• When no word comes from Apá – Miguel Garcia – the other villagers taunt Juana and her mother, Lupe, with the hideous word: abandoned. But there’s still Don Elías to pay off, and there’s only one thing he’s asking for and one thing Lupe can give: her body.…
THE ISLAND OF KORA acts as the case designed to bring all the points discussed in this class together. Therefore, this case calls for an application of all the points that have been previously discussed. After reading the case, design a plan for solving the islander’s problems. Your plan should include the theoretical basis your plan uses, the decision making procedure you would use, as well as the specific action you would take to resolve the problem. Also, do not forget that in the islander’s eyes you are the Supreme Being. (About 5 typed pages)…
The Makah tribe have long been hunters of whales. The hunting dates back 2000 years and initial stopped in the 1920 's due to a significant decrease in the Gray Whale population. The tribe has three significant groups comprised of the elders, the proponents of hunting and the younger members, lacking in traditional ways. A majority of the tribe now wants to regenerate the hunting process as the whale population has increased to an acceptable level and have been put in place laws are in place allowing the hunt with a limit of five whales. The majority members of the tribe are attempting to instill discipline and pride in their traditions within the younger generation. The idea of re instituting whale hunting has come with opposition from the elder members as well as environmentalists.…
The author’s narrative, ripe with horrifying descriptions, is nonetheless told with compassion appealing to the emotions of the audience in his argument. The greater part of the book follows these men on their unlucky journey through the desert, and how each one is drained of their money, water, hopes and dreams, and for some, life. The author uses compelling descriptions of imagery; the taste of urine, the sight of mummified corpses, and the anguish of losing one's son are all strikingly portrayed. The reader finds themselves horrified each time death reaches another victim of the Devil’s Highway, forcing you to think about the family waiting in Mexico dreaming of a better life. At the beginning of the book Urrea lists the possessions of the dead (“John Doe # 37: no effects, John Doe # 44: Mexican bills in back pocket, a letter in right front pocket, a brown wallet in left front pocket”) these specific details provided are emotional responses to give the readers every last detail of the man and his possessions. Another technique Urrea uses that affects the audiences emotions is grammatical persons, Urrea often switches into second-person point-of-view so the reader imagines that he or she is going through the stages of hypothermia themselves. “Your muscles, lacking water, feed on themselves. They break down and start to rot. Once rotting in you, they dump rafts of…
One of the most powerful types of writing Anzaldua uses in this novel is her physiological personal anecdotes. She, on multiple occasions uses metaphorical and somewhat mystical words to portray her ideas and experiences with her own subconscious. She uses such words to recount one of her first experiences feeling “wrong:” “I was two or three years old the first time Coatlicue visited my psyche, the first time she “devoured” me (and I “fell” into the underworld). By the worried look on my parents’ faces I learned early that something was fundamentally wrong with me” (Anzaldua 64). This passage does two things for her writing. Firstly it uses those mystical metaphors “devoured” and “‘fell’ into the underworld.” These types of words portray the mythical and somewhat unknown nature of the subconscious. Secondly, this passage again addresses the “fundamental wrong” that Anzaldua speaks on. This wrong that the Chican@ population has seen in themselves. This time though it is a wrong due to another stigma, this psychological trip that Anzaldua goes on, this “‘[fall]’ into the underworld.” This devouring and this seemingly psychological takeover, whether one believes it is as Anzaldua writes it as, a spiritual quest or a more socially approved mental break is something different from the norm. She mentions the “worried look on [her] parents’…
Death is a process of life that sooner or later everyone must face in due time. In his poem, “The Soldier of Mictlán,” Rigoberto Gonzalez describes the life of a soldier in the afterlife in a place called Mictlán, where most of the dead come according to Aztec mythology. His poetic techniques portray the fervent desire of an exhausted soldier to experience life again and leave behind the emptiness of the underworld.…
The article of “The Falling Down” which written by Elana Bilberry deeply explores the phenomenology of the late capitalism and how it changes the relationship in the global and local scale. It described a man who calls D-Fens experiences a series of difficulties and troublesome on his way to home. And during the journey, he also met another man who continually defers his homecoming. Their stories and the moment of the bodies illustrate a crucial body-city connections. Both of their bodies are infected by the Losn Angeles partitioned spaces, which including the social and ethnic. When the protagonist, D-Fen faces the pressure of contemporary urban living and suffers in the painful traffic jam, he chose to abandon his car and leave the freeway…
The United States government have done many unethical things to the Native Americans. In 1830, the government forced the Native Americans to march an 800 mile distance from Georgia to Indian Territory in Oklahoma. There were no Federal aid and ¼ of the 18,000 people died on The Trail Of Tears. The reasons that the government should give them back their land is because they were forced to move out of their land and the Native American’s land was not a resource it was a part of their family and home.…
