The sun was bright and she did not like to sweat in public. She took off her glasses and crossed to the shaded side of the street." Response: The mother is a hard worker and cares a lot about her husband and children. Throughout the book the mother stays strong for her family while…
In a traditional society, Edna feels stuck between what is right for her and what makes society happy. She is expected to be a good wife and mother, however; she falls short of this…
Reading Addie’s section of the novel, the reader discovers several innermost thoughts and secrets the mother is harboring. Addie does not look forward to her life. Stating things such as: “I could just remember how my father used to say that the reason for living was to get ready to stay dead a long time” and “And when I would have to look at them day after day…I would hate my father for having ever planted me” (Faulkner 19-170) tells the reader that Addie is not satisfied with her life. She has no family as all her relatives are dead; Addie finds comfort in death. As a schoolteacher, she only looks forward to when the children misbehave, so she can discipline them. “Now you are aware of me! Now I am something in your secret and selfish life…” (Faulkner 170) shows Addie longing to be noticed and important. She wants to leave a lasting memory. This dissatisfaction is not only with her job, but with her husband and children. She never speaks of Anse, her husband, lovingly. She speaks more of obligation. She never says that she loves him, the word holds no meaning in her life:…
The most important person a girl looks up to and connects with is her mother. However, the girl may sometimes lack a mother figure, and may look to another: father, brother, sister, and if alive, grandmother. Janie Mae Crawford and Nanny share a complex relationship as her mother figure disappears and it is left to Nanny to nurture the protagonist, influencing many of her choices in the near future. Creator of character Nanny and Janie Mae Crawford, Zora Neale Hurston depicts the complexity of Nanny and Janie’s love in her novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God. Hurston effectively describes the difficulty of the mother-daughter relationship between Nanny and Janie. Janie and Nanny’s bond is compassionate,…
Death; a terror of fear Sanger Rainsford and Marshall Will Kane experienced as that got caught up into a bundle of panic. To start off with, in the film High Noon written by Carl Foreman we quickly find out that Frank Miller is coming back to town with his gang to get revenge on the Marshall Will Kane. Unfortunately Will Kane has trouble finding deputies and has to take on this challenge alone. As we read the novel, The Most Dangerous Game written by Richard Connell we observed that the protagonist Rainsford fell off his yacht to next wake up on the mysterious Ship Trap Island. With no one around to call for help he comes into contact with General Zaroff and is forced into playing a terrible "game". While analyzing both of the stories, High…
At the opening of the book, the readers meet Cornelia Thornhill, a very quiet and insecure young girl. Agatha, her eccentric great aunt, says to her, “If you don’t get out here, I’m coming in there and dragging you out.” She’s trying to “drag” the life and livelihood out of Cornelia, but she just refuses. Agatha is constantly trying to…
Problems often arise between two people when one is a parental figure and the other a daughter figure. Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God expresses a conflict between the main character, Janie, and her grandmother which she called Nanny. The conflict arises because of their disagreement on marriage and love. Nanny believes love is not the most important aspect of marriage, but Janie “means tuh live [her way]” (Hurston 114). The struggle between Janie and Nanny highlights hopes and the deeper emotions which Janie desires.…
“She had waited all her life for something.” This quote is significant because it epitomizes the struggle of a woman to reach self-actualization. In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston juxtaposes opposing places to emphasize the experience gained by the novel’s protagonist, Janie, in each respective location, and to emphasize the effect of that environment on Janie’s journey to attain her dreams. Through this comparison, the author explores the idea of living and experiencing life as a means of self-discovery. Moreover, Hurston expresses another theme central to the novel’s understanding. This particular theme denounces the belief that achieving life experience should always involve happiness. Through the juxtaposition of Eatonville to the Everglades Zora Neale Hurston depicts the self-discovery of a woman, attained only by embarking on through empiricism.In the novel Eatonville serves as a symbol of the oppression that Janie endured throughout the majority of her life. When the narration commences, prior to the introduction of Eatonville, Janie she is sixteen-years-old and living with her grandmother, Nanny. Nanny is characterized as strong-willed and overbearing. Furthermore, she is the first force of oppression, against which Janie must contend. The audience is provided with insight into Nanny’s perspective of the situation when Nanny remarks, “Ah was born back due in slavery...Ah didn’t want to be used for a work-ox and a brood-sow and Ah didn’t want mah daughter used dat way neither...Ah even hated the way you was born. But, all de same Ah said thank God, Ah got another chance” (Hurston 15). Because of her experiences, Nanny desires to protect Janie from all struggles in life; Nanny believes that by marrying Logan Killicks, Janie will be able to avoid the obstacles that her grandmother endured. Although Nanny’s intentions are virtuous, her actions only cause Janie to further rebel. Immediately after marrying…
