Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson is a book that was set in the American Revolutionary War in the undecided colony of New York.…
In the book, “Speak” by, Laurie Halse Anderson, we are taken on a journey through the life of a young girl, named Melinda Sordino. We quickly learn that Melinda is a rape survivor that becomes mute after encountering sexual violence at a party during summer break, right before the start of her freshman year of high school. Melinda carries the burden of this secret with her in shame and in silence, from the hallways of her school to the doors of her home; internally isolating herself from everyone.…
The characters in “The Chrysalids” and “The Stolen Party” both face the wall and barrier of being discriminated against due to their social status, which resulted in them not achieving their goal of being accepted.…
In A Lesson Before Dying, by Ernest Gaines, the narrator, Grant, is an African-American man living in the Jim Crow era and subsequently faces discrimination and oppression all too often. One example discrimination is when Grant goes to buy a radio from a white-owned shop. The white lady tries to give Grant an old box, even though he is paying full price for the radio. This is an example of discrimination because the saleswomen is treating Grant unfairly because he is different race; however this is a rather benign example of the discrimination Grant faces. A more poignant example of discrimination, oppression, in Grant’s world is the trial of Jefferson, a young African-American man. Jefferson is tried and convicted for murdering white man (under…
Syme’s exploited differences and eventual death show how different people are “socially vaporized” when they are seen as outside the social norms. These similarities in the dehumanization and social neglection of outcasts apply very similarly to our society today.…
Hawks could make his distinctive mark on any genre and can be easily recognized throughout his long film career, “westerns, musicals, screwball comedies, war pictures, historical epics, romantic adventures, films noir, gangster sagas, and even science fiction“(imdb, Howard Hawks). Here is just sample of classic films he has directed, Scarface (1932), Bringing Up Baby (1938), His Girl Friday (1940), Sergeant York (1941), Air Force (1943), To Have and Have Not (1944), The Big Sleep (1946), and Rio Bravo (1959). He nearly won the Oscar in 1941 for Best Director of Sergeant York; Hawks was “nominated for Best Director only that one time, despite making some of the best films in the Hollywood canon“ (imdb, Howard Hawks). By the 1960s and 1970s the…
Jacqueline’s character makes the viewers consider how they might be compliant in terms of systemic oppression by opening the discussion about internalized racism. She subtly embodies how racial inequality shapes the way that people with marginalized identities think of themselves and other members within their group. Researchers say that when marginalized racial groups accept and internalize mainstream racist values and rationales, they are often unconsciously justifying the oppression of their group with a belief in own inferiority (Pyke and Dang 168). These are not things that people think through consciously, they are ingrained in our culture, and Unbreakable allows people another lens through which they can view society. Xanthippe Voorhees One of the best strengths of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt…
Have you ever heard stories on the internet or the news of people getting shot or being hurt by bullying? In the story “All Summer in a Day” by Ray Bradbury and in “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. people are getting hurt two different ways, but in the act of jealousy. In “All Summer in a Day”, a girl name Margot (on Venus) knows more about the sun than the other children, yet, instead of the other children wanting to know more and hearing her out, they put her in a closet. And in “Harrison Bergeron”, there’s a handicap general who forces everyone to wear some kind of tech/gear to hide their strengths. People can be easily manipulated to go one way or the other, for people may know more, seen more, or have more than them and treat them…
Each poem by Jericho Brown projects many different challenges of being minority and experiencing severities related to these trials. I feel like through his poems author trying to give readers an understanding of how painful it feels to be different from people around. Author explaining and projecting the minority experience through sore, painful and agonizing experiences, because these type of feelings could be related to any reader, in my opinion. All of us have feelings of being exhausted times to times, all of us have been experienced lows in life, and in that undesirable moments we tend to feel that it is nobody who understands, that we left alone in the sorrow, however by reading Browns poems it is easy to see that the pain experiences by speakers` are very related to your, and could have been experienced by anybody else. By the fact of relating speakers` painful experiences to readers` sorrow moments, an understanding of speakers` point of view appears, which is, in my opinion, is the main purpose of almost all literature related to minority experience.…
Specifically, the majority of high school students reading The Catcher in the Rye can relate to the prevailing pressure to meet high family and class expectations. The main character,…
Oppression is a prevalent and reoccurring theme in black literature. African-American novelists in the early 20th century offered a predominantly white audience an insight into black culture and vocalized the injustice had by their hands. Alice Walker's The Color Purple and Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye both incorporate controversial female protagonists facing the challenge of mental oppression by both personal and societal belief, and physical abuse at the hands of their aggressors. Whilst each arguably feminist bildungsroman faces criticism for misrepresenting relationships and stereotyping behaviour in black society, it is widely accepted that both authors explore and bring attention to the oppression and abuse of women in a modern context.…
How many common misconceptions have you ever heard about Muslims recently? Today we hear thousands of people say discriminating things toward a certain race. Recently, a lot of people have been talking about Muslims and saying “all Muslims are terrorist” and if not that something along those lines. Mostly because the media that catches everyone’s eye, emphasises the relationship between some sort of attack and their race. In relation to the play ‘The Crucible’ written by Arthur Miller, the people who have the authority around the village are what influences the rest of the population to think the way that they do. They constantly talk about their religion and focus on witches who they are deeply frightened by. We can see in the play, Fear is…
As she entered the local supermarket, everyone’s actions came to a standstill. They all watched her as she walked down the aisle minding her own business. Their eyes pierced into her dark flesh, discovering the humility that the woman felt as they watched every single one of her moves. The humiliation that she experienced caused her to question how one’s mind could be so immoral to the point where they discriminate people from society because of their skin color. She perpetually wondered what it would be like to be born a different skin color. It was challenging for the young woman to be a part of society without feeling discriminated by others. She longed for the time where color would not create a rift in society and instead would unite people…
'Of Mice and Men', Steinbeck portrays a world dominated by powerful white able-bodied males. It is the views and opinions of this social type that permeate ranch society and those who come from outside these boundaries are ostracized and persecuted. Thus we have a world where Steinbeck describes the plight of women, black people, disabled people and those with mental disabilities showing the persecution and suffering they have to endure.…
Lee illustrates the prevalence of discrimination and racial profiling in America’s 1930’s. That is still the case in world today. Attitudes towards inequality in a negative way can bring out an ugly side of a person, one message Lee shows in her novel. An example of a negative attitudes towards minorities are racial slurs. Racial slurs, also used in the book, are tossed around like they do not mean anything. This exemplifies that the race or group being discriminated against are still inferior like in the book that is based in the 1930’s.…