In the article Robin Doak discusses the history of salt.First Doak illustrates salt has been important to people since early times.Robin Doak tells us about how it is used to melt ice on slippery roads.He points out that salt is everywhere.Robin Doak emphasizes that Salt was important in United States history,too.Finally Robin Doak concludes that other chemicals are produced from salt,such as chlorine and sodium.…
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.…
is the bestselling memoir of James McBride, a biracial journalist, jazz saxophonist, and composer whose Jewish mother gave birth to twelve children, all of whom she raised in a housing project in Brooklyn. His mother witnessed the premature death of her first husband, a reverend, and through sheer force of will saw each of her children graduate from college. Her basic household tenets rested on the importance of academic success and the church, and many of her children moved on to earn graduate and professional degrees.…
- Cates said being in jail had two advantages: food was better, temperature is cooler.…
The Divine Wind’ is a book/novel written by Garry Disher. The novel is set in the Pearling town of Broome which is located in the North-western region of Australia. The novel explores prejudice, friendship, love and betrayal. The novel is mainly set in World War 2, with Hart as the main character. Hart is the narrator of this story, he is retelling his story during WWII with all the problems that he faced. The novel displays “ the dislocation and emotional suffering people experience when their lives are severely disrupted”. There are two main characters that endure this feeling of isolation, dislocation and severe disruption. Ida Penrose and Mitsy.…
In the book Shabanu Daughter of the Wind, written by Suzanne Fisher Staples, a girl named Shabanu starts to transform from a child to a woman. Shabanu is an independent and headstrong girl. As she grows, she starts to learn about the expectations of the society. She is expected to wear a veil and to marry a man, no matter she loves him or not. As Shabanu grows, she becomes more mature, and she shows it by caring for Mithoo.…
“Identi-knitted out as fulsomely as the most wanted criminal” – The identity is relentlessly picked apart and related to other relatives as if he was a master criminal that everyone was trying to identify.…
Life changing events in a person’s life can be a stressful or hard time. This idea is explored in Warriors Don’t Cry by Melba Pattillo Beals, an autobiography “I Never Had It Made” by Jackie Robinson, and “The Father of Chinese Aviation” By Rebecca Maksel. All of the characters had to face many difficult obstacles and people that would be thought to prevent them from achieving their goal, but changed their country in doing so.…
The short story “Hard Times” by Ron Rash, focuses on the effects that depression has on society. The main characters in the story are Jacob and Edna, who are farmers in a rural community in Raleigh, North Carolina. As the story begins, Edna has once again noticed that the eggs from a particular hen is missing. Though she has several other hens, who are laying, she contributes those missing eggs to adding to their poverty. Edna, who was once a very happy person has been soured by the effects of poverty and now stands tight lipped in the door of the henhouse. Jacob makes the comment, "This cove’s so damn dark a man about has to break light with a crowbar” . This comment sets the tone of the story, one of darkness which is a result of poverty.…
Even though 12 people say you're wrong and you broke the law, millions of other people are standing behind you saying you won. In the book Inherit the wind a man of the name betts cates was against the whole world. The two side are fighting over if Evolution should be taught in the classroom. Cates shows that he helped the world against a law that really showed up the facts about the past. I even though he didn't win the case, he won by gaining millions of people support.…
In No Promises in the Wind, Josh runs away from home because of his dad. He goes through many obstacles. He fails sometimes and succeeds sometimes but at the end of his journey he realizes he is just like his dad. He then decides to go back to Chicago and meet up with his family again.…
The authors, Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee’s, main purpose through Inherit the Wind is proving that humans hold the right to think. Henry Drummond is vital in this discovery because of his firm belief that one should hold this right. Drummond’s hero archetype is the cause for his strong feelings, and he succeeds when convincing the audience of his beliefs by revealing the contradictions underlying his witnesses’ inherited religious beliefs.…
The narrative, ' The Jilting of Granny Weatherall' by Katherine Ann Porter revolves around an elderly woman: Granny Weatherall. The opening scene is orchestrated parallel to the beginning of a day and culminates into the usual night by the end of the plot. The author however just describes the whole scenario through Granny's eyes and the events she perceives. The acts of other characters are also portrayed by what Miss Weatherall observes. In essence, the plot is unveiled through a non-participant, selective omniscient point of view to convey the message a person sends moments from death.…
The Weary Blues by Langston Hughes is an influential protest poem that depicts a man in a blues bar, who is playing away at the piano, singing the blues. The poem was obviously developed at the time of the Harlem Renaissance and was published in 1923. The weary blues won multiple awards due to its influential style of writing. The Weary Blues was publish in a place called Harlem, which was filled with musical and artistic potential. At the time of the Harlem Renaissance, the musical genre known as the blues was used day in day out. People around the world could easily relate to this poem because everyone has felt sad, depressed and down. The theme of the poem is mainly about living with the use of music and the suffering that was brought upon…
In Connie Jan Maraan’s story entitled “Ghost”, she applied various symbols to express what happened in the accident, used rhetorical devices to make the story more colourful and depicted the possible events that may happen after death. Maraan is an interesting writer who uses lively descriptions and language in depicting the realities presented in the story. She helps the readers attain a good understanding of the possible beauty in what could otherwise be morbidity in its very notion. Death is presented and tackled in the most acceptable terms like making anything possible because of the absence of feeling.…