To start, Dr. Rana is introduced as a physicist Arab-American
To start, Dr. Rana is introduced as a physicist Arab-American
Traditions are customs or beliefs handed down through a family and sometimes created without even realizing it. The routines or foods shared when we come together are repeated and become a part of who we are. A detail made clear, a few weeks ago, as my daughters and I shopped for groceries the day before our Super Bowl gathering. As we grabbed chips, dips, sodas, baked beans, chicken, and barbeque sauce, one of my daughters said, "Don't forget the ingredients for 'Mom's ChickenEnchiladas'." I never realized, until then, that it had become a traditional dish served at all our family functions.…
Saed explores a strong and obvious value of and longing for culture in her poems “What the Scar Revealed”. An individuals culture influences and shapes their values and ideas. Saed’s poem follows the journey of hers and her family’s traumatic memories endured while under the Taliban and fleeing from the Russian invasion, and therefore her loss and longing of culture in her new country. Saed uses place and physical setting to express her cultural value. First person, visual imagery and simile are used in the line, “Turquoise domes, spice vendors, pomegranates like hearts, and the adhaan in her ear…” (What the Scar Revealed) These techniques allow immediacy, authenticity and the generation of a visualised scene enables the reader to connect to the scene on a deeper level and compare and contrast to their own lives and experiences. A clear tone of want and longing is seen in this line, reflecting the poems central longing for culture.…
Figurative language: Saed mixes objects of her homeland (e.g. specific foods like pine nuts and perfumed tea) with family history and memory to show that culture and even vicarious experience contributes to an individual’s sense of…
Author Jenny Nordberg interviewed several Afghan families and asked about their lifestyle. In different Afghan cities, males are the dominant gender; as they are in most countries. But in Afghan cultures men are free to work and have all the freedom that they desire, the women do not. Woman will dress up their daughters as boys, called ‘bacha posh” (meaning dressed like a boy), so they could have a male to represent the family or work if the family needed money. In the story of Mehran, Shubnum, and Niima, this means changing their appearance, lifestyle, and their self-identities.…
Have you thought about installing a home security system, but put it off because you don't think you really need one? Well, before you put it off any longer, you may want to consider these facts: In 2010, there were more than two million home burglaries in the United States, over 70 percent of which took place in residential homes, reports the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Victims of these burglaries claimed an estimated $4.6 billion in lost property, and the average dollar loss per burglary was $2,119. With these startling statistics, investing in a home security system doesn't seem like such a bad idea. The number one reason to invest in a home security system is to protect your family and many other things. In this report we will show the steps as well as the design of home security system.…
She won't ever be her own person to the people in her culture, she'll be someone's property. This book shows how culture, race, and class can intersect with gender in producing women's experiences with the way it shows that Mariam's culture feels a certain way about women that affects Mariam's everyday life. Mariam finds Rasheed's magazines and is conflicted. Her culture teaches her that women have to be covered all the time and that their faces and bodies…
Analyzing characterization is the key to find fiction's controlling idea and central insight--theme. Direct presentation--one character description technique--usually directly shows what characters are like by exposition, analysis, or another character's description. The other way to shape characters is to use the indirect presentation by describing their actions and leaving room for readers to develop their own ideas about the characters. "Everyday Use" by Alice Walker is a short story that expresses the conflicts between people's different attitudes and values of heritage. This story is a dramatic story, but one that uses first-person point of view to narrate the story, which gives readers a fresh reading experience. In the story, Dee, a black lady who has been educated, comes to visit her Mama and her younger sister, Maggie. Dee interests in many of the daily-used heritages in the family and wants to take something back for art appreciation. Mama does not refuse any of Dee's requests until Dee wants to have the inherited quilt, which she plans to give to Maggie as a dowry. Dee does not understand the behaviour of Maggie and Mama of putting the treasures into everyday use, and she blames that they do not know the value of those quilts. This work of fiction uses both direct and indirect presentation of Dee, Maggie, and Mama to express the central theme as that the differences between people's ideas toward heritage widely exist in society, from objective-oriented to subjective-oriented and the conflicts in between.…
