Dakota Dreams is a novel by James Bennett. The story follows the life of a lonely fifteen year old foster child named Floyd Rayfield. Since Floyd has no parents he had to live in multiple foster or group homes for most of his life. One day Floyd had a dream in which he saw himself as a Dakota warrior, a fierce warrior in Indian tribes. When Floyd awoke from his dream, he was certain that becoming a Dakota Warrior was his destiny. Floyd undergoes a name change to Charley Black Crow and, he learns more about Indian culture and customs. After being sent to a mental hospital. Floyd finally had enough of his depressing lifestyle, so he decided to run away to the Dakota Reservation. There he meets the tribal chief who deems him worthy of going on…
In the short story “Winter Dreams” we see the main conflict of Dexter mentally fighting with himself over the desire for material success, and the emotional desire to feel the love of his one “true” girl Judy. Throughout the story we see many examples of this internal war. Many examples of the desire for the material success are shown throughout the reading. We see on page 731 that dexter started out as a coded to try to earn good money.…
As time elapses in the story, Dexter becomes an independent man but still thinks of Judy. He becomes much older and begins running laundry businesses. He became a man that people would call "Now there's a boy." Even though the people who knew him would say that about him, he still…
Dexter would have been miserable in a marriage to Judy. She was unfaithful in her many relationships with men and her past actions did not promise a good marriage. She had a need or rather impulsive obsession to have many suitors at a time. If Dexter had married Judy then I think he would have given up any happiness that comes from a secure, committed relationship. She was never satisfied with the affections that she had and could not understand the sacrifice of true love. The disappointment and lack of committed love that Dexter would have known in a marriage to her would have been…
“It is not so simple as that either. As so frequently would be the case in the future, Dexter was unconsciously dictated to by his winter dreams.” This quote is from the last paragraph in section one of “Winter Dreams”, the small little phrase goes on to set the whole theme of the short story, and very early on gives us a look at Dexters desire for wealth, beautiful women, and a good time. All of which are major components of the American dream as we know it today. Although, Dexter seems to contradict himself in wanting the american dream, by getting lost in his feelings and allowing things to hold him back from really pursuing what makes him happy.…
He wanted to have all of the nice things, so that is why he put so much effort into his success and not Judy. At the beginning of the story Dexter was a caddy at a rich golf course,…
By looking at the title you would be able to tell what the poem is about, a widow, which is a woman who has lost her partner by death. The poem begins with a lady gardening but then it changes into something deeper. It writes about her past of losing her husband and that she will never be able to relive those moments. The themes of this poem is the lady’s sadness, loneliness and grief of losing someone important to her. Peter Skrzynecki used personification in “by a hat which summer can’t pierce” since summer is known as a season of joy and laughter.…
Robert Hayden's Poem, "Those Winter Sundays," is the perfect example of a life lesson. As a child growing up there are things we do not realize but eventually life reveals the significance of curtain things and in this poem Hayden’s has this experience. This poem shows how we take things and people closest to us for granted. He does this in three ways, blatantly, with the language he uses, and also with the mood and tone he sets.…
The poem “Those Winter Sundays” is the story about a men who is reflecting on his past, when he was a kid his dad spend the winters working alone in an exceptionally harsh environment “my father got up early and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold” (Line 1-2). The kid's dad is by all accounts a tough man, who showed signs of bad temper due to the fact that he worked so hard to support his family and nobody recognize his yield “No one ever thanked him.” (Line 5), yet he did love and care for his family, hence all his efforts to work each and every day. The narrator of this poem is a man recalling his childhood and telling the audience how much he is lamenting not having the opportunity to spend time with his father, however most essential…
Due – Wednesday, April 22nd, at the start of class, printed out, and will not be accepted after that. If you know for a fact that you are going to be absent, you are responsible for having the completed paper delivered to the instructor by the time the class starts. The Critical Analysis Paper will not be accepted early, late, or by email.…
