culture since it had “90% of blacks in this country living in the south. By the time the…
October sky In the novel October Sky by Homer Hickam the character, Homer is forced for many obstacles against all odds. Homer Hickam is a 15 yr old boy who wants to build rockets from a poor coal mining town he doesn't have support. He doesn't have the materials he needs. He needs to know how to build rockets. Homer Hickam had a lot of problems.…
“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.…
Bob Dylan had a different style to most of his songs. In his civil rights songs he obviously writes about civil rights issues affecting mainly America of that time. In this songs the thing he is mainly singing/ protesting about is civil rights. He said in an interview that he wanted to make an anthem of change for civil rights. Some different ideas presented in the poem would include: changing times, unity of people and asking for change.…
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story, "Winter Dreams," ambitious, "desirous" Dexter stands at the threshold between admiring "glittering things" and finding out that the "glittering things" he admires fade away sooner or later. Dexters character throughout this short story, changes in many ways, from being unaware of what he really wanted in life to being aware of what he actually became.…
Although Dexter 's dream parallels to that of the American Dream, Fitzgerald presents this idea of idealism in a negative sense, saying that in reality achieving this dream is impossible. The…
Judy Jones was born wealthy and she was attracted to men with power and money. Aside from her physical beauty, her status gave her many social options. She was vain and liked to be seen with a procession of men. Dexter was one of them. The seductive mannerisms in her voice had a magical effect on men and it drew their attention. Her voice was not lady-like but her tone was deep. Later on Dexter remembered that unique voice. Fitzgerald wrote in the short story, “He imagined her husky voice over the telephone…”. “The smile which turns down the corner of her mouth in a half pout” also made men wild. Judy had complete control over the men with whom she associated, and it made her feel not only powerful, but alive. She controlled them like puppets on a string, including Dexter. When men lost interest, she knew how to win back their affection for her. Her seductive voice and mannerisms contributed to her emotional power over these men. Her selfish tenacity emerged as she went after whatever she wanted of their affections.…
Though Dexter seems to have better access to the material portion of the Dream, he builds up his hopes around Judy Jones. When Judy first asks him who he is, Dexter pauses before giving his answer. He thinks about his middle-class upbringing but “chooses the one that suppresses his identity. That is given up easily in our society” (Berman 58). Dexter obscures his past in order to portray himself as the type of man that Judy wants; the stigma of having humble origins pushes him to distance himself from his family and roots. It is easy to give up one’s past when it does not fit into the idea of an affluent socialite. His identity becomes fully shaped by the illusions of a materialistic Dream as he “surrendered a part of himself to the most direct and unprincipled personality with which he had ever come in contact” (Fitzgerald 667). This personality refers to Judy, who Fitzgerald describes as impulsive, fickle, but exceedingly beautiful and alluring to men. At the same…
Have you ever been separated from your family? What if living wasn’t guaranteed? The holocaust killed over eleven million people. The purpose of the holocaust was to eliminate the entire Jewish race. In Night, by Elie Wiesel, Elie and his family were separated. Elie was forced to take care of his father while his mother and sister were killed. The Jews’ freedom, identity, and sense of hope were taken from them to make the Jews feel less than human.…
There is a very thin line between the person who you were and the person that you are right now. As humans, we experience millions of events that can affect and change our perspective on aspects throughout the course of our lives. Similar to caterpillars, we cannot be innocent and childish forever. There is a time for everybody to transform into something beautiful, and everybody’s time is different. Change can be good or bad, but most importantly, change helps us grow and become the people we were meant to be. How are we supposed to mature and enjoy our lives if we cannot accept the differences that life presents? For many people, metamorphosing is difficult because sometimes it can be a challenge to let go of something that was always a part of ourselves, such as letting go of a teddy bear, or a blanket, but for other people, it can be almost instantaneous.…
I found F. Scott Fitzgerald’s short story “Winter Dreams” to be very avant-garde and elitist as it tells of the rise of Dexter Green, a hardworking, middle class man who becomes caught up in the pursue of wealth and status. In his quest to be part of the ‘old money’ elite, he meets Judy Jones, a beautiful and youthful woman who further fuels his desire for greater wealth. The story addresses the ‘American dream’ where it was believed that achieving status, materialism and the idea that anything can be bought, even love. Fitzgerald exploited the dream and revealed the inability to achieve it and its tendency to leave characters disappointed.…
Scott Fitzgerald wrote about how Dexter Green, the son of immigrant parents, strived to achieve the American Dream. The author’s own mother was the child of Irish immigrants, and he was raised in a middle class family. Dexter’s mother was a lower class immigrant, as Fitzgerald wrote, “His mother’s name had been Krimslich. She was a Bohemian of the peasant class and she had talked broken English to the end of her days” (2155). Although his parents prospered in the new country, they were stigmatized because they were immigrants and had to fight for acceptance. Dexter came to embrace his identity, as described by Fitzgerald when he wrote, “he was better than these men. He was newer and stronger” (2155). Dexter used his formal education and ingenuity to make himself into a successful businessman, while most of his friends simply inherited their wealth. Fitzgerald pointed out how emotional happiness was hard to achieve in a shallow, money-driven society. This was even a problem for Judy, who was rich and beautiful, which was revealed when she said, “I’m more beautiful than anybody else . . . why can’t I be happy?” (2161). While pretty women were objects of male admiration, they frequently found themselves depressed and trapped in unsatisfying…
One of the ways Dexter tries to strive for an admired status is through Judy Jones. Judy is the epitome of success and is portrayed as the typical American dream; beautiful and charming, but with an ungodliness' in spirit. Fitzgerald states, "Judy Jones, a slender enameled doll in the cloth of gold: gold in a band at her head, gold in two slipper points at her dress's hem." (11) She is conveyed to be a pretty doll. Like a doll, she represents what Dexter wants to see her as; a perfectly illusive beauty. These illusions are found in the American Dream because people choose to only see what they want and refuse to look long term to the effects and consequences of their…
Then Frost tells his readers that society doesn't see the soldier's life important enough to have solved anything, and that the soldier's death didn't have any meaning. Before Frost tells his readers this, he first gives a hint that the soldier's death did have…
On August 28, 1963, nearly a quarter of million people arrived in the District of Columbia for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. In the midst of the days various events and speeches, one stood out: Martin Luther King, Jr’s speech “ I Have a Dream”. It is a political text in which he called for racial equality and an end to the discrimination. His oration eclipsed the remarks of all other speakers that day and it is among the most quoted American public addresses. According to the U.S. Representative John Lewis, who also spoke that day as the President of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, "Dr. King had the power, the ability, and the capacity to transform those steps on the Lincoln Memorial into a monumental area that will forever be recognized. By speaking the way he did, he educated, he inspired, and he informed not just the people there, but people throughout America and unborn generations. “I Have a Dream” has come to symbolise the aspirations of the modern civil rights movement. "The son, the grandson, and the great grandson of preachers," as he so tactfully reminded the clergymen addressed in "Letter from Birmingham Jail," Martin Luther King, Jr., was born on January 15, 1929, in Atlanta, Georgia. Educated at Morehouse College and at Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania, he was ordained a Baptist minister in his father's church at 18. In 1955, he completed a doctorate in systematic theology at Boston University. That December, he called a citywide boycott of segregated buses in Montgomery, Alabama, where he had been serving as pastor of a church for over a year. From then until his death in Memphis in 1968, King travelled over six million miles and spoke over twenty-five hundred times, appearing wherever there was injustice, protest and action. Meanwhile he wrote five books as well as numerous articles. In these years, he led a massive protest in Birmingham,…