Indigenous people are traditionally known for their strong connection to their land, culture, and community. However, in the novel In Search Of April Raintree written by Beatrice Monsioner, this reality is challenged. Beatrice Monsioner shows how big of a negative impact society has on Indigenous peoples through this novel. Two sisters April and Cheryl Raintree have been faced with brutal experiences of victimization. Their lives have been turned upside down for who they are and because of this April had chosen to leave her identity behind for something society would accept. While Cheryl went strong with her deep ties to her culture and people but at the end they had come to realize the truth.…
It all begins in an insane asylum with a half-Native American schizophrenic named Chief Bromden pretending to be deaf and dumb to avoid the typical harassment the other patients go through by the Black Boys, three African American patients conditioned to be Nurse Ratched’s bodyguards (more like lapdogs), and Nurse Ratched herself, the big breasted, fine-aged nurse who is known as “Big Nurse” in the asylum for having the reputation of running the asylum. The Black Boys are beginning their ritual shaving, as they do every morning, and they decided to start with Chief Bromden. In fear, Bromden goes to hide in the broom closet and he begins reminiscing about his past, growing up on the Columbia River with his father. This memory is cut abruptly when one of the Black Boys finds him in the closet; they put him in the chair to begin shaving him, then a fog begins to cover the room… As the fog clears up, he is relieved because he thought he was taken to the Shock Shop, the room where patients are given electroshock treatment. Right as he begins to relax on the chair, a brand new patient is admitted to the mental institution. He is known as Randall McMurphy, an Irish Ginger who has had a problem with gambling. When he gets there, Ratched makes it her mission to get the Black Boys to shower him, but he continually avoids getting that shower and introduces himself to all of the other patients. He shares his story about how he came from a work farm called “Pendleton” and that he is at this institute because he is “a psychopath”. After introducing himself to all the Acutes and Chronics, Acutes being the patients with temporary or short-term conditions and Chronics being the patients with more severe mental disorders, he circles the Acutes, asking for the “bull goose loony”, which is his fancy lingo for “whomever is in charge among the patients.” Billy Bibbit, one of the Acutes who has a stuttering problem, tells McMurphy that a…
For my additional summer reading book I read “Our Only May Amelia” by Jennifer L. Holm. The main character is May Amelia, the only girl in a family of 8 children, living in 1899 colonial America after immigrating from Finland. When the story begins May Amelia’s mother is uncomfortably pregnant with her 9th child, her brothers are giving her trouble and her father wants her to be a ‘proper young lady’. Soon her grandmother visits and decides to stay with them for a while. Her grandmother is a bitter mean old lady who has no patience for children and is appalled at how May Amelia has been raised.…
I would speak directly towards Tea Cake because I feel a lot of incidents took…
In the story “Pancakes,” the author, Joan Bauer, creates an irritated tone. Irritated is defined as showing or feeling slight anger or annoyance. First of all, in the exposition of the story, the protagonist wakes up and finds an article about being a perfectionist on her mirror. Instantly she was annoyed because a month before her boyfriend had accused her of being a perfectionist (194). By including this, the author is able to convey that Jill had repeatedly been accused in some way of being a perfectionist and this had begun to pique and annoy her. Later into the story, during the rising action, a customer didn't like the size of her pancakes and sent them back, so Jill goes to Andy and snarls, “Chocolate silver dollars for the brat on eight.…
In chapter thirteen there is one specific passage that holds a lot of meaning. This passage uses personification with the sun and how it “[sent] up spies ahead of him to mark out the road through the dark, he peeped up over the door sill of the world and made and went about his business all dressed in white.” This example of personification makes the sun seem like a person. The sun looks over the “door sill of the world” which is another way to say the sun was coming up and it got rid of the darkness. The sun was explained so intricately in the first few sentences to show its beauty, but Janie didn’t care about it even though it is described in such a way that makes it hard to ignore.…
As Janie returns to the town the townspeople criticize her attire and her previous love life and speculate what had happened to her lover. The town seems to be resentful about her return and try to pinpoint the reason of her return. This gives me the first look at how the townspeople seem to be zealous of her past and truly are critical of the choices she makes. This piece of symbolism shows aspects of Janie’s life that have had positive effects and negative affects on her life and her life choices.…
Navarrete endeavors to use cartoon and comedic satire in order to expose the injustice of the powerful over the powerless. Maritess, a Filipino, agrees to work for the super friends. Rather than using her airplane to fight crime and promote justice, Wonder Woman immediately appears brashly in Zambwanga to figuratively abduct Maritess. Furthermore, Maritess asserts that Superman exercises his x-ray vision to sexually harass her.…
