book. He has gone though the death of his mother and his friend but not only his friend but she was his first love. Harry and his family without they mother and wife have to carry on with they life. This novel is relevant to everyday families life.…
Katherine Boo’s first book, Behind The Beautiful Forevers, details the lives of the citizens of Annawadi, a small slum in Mumbai, India. For three years and four months Boo chronicled the everyday struggles of several individuals illegally squatting within the cramped quarters owned by the Mumbai Airport Authority. Founded in 1991 by construction workers hoping to acquire temp work brought on by the ever-expanding airport (Boo, 2012, p. 5), Annawadi is home to “three thousand people … packed into … three hundred and thirty five huts” (Boo, 2012, p. xi).…
After reading the novel Nest in the Wind: Adventures in Anthropology on a Tropical Island, written by Martha C. Ward, I learned about a culture on an island that is much different but similar in many ways to ours. The Climate of the Island was tropical with heavy rainfall. The Island was known as a “tropical paradise”. Ward a female Anthropologist went to this Island to study its inhabitants . Some area she focus on was Family, Religion, sex, tradition, economics, politics ,medicine, death, resources and daily activities . Ward approach to getting this information as accurate as possible was to live among the Pohnpeians as . She got involved in their culture and community. She even , though unwanted gained rank in their society. Her and Her Husband lived in a tin hut, learned customs and manners. They were forced to do the daily chores , find food learn the language and be an active part of the community When the first arrived they had little idea what to expect. They went for information and what they got was a life changing experience. Their study is one of the few done on the traditional way of Pohnpei life recording everything from chores to beliefs.…
Mary Ann Glendon begins by discussing the eighteenth century and what the Founding Fathers expected America to be when they were discussing social systems, the environment and emphasis on family during that time period produced different character and personality than our environment and definition of family does today. Glendon asserts, “the market economy, too, can take a toll on society.” This quote in particular reminded me of the probing social commentary discussed in the previous chapters of Lasch, where the market, no longer relying on small-scale production can cause a loss in civic virtue because citizens focus their concerns elsewhere. Therefore, the environment that the Founding Fathers were exposed to, surrounded by small-scale production,…
Stephen Crane’s first novel Maggie (girl of the streets) is a tale of uncompromising realism. The story chronicles the titular Maggie, a girl who lives in the Bowery with her emotionally abusive parents and brothers Jimmie and Tommy. The novel revolves around the trials and tribulations of Maggie and her family in the Bowery. Highlights of the story include the death of Maggie’s father and brother Tommie which drive Pete to turn into a cold and hard person by novels end. Maggie desperately tries to escape bowery life, but in the end Maggie succumbs to the Bowery and dies a broken woman. Crane is considered a Naturalist, and in Crane’s naturalist world no one escapes their biological chains. Maggie’s parents are both unfit parents: they are emotionally and physically abusive, and have alcoholic tendencies. Despite Maggie’s and (to a lesser extent) Jimmie’s longings to escape the bleak world of the bowery they do not. Crane is making a statement on the adverse effects of industrialization and urbanization with the novel. Industrialization and urbanization on the surface create jobs and strengthen business, but upon further examination it disenfranchises the very people it promises to help. Many of the families in the bowery are immigrant families who become wage slaves. Maggie’s family is no different; because of their dependency on big business they have become disenfranchised and incapable of growth. This idea of being set into a world where there is no escape from one's biological heredity that Crane showcases the in the novel is mirrors Darwin’s survival of the fittest theory. According to Darwin only the biologically strong would survive in the world, with the weaker specimens expiring. In Crane’s novel the people are not inherently weak; it is the environment that shapes them and prevents them from growing. Ultimately, all of the characters in Maggie are victims of the Bowery life.…
‘The Secret Life of Frogs’ is a poem that delves into the childhood perception of war, in particular World War I, and the experiences of their fathers. ‘The Secret Life of Frogs’ deals with the idea of misunderstandings incurred when children attempt to understand adult concepts. This is evident through the use of punning. The term ‘Frog’, which is frequently used throughout the poem adds amusement to the text because to the readers, it not only translates literally to a frog, but also represents the rival French people in the war through a negative light. However, the narrator, who is also one of the children in the poem, does not understand this other meaning attached to the term ‘frog’. This can clearly be seen in the final sentence when the narrator believes in protecting the amphibians, but does not distinguish the term ‘Frogs’ to also represent the French people. The use of allusion, reference to World War I in the poem, emphasizes the idea that children in their innocence, particularly children during the war, can misinterpret what adults talk about. Evident in the line ‘some syllables we used as charms…Gallipoli’, where the children have heard of these words and the negative connotations attached, however they do not know of the magnitude of the events that are associated with the words.…