At stake here are several conflicting values, the concern for a fellow human being, self-preservation, success of the company and the pressure to perform. As VP of the division, I am under scrutiny to deliver substantial results to my president, John Edmonds, to be seen as sensitive to my product managers needs. Lisa Walters, Kathryn’s supervisor, has pressed me for a resource action for boosting staff morale and replacing her with someone who can be more productive. I also feel that Kathryn McNeil is a hard worker who is stuck in a tricky personal situation.…
There is despise and bitterness on the planet that individuals disregard. The energized film Princess Mononoke addresses genuine subject that should be conveyed to consideration. (265 Words) Subject The Book of Life In The Book of Life, The Day of the Dead is the most grounded topic. The Day of the Dead is a standout amongst the most well known occasions in Mexico. where one can witness masterful showcases and custom exhibitions. It is an alternate ordeal through and through. Numerous nonnatives need to visit Mexico on this unique special festival to encounter the Mexican culture. One can witness plastic toys, paper cut outs that strikingly show the idea of death. There are showcases of coffin, skull and skeleton confections. This additionally embodies the imaginative intuition and creative aptitudes of the Mexican individuals. It indicates how they can change the revolting idea of death into something beautiful. Mexico is an extremely captivating spot, and this is the reason the plot of the motion picture The Book of Life additionally rotates around it When Manolo Sanchez bites the dust in The Book of Life, he goes to a place called The Place that is known for the…
In the opening paragraph, she talks about how she had a dream about serpents, and her mother's warning her not to go outside at night because a snake can crawl into her buttocks and make her pregnant. She then jumps to when she went into the woods with her mother one day and was almost bitten by snake but it only got her shoes and have ever since been immune to its venom forever. Saying she bought “sought and shunned them.” She then talked about the experience she had from being a catholic. She talked about the “Pagan” beliefs that somehow connect to that of Catholic religious faith. She compared the Earth Goddess, Coatlalopeuh, to that of the Virgin Mary in the bible. She also touch upon how the “dominated-male-Azteca Mexica culture” deformed the female goddesses and pushed them underground. She talked also about what each of the sexes stand for by relating the female figure or “mother figure” to the Indians and the male or “father figure” to the Spanish which in all unites the Mexican culture to a female figure. She also connected the meaning of snake to woman, when she allegated that she has “died several times” and daydreamed and every time she see snakes, which is a “pre-human ideas of women's sexuality, her creativity, her energy, and life.” In the last subtitle of “Entering into the Serpent”, she talked about how we are more likely to lose ourselves if we accept and follow only the rules of our religion, when she said, “Catholic church fails to give meaning to my daily act...It and other institutionalized religions impoverish all life, beauty, , pleasure.” My first time reading Anzaldua’s article, I found it very complex and difficult to understand due to her constant change in language from English to spanish and vice…
PASSION: Why am I here? As a child I was always attracted to the smaller, weakened animal I found in my yard, i.e. dying birds, kittens, bugs, etc. The animals we owned were never neutered which resulted in a numerous amount of puppies and kittens. I was intrigued by the cycle of life. Originally I wanted to become a veterinarian. The financial strain on my family made it apparent that it would not be possible. As fate would have it, there was a two year waiting list for nursing school, but I was readily accepted into a two year respiratory program. At the end of the respiratory program, I stayed for one more year to specialize in NICU.…
Mexico has a distinguished culture of traditions, which have been in existence for more than three thousand years. As a direct consequence of colonisation, over time Mexico’s rich past of lost civilisations has amalgamated with European traditions and religion. In particular, distinct connections can be made between modern Mexican and pre-Hispanic Mayan death customs. As a consequence of this historical cycle of colonialism and domination, incredibly unique traditions are observable in Mexico today; notably, overall beliefs concerning death, burial practices and the Day of the Dead holiday. Latin American Folklorist, Gabriel Moedano Navarro said “although the cult of death is a trait that appears among every people, there is nowhere in the…
afterlife: the greeks believe that when they die their spirits go to the “underworld”. Hades was the god and ruler of the underworld. Unless proper rituals were performed, the deceased person’s spirit would never reach the underworld and it would haunt the upper world as a ghost forever.…
As you can see, Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez is one of the most important Latin American novels to ever be written. The story depicts the life of what was once an ordinary town in Colombia forever changed by a murder which was inspired by a death of Marquez’s friend. He also displays the dominance men have over women and how the town expects both genders to behave. It is these reasons why I acknowledge why the book is not only of the most important books in Latin American literature, but one of the best ever…