Characterization is used to address how ignorant a person can be to his or her heritage in the short story “Everyday Use,” by Alice Walker. The author shows the way of living, of a family to display the reader the way heritage is forgotten and, or ignored. In this short story the author uses a mother, and two daughters, Dee and Maggie, to demonstrate how different the thoughts are between a family and how they honor their heritage.…
Alice Walker believes that quilting and piecing represents both the artistic heritage of Afro-American women and the model of a black feminist, writing about connection and understanding. “In the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.,” Walker describes a quilt that illustrates biblical stories. Walker believes that imagination and feelings can be acknowledged without the use of quilts or museums, but the heritage illustrated in the Smithsonian quilt has only survived because it was preserved in museums. Walker presents her theme of the quilt, more clearly in her story “Everyday Use.” In her story, like most, she uses the differences between the two sisters to demonstrate the concept of “heritage.” The fortunate older sister, Dee, has escaped from her culture, while the unfortunate younger sister, Maggie, has stayed at home where she was dreadfully scarred in a house fire. After leaving her culture, Dee has chosen the life of profound black nationalism, and returns to reclaim her heritage from her mother in the form of “art,” such as the quilts made by her grandmother. Dee believes that Maggie could not appreciate the quilts and would only use them for everyday use. In this moment, the mother, who has always been intimidated by Dee, decides Maggie deserves the quilts the most. The mother believes that although Maggie cannot speak as fluently about her heritage, she understands that the quilt is more of a development rather than a product, and will understand its meaning in a way that Dee would never comprehend. According to Walker’s story, the meaning of an aesthetic heritage lies in its constant renewal rather than its appreciation.…
In the early 1970s, the Black Power movement was not only a political slogan against racism, but also an ideology that promoted racial pride and embraced the elements of the African culture. During this time, many African-Americans were encouraged to grow their hairs into afros, wear traditional African clothing, and reject their white slave names. In the story Everyday Use, Alice Walker presents a family with opposing views towards tradition and creates a character fooled by the Black Power movement. The author uses irony to reveal a meaning of heritage hidden under the perceived idea of African-American identity.…
This shows that the world has realized that we need to give people ways to express themselves in different ways. And as the world of technology advances, we need to find a way for people of different races, Arabic, to express themselves, while still abiding to their culture’s…
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is a powerful novel about two friends whose only similarity is the wet nurse they were fed from when they were little. Because the novel is not informative in purpose and as American, we know little about the history and politics of Afghanistan, its culture, Islam, the persecution of the Hazara, and the Taliban, it is vital in order to understand the novel on the deepest of levels to have background information relating to the topics previously mentioned. Without any background knowledge of Afghanistan it is still easy to understand the novel, in order to more fully appreciate the work of art that the Kite Runner is, certain information must be presented at the time of the analysis of the novel.…
In the short story, Everyday Use by Alice Walker, we get a look in to the lives of an African American family living in the south. The plot of the story is simple enough, a woman who is to make a decision of to whom she will give away two quilts. The oldest daughter, Dee, sees the quilts as cultural fashion while Maggie, the younger daughter, sees them as precious pieces of the people in her past. Walker illustrates an absolute contrast between the two daughters not only in their appearance but also their behavior and ideas.…
She is confused to what this encompasses. She grasps at African tradition and cultures, like when she changes her name to Wangero (an African name). Consequently she fails to acknowledge her own African-American culture; as she finds the items in her Mother’s home to be material goods, as opposed to her ancestor’s habits and way of life.…
Walker introduced the quilts to represent the significance of an African-American culture. The mother wanted her children to understand that keeping a family’s heritage is important in an African-American society. A family’s heritage is a main key in life because it is a going on tradition from past ancestors. The theme is represented by Mama and her daughters to get a strong point of view of what some families go through to understand the reputation of growing up with a strong culture. The author shows a family’s close bond and the quilts they share with one another. Walker shares the meaning of an African-American heritage and hopes to get the reader’s attention in understanding the importance of an individual’s background. Heritage is an important concept in today’s society, because it allows us to communicate with our backgrounds. Heritage allows us to understand previous generations and history of where we come…