As the novel opened, Taylor Geer was one of the main characters, she was strong and practical in the different things that she did. The feisty protagonist left her rural home in Pittman Country, Kentucky to begin a new life with a new identity. ''When I drove over the Pittman kine I made two promises to myself. One I kept, the other I did not. The first was that I would get myself a new name. I wasn't crazy about anything I had been called up that point in life.' However, Taylor Geer discovered important thing about herself and her life. Taylor became more worldly as she witnessed the cruelties of human suffering and becomes sympathetic to the personal tragedy of a little girl and a friend who struggled not to offend people for fear of rejection. By bringing love to Turtle(the baby that she took), Taylor is able to restore the damaged the irony of her life. ''Do you know, I spent the first half of my life avoiding motherhood and tires, and now I'm counting them as blessings.''…
I'm here to inform you of this wonderful and horrible relationship between a clueless girl and a dangerous boy in the novel Jake Riley; Irreparably damaged by Rebecca Davis and why you should check it out sometime. Set sometime in the 1990s or current time, it's about a girl named Lainey. Even though Lainey is fast and smart, she just can't seem to get away from one particular friend. Although there are many instances of this ‘friendship’ being crooked, she just can't seem to stay away, and this confusing yet somehow touching truth is shown in the novel when Lainey is thinking to herself, “I hate Jake’s guts, but somehow the fact that everybody gangs up on him and thinks that he’ll get help in the place that damaged him makes me want to beat…
Thomson, however, recognizes the fault in her analogy – burglars have a choice to enter the house while children do not. She then utilizers her thought experiment to account for the discrepancy. She asks her audience to consider that people-seeds were simply drifting around in the air and, if the circumstances are right, one may float into a window and take root in the carpet, despite if all precautionary measures were taken. She argues that the “people-seed” does not have a right to house, despite coming in through an open window. She uses this analogy to demonstrate a women who had consensual intercourse, but took preventative measures which failed (390).…
In the poem, “Hand-Me-Downs” by Sarah Kay, the poet uses conflict and figurative language to show that anger is passed down from generation to generation. This is a problem because when a person “wears” anger, they do not ask themselves if the anger is worth it, and if it is having the affect it is supposed to have.…
Throughout the story, At the Pitt-Rivers, the narrator analyses a “couple” in the museum. He observes the way the couple act around each other and how they communicate. When the narrator first spots the young woman, he observes her and her physical appearance: “The girl was definitely not attractive … she hadn’t got a nice figure; her legs were kind of dumpy and she didn’t have pretty hair or anything like that” (Lively 24). Right off the bat, the narrator judges the woman for not being attractive whatsoever. However, the narrator goes on for being misconstrued: “She still wasn’t pretty, but she had the most beautiful expression I’ve ever seen in my life” (Lively 25). The narrator is stating how, even though this woman may be unattractive, she has the most beautiful expression ever. Later on, the narrator realizes that the reason why she lights up so much and gives off this beautiful array of expression, is because of the man she is with. At this point, the narrator recognizes that the man may be in a relationship with the woman and eventually concludes that they are.…
A lesson that can be found in this novel is that relationships are never perfect, and there will always be some sort of problem along the way. You’ll never to be alone because you will have friends to help you go through that problem. In the novel, Someone Like You, by Sarah Dessen there are two best friends who had relationships that goes down hill. Scarlett dates a boy named Michael, and she ends up pregnant. Then Michael dies in a motorcycle accident. Scarlett’s best friend, Halley, somehow follows Scarlett’s foot steps . Halley dates a boy named Macon, and he constantly asks her to have relations with him. However, when she finally agrees to have an intercourse with Macon, she ends up throwing up and gets in an argument with Macon. Therefore leading to her getting in a fatal car accident. Halley ends up surviving and breaks up with Macon because she realizes she deserves better.…
It was confirmed by the doctors that a couple, namely Jim and Cindy Green, couldn't have any children. One night, they were losing their hope and Jim came up with the idea that they would make notes of what kind of child they wanted to cheer Cindy up. They buried those notes in their garden. Then a storm went by. Later on, a child named Timothy sneaked in their house, claiming that he came from the garden. They saw that Timothy had leaves on his legs, and they discovered that Timothy grew from the notes that they buried. They adopted him and hid his leaves by making him wear socks. Throughout Timothy's life, he made a lot of people happy, Jim's father, Cindy's sister, his football coach, a girl from their neighborhood and many others. Then fall came along. All the leaves of the trees were changing color, and came falling to the ground, and so did the leaves on Timothy's legs. One by one they fell off, until he only had one. He explained to Jim and Cindy that when his last leaf falls off, he will be gone. Then there was a crackling of thunder, the power went off for a second, and when it came back on, Timothy was gone. Later on they found a note from Timothy saying "Never give up". In the following days, all the people that Timothy made happy had discovered a leaf or two in random places, which were supposedly the ones that had fallen off of Timothy's legs, and Jim and Cindy adopted another child like Timothy had told them to, to never give…