This story centers around a girl who has a lot of liberty to do what she wants. However, her flaw is simply that she is too naive towards the world’s dangers and has a difficulty creating any sort of intimate relationship with anyone. Much like Laura, she has a cold relationship with her mother. Connie sees her mother as a person who is difficult to please and who is also constantly comparing her with her older sister June. “June did this, June did that,, she saved money and helped clean the house and cooked…” (Oates 492). This constant comparison with her sister drives Connie to the point of anger and disgust, where Connie cannot stand being with her mom for extended periods of time. This will go on to play a crucial role in the development of the story. Connie’s frustration with her mother is also made evident by the way Connie believes that her mother prefers June over her, stating that “if June’s name was mentioned her mother’s tone was approving, and if Connie’s name was mentioned it was disapproving” (Oates 495). Connie feels as if she is not appreciated within her household, a factor that leads her to make questionable decisions once Arnold Friend makes his appearance later on in the story. Along with her shaky relationship with her mother, Connie also has difficulty creating relationships with other people.…
As time went on, new opportunities arose. “He spoke for change and chance. Still she hung back. The memory of Nanny was still powerful and strong.” (29) Joe Starks was a relief for Janie. At this point her desires came back into play, Love and romance were again an option. Despite this newfound hope, she was aware of the outward existences, in particular her Grandma. Tension grew more as Janie considered running away with Joe. He appeared to be what she always wanted…
Edna and Addie both were seeking autonomy. Unfortunately, Edna was a married woman from 19-century era who did not any options to improve her situation. In the 19-century era women were very limited by society. Women did not have the opportunity of choosing what they wanted for their lives.in others worlds women didn’t have rights at all. Society expectations were very clear; women supposed to be virtuous. Being virtuous meant being to marry and have children. Moreover, women supposed to be in charge of the house because they weren’t capable to manage the outside world. Edna realized that society expectation were in reality limitations. She wanted to have the freedom of choosing for herself the love of her live and the live she wanted to live.…
Ethel Wilson's "Hurry Hurry" is about a man who murdered a woman on a what used to be peaceful, quiet and innocent island. The mood she starts with in "Hurry Hurry" is peaceful at first, to help the reader picture the island as Miriam sees it, then it gradually turns into a tense and scary mood. Ethel shows this through the structure of her sentances such as the the point of veiw and the repitition of words or descriptions , the imagery of her writing, and the setting of the peaceful island.…
In the novel, And Then There Were None, written by Agatha Christie, ten people are invited to an island under false pretenses, but slowly, one by one, the group starts dying off. All of the deaths of the group are based upon an old nursery rhyme called Ten Little Indians, which is hung in all the rooms. But when all of them arrive at the house on the island, a record player starts playing, explaining how all of them are guilty of murder. Soon after, Mrs. Roger’s is the first to drop dead, leaving all of them weary and paranoid of one another. Doubts and blame start flying around between each other.…
First the mothers all speaking in turn, remember clear memories with their relationships with their own mothers, and they worry that their daughters’ memories of them will never possess the same potency. Secondly when the daughters recall their childhood memories with their mother also supports my idea of the mood. And last when the daughter tell about their delimas in the adult life as they search for an answer which adventually bring them back to their mothers and their relationships begin to heal. The major conflict in this novel is the mothers are trying to instill in their daughter a part of their hertige. The daught take this a medley or their mother lack of american culture. But all the mother want to do is save their daughter from the pain and grief they felt as children. Both the mother and daughter struggles with their identies. The mothers try and reconcile the past is their present and the daughter are trying to find a positive balance between their loyaty to their heritage and some sort of independance. This is resolved when the bridge is gapped between two countries, two generation and two cultures.The ending to the story was very satisfying because June was able to find her inner Chinese identity. And doing that she built a bridge to her mother. June gives hope to all the other characters struggling for a stronger mother and daughter bond despite the culture, age and language…
“And if this ain’t beautifully, child nothing is (p.115)” with respect to knowing her responsibilities in the community. She claims many professions and is of importance to many people, especially her own family. She gives advice to her only niece, Cocoa; childless to her own infertility of life, about home and wisdom that is metaphorically interprets life’s lessons in living and values and comfort that only home can offer no matter how far you travel away, “ Home. It’s being new and old all rolled into one. Measuring your new against the old friends, old ways, old places. Knowing that as long as the old survives, you can keep changing as much as you want without the nightmare of waking up to a total stranger (p.49).” Mama Day speaks a native tongue rich in wisdom that gives authority to the tongue.…