“Out of This Furnace” by Thomas Bell is about immigrants that came to America from Slovakia to make a living. It starts in 1881, were Kracha comes to America to work and provide for his family. It talks about Kracha’s journey from New York to White Haven and how he had goals wanting to be successful in America. Mike, Kracha’s son in law, came from the same background as him. Although, Kracha and Mike have a lot in common, I think they are different in many ways.…
People take their lives for granted too easily today. We do not know when something could happen to us or a loved one. Unexpected events take place to people all the time. In the book Forgotten Fire Adam Bagdasarian tells the real life story of how his uncle survived the Armenian Genocide in 1915. Vahan Kenderian, Adam’s uncle, was only twelve when many events started occurring. These events were unexpected and tragic in many ways to not only Vahan and his family, but also all of the Armenians. In a short time, Vahan lost his home and family and, to survive he was forced to live a life he could never have dreamed of. He went through many struggles and saw many horrors that a boy of that age should not have to go through or should have seen. Though, most of these events were very traumatic and life altering, Vahan was able to learn important life lessons as a result of the events. He was a strong and confident young boy and even through all of the hard times he still remained strong and was able to grow not only physically, but mentally and emotionally as well. The three most crucial events that helped him learn life lessons were when he witnessed his two older brothers’ murders, meeting a girl named Seranoush who became his friend, and how he had to work hard and fight for a place to live and survive.…
The poem “Last Night” by Sharon Olds is a short poem about a fear of sex without…
Jack London is most well-known for his novels Call of the Wild and White Fang. The novels and the short story “To Build a Fire” share a similar theme of survival in the wildernerness. London’s “To Build A Fire” is a story about a man and a dog traveling the Yukon trail. In the story the man is struggling to survive the harsh environment of the Klondike. “To Build a Fire” is a naturalistic story, influenced by scientific determinism as well as by Darwin’s theory of evolution because London was a socialist and a realist. Jack London traveled across Canada and Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush. Jack London’s time in the Klondike influenced the setting, characters,…
In the article “You’ll Never Learn”, Annie Paul describes how multitasking while learning negatively affects students’ memory, grades and more. Paul begins by giving the results of an experiment done on how students study. Many of the students spent a lot of the time texting and on Facebook instead of actually studying. Paul then turns the attention to evidence from psychology suggesting that when students multitask their work ends up being of lower quality than if they would not have. According to researchers, the schoolwork takes longer to finish when multitasking because students waste time on nonsense.…
In Jack London’s to Build a Fire, an unnamed man travels through the cold winter in Yukon. He is a newcomer to Yukon and does not care about how terribly cold it is. He is not bothered by the freezing weather or the fact that there is no sunshine. An old-timer warns him about traveling alone especially while it’s fifty degrees below zero however, the man shrugs off his warning and calls him womanish for saying this to him. The man’s careless decision unfortunately costs him his life.…
In The Embers and the Stars by Kohák the intersection of time and eternity is expressed. Kohák has focused on "natural" time, which is to say that time is not just what is expressed by a clock, or with a series of numbers on a clock. "It is, rather, set within the matrix of nature's rhythm which establishes personal yet non-arbitrary reference points." This means that time is not measured in seconds, minutes, or hours but by personal existence and experience. These "reference points" are experiences in your life that are meaningful and you help spatially distinguish points in time. Time as we know it is explained by Kohák as a "construct imposed upon nature's rhythm, subordination and ordering it". He does say that it is a useful construct, but as for the theory of relativity time does not hold up.…
"The civilized man has built a coach and lost the use of his feet." The civilized man is so conformed to the grid and society that he wouldn't be able to survive in the wilderness without man-made technology. A civilized man is so attached to technology and society that they wouldn't know what to do in the wilderness without it.…
In Jack London’s short story, “To Build a Fire”, the setting is more than just a setting. It functions as many different things. Including, creating meaning by expressing the scenery, and by letting the reader become aware of the animal’s thoughts. Characterizing is another way the author used the setting. Weather was the truer antagonist in this story with its temperature and snow-hiding dangers to try and defeat the man. Even with everything against the unnamed man; his ignorance, meaning, and the weather he still keeps going past the point of return.…
In the story “To Build a Fire” by Jack London, a man of inexperience, stubbornness, and lack of imagination embarks on the less traveled route of the Yukon trail without a companion or any means of survival resources at his disposal. In fact, the only necessity that was given an ounce of thought was the man’s lunch for that very evening, sticking close to his bare chest so the food would not freeze. The man, however, decided that his husky’s company would be enough of an aide as he makes his way to meet his boys at a campsite before night fall. Never to have experienced true winter, the man sets off in the fifty below zero freezing weather, ignoring the words of the old-timer.…
For this discussion assignment I chose 'To Build a Fire' by the great writer Jack London to read and wrote. I read summaries which were written by my fellow students last week. Their description encourages me to read this story, specially Reza Hosseini, when she wrote "Jack London also had a great interest in nature,animals and the ups and downs of human relations with them"(Hosseini, (2017,March 1), posted on discussion forum Unit5). In this story, London told us about a journey made in freezing temperatures which was done by the main character and his dog.…
Rachel Vincent’s science-fiction novel The Flame Never Dies, offers a deeper take on the tales we always hear about demons and exorcists. With the assistance of others, Vincent has created a masterpiece about the classic purifying art, exorcism. What’s special about exorcising demons instead of killing the host is that when exorcising, the demon is killed. If one kills the host the demon will be freed to obtain another host.…
The excerpt from The Red Badge of Courage, shows realism in a unique way that related and reminded me of, "To Build a Fire", by Jack London. Both of these passages represent realism in actual situations that could happen. Often times in adventurous stories like both of these the end of the story is always fantasized and turned into a long fantasy moment; whereas in these stories the ending of the story, ends just the way it would end in a realistic world. In /To Build a Fire/, the author could have either ended it with the man staying alive or he could have ended it with him dying, which in both situations they are realistic depending on how they are written.…
It is easy to not notice that one’s instinct is the greatest gift received from nature. To disobey the teachings and lessons from nature is a cardinal sin; disregarding knowledge from ancestor’s can lead to the worst outcome of all, death. When put in a situation that forces one to concede defeat and realize that nature is an environment in which the occupants are solely reliant, a feeling of confidence can switch to dubiousness. In To Build a Fire, author Jack London strengthens the effect of nature on a man when he develops traits of egotism and ascendancy. The Yukon, a territory in northwest Canada, is a wild and mountainous region that is sparsely populated.…
Jack London had a difficult start to an accomplished life. Through his writings he expressed the social and intellectual problems in the 1900s. London influenced many great writers through his different socialism ideas. His writings show the difficult issues for the time through race and class. Through his writing “To Build a Fire” London describes the difficulties of his own time in the Yukon Territory.…