Throughout Winter Dreams, F. Scott Fitzgerald develops the theme of ambition through the main character Dexter Green’s desire to achieve more in life. Dexter is going to college and his father offered to pay his way through a state college. Except Dexter’s dreams had other plans, “They persuaded Dexter several years later to pass up a business course at the State University … for the precarious advantage of attending an older and more famous university in the East, where he was bothered by his scanty funds,” (Ch. 2). Dexter doesn’t want to be fully dependent on his father throughout his life. He wants to achieve success on his own with no help from others. Dexter wants to be able to give himself the best things in life. Being an independent, self-driven person makes Dexter stand out from the other boys at his college. Those boys are reckless with their money because it is actually their parents’ money. So, Dexter borrowed a thousand dollars and bought partnership in a laundry. “Before he was twenty-seven he owned the largest string of laundries in his section of the country,” (Ch. 2). Dexter has the mind-set to go and get what he wants out of life. He is smart with the way he spends his money, and he has already surpassed most of the men at his age. He has achieved his goal of being able to take care of himself and in achieving a better future for himself. Dexter has strived to get to a higher class in society in order to have a chance with Judy Jones. Since the first time he saw Judy Jones, he has wanted to be with her. A man named Devlin, from Detroit, came to visit Dexter for business, but they end up talking about how Judy’s life has turned out. She is married and her beauty is starting to fade. “The dream was gone. Something had been taken from him,” (Ch. 6) Dexter’s life was solely driven by his love for the young, beautiful Judy Jones. His constant chase for Judy made him want to be more in life, in order for her to consider being in a relationship with him.…
From Shakespeare’s work The Winters Tale, the audience is given a vivid representation of gender politics. Like most of Shakespeare’s plays, the character development of the women is particularly profound, specifically Hermione and Paulina. These characters are arguably the most discerning characters Shakespeare has every created, and when they are faced with such tremendous adversity; they exemplify a virtuous and genuine defiance, of the tyranny of Leontes. The consequences that result from their patience, ultimately provides a certain level of spiritual atonement for themselves, and later for Leontes. The actions of their defiance cannot be fully understood until the end of act five when Leontes himself undergoes a personal catharsis, and Hermione is resurrected. Hermione is particularly virtuous with her embodiment of candor, and Paulina is equally as profound with her sense of directness and the wisdom that she provides Leontes.…
In her collection Transformations, Anne Sexton rewrites the classic Grimm’s fairytales. In her version of “Snow White and The Seven Dwarves”, Sexton insinuates that women are often judged by their beauty as if it classifies a woman as a “dumb bunny”. Sexton displays Snow White in a vulnerable and unintelligent way as she continuously makes the same mistake over and over, as she lets her stepmother in the house. Each time, her Stepmother proceeds to ambush her due to the jealousy she has for Snow White. The mirror prompts the jealousy between the evil Stepmother and Snow White. Snow White happens to be saved many times as a result of her astounding looks and purity making her more desirable by others, which develops into her most important traits as a princess.…
The central conflict in The Winter's Tale is the violation of Nature on the part of the patriarch of the old generation, Leontes. I believe that in “The Winter’s Tale” the nature of each character and their fateNature in The Winter's Tale is best understood as the ordered character of the universe. This is expressed in a three-tiered, hierarchically ordered structure with the divine at the apex, the monarch next, and the common man at the base.…
In the Winter’s Tale, Mamillius states that “a sad tale’s best for winter” (2.1.33). William Shakespeare’s ominous beginning immediately arouses the attention of the audience to believe that this play is a tragedy. Unlike many of Shakespeare’s earlier works, which consist of more tragedy as the play continues, the Winter’s Tale contains a tragic beginning and a happy ending. The play consists of strong elements of both tragedy and comedy; hence, making the Winter’s Tale a problem play. Throughout the play, the relationship between the characters and Nature or her representatives seems to be a prominent occurrence. In other words, the “law and process of great nature” is prevalent as it appears to be present when associating with the characters and specific events in the play.…