His first show of power was when he stole Janie’s hidden money. Because she hid her money away out of fear of Teacake simply being a golddigger, it was obvious that she did not wish for him to know about it, much less have him spend it. Teacake taking her money clearly shows that he believes that he can take the money because it was his right to, and thus establishes his superiority. This idea is further supported when Janie does not seem upset over this breach of privacy, and Teacake does not seem apologetic at all. Later, he shows his superiority and ownership of Janie in the form of punishment. With the arrival of new planters in the beginning of chapter 17, Teacake is afraid of Janie cheating on him, despite numerous assurances of loyalty by Janie. This misunderstanding also demonstrates how Teacake, like many men, do not understand women. Teacakes ability to be “able to whip her reassured him in possession” (147). The whip is used to punish mules, and the use of the word “possession” further supports the metaphor of women being mules. Even though she is seen as very independent, Janie also perpetuates the disparity between men and women by letting Teacake hit her.…
used to inflict tragedy to Janie and Tea Cake’s lives. Eatonville also allowed for the address of…
“For all the Tea in China -How England Stole the World 's Favorite Drink and Changed History…
When studying the Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Wife of Bath’s Tale, both coming from the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, you see a common theme of feminism. Also, you get a good sense of the of the anti feminist cultural norms and ideas regarding women in the medieval era. Alisoun, The Wife of Bath, focuses most upon the common stereotypes of women. These stereotypes include the idea that women only marry into money in order to live a lavish lifestyle off of their husband’s income as well as the belief that women will never stop talking to their husbands. Stemming from this, the common belief among men was that if you were to get married, it would ruin your chances of success later in life. The Wife of Bath opposed all of these…
her. The beginning of the story is told from the white people 's perspectives as they see an old black woman come to their church and go inside. Inside the church, the point of view switches to the usher who tells the old black lady to leave. The point of view then switches back to the white women inside the church, who take it as a personal insult and feel the most threatened about the old black lady being at their church. They rouse their husbands to throw the old lady out. The perspective then changes to the old black lady. This constant changing of point of view is useful in that it portrays the fears, thoughts, and feelings of almost everyone in the story. Firsthand, the reader is able to know what the people are thinking and why. In the end, the point of view briefly returns to the white people who were at church that day. The story ends with the perspective of some black families wher. The beginning of the story is told from the white people 's perspectives as they see an old black woman come to their church and go inside. Inside the church, the point of view switches to the usher who tells the old black lady to leave. The point of view then switches back to the white women inside the church, who take it as a personal insult and feel the most threatened about the old black lady being at their church. They rouse their husbands to throw the old lady out. The perspective then changes to the old black lady. This constant changing of point of view is useful in that it portrays the fears, thoughts, and feelings of almost everyone in the story. Firsthand, the reader is able to know what the people are thinking and why. In the end, the point of view briefly returns to the white people who were at church that day. The story ends with the perspective of some black families who witnessed the old lady walking down the highway. ho witnessed the old lady walkiher. The beginning of the story is told from the white people 's perspectives as they see an old black woman come…
Myrtle Wilson desires one thing in life, money. She lives in the valley of ashes, the desolate and barren land that lies between Long Island and New York. She wants nothing more than to become wealthy, leave the valley of ashes, leave her husband, and become a extravagant vapid housewife like she always dreamt of being. “‘I married him because I thought he was a gentleman,’ she said finally. ‘I thought he knew something about breeding, but he wasn’t fit to lick my shoe’” Myrtle remarked of her relationship with George. She wanted so badly for him to be something else, someone with class. She wanted a perfect, wealthy man of high social standing. Myrtle discussed her wedding day to George, “The only crazy I was, was when I married him. I knew right away I made a mistake. He borrowed somebody’s best suit to get married in, and never even told me about it, and the man came after it one day when he was out.” Myrtle was embarrassed and almost disgraced about the fact that George didn’t get married in a suit he bought for himself. Myrtle said she knew right away she made a mistake, so the question was why did she go through with it in the first place? That’s why Myrtle has Tom though: he was her fulfillment, her fortune, though in reality they would never truly be together. Tom was with Daisy and that is…
Dreams are often viewed as peaceful escapes, but sometimes dreams make a person’s worst fears come true. In an excerpt from Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, the narrator describes a dream where she visits an abandoned home overpowered by nature. The author uses menacing diction, mysterious details, and haunting imagery to create a nostalgic mood.…