Mrs. Wheeler, a Protestant Christian, has been married to Mr. Wheeler for more than twenty years. Although she has birthed three boys, she has taken care of many others in her life due to the farm life of her husband. That’s exactly what she is-a caretaker. She was the perfect…
The editors analyze the aspects of commodity culture and advertising linked with Elizabeth Teare’s article, “Harry Potter and the Technology of Magic.” Giving several examples, the writer focuses on identifying the main claim of Teare’s article, “twenty-first-century commercial and technological culture” that shapes consumerist themes in children’s literature and the marketing of merchandise associated with children’s books and films. The author helpfully points out that whether or not you are a fan of J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series, this article can be proven useful when the same thought process is applied to any fiction readers might enjoy. The editor’s perspective was very useful in narrowing down Teare’s main point from other claims made within the article.…
Their family always was pleased and in check with the bills for the first few months when they moved to a new house. Two places where they stayed the longest was Phoenix and Blue Mountain. In both areas Dad found good paying job as miner or electrician in a mine and for the first few months all the family’s needs were full filled according to the writer. However, when dad lost his job, things around the house would go back into chaos and left mom no choice but to teach and this made life better with their needs met again. During these days everyone was happy and the children received presents regularly like a new bicycle. These events were when the most smiles and happiness in kids was shone off. Finally towards the end of the book everyone moved to New York City and from beginning to end in their stay everyone was joyful. However their dad did die and Maureen moved to California after stabbing her mother but order was still there. Jeanette went to an Ivy League college and after graduating she became a journalist which was what she always wanted to be since high school. The author made this time seem very cheerful except when they talked about her parents in the streets. Towards the end the thanksgiving dinner brought the family all together witch it brought forth a conclusion worth reading. The Glass Castle states on the last paragraph “We raised our glasses. I could almost hear Dad chuckling at Mom's comment in the way he always did when he was truly enjoying something.” This showed at the end of all the pain and suffering there was true peace for their family at…
An analysis of the literary elements imagery, symbolism, and tone/mood in “Barbie Doll”, by Marge Piercy and, “Hanging Fire” by Audre Lorde reveals each character and their struggle with their identity in society.…
Oh, my God! That worries me so. Suppose I think I’m in love with a man and I marry him and it turns out I’m not in love with him. What does being in love mean? I wish I didn’t think so much. I wish to heaven I didn’t. Everything bad that happens to a girl I begin to worry it will happen to me. All night I’ve been worrying. Part of the time I’ve been worrying that I’d end an old maid like Aunt Sarah, and part of the time I worry that I’ll fall in love with someone like Syd and defy Papa and run off with him and then realize I made a mistake and part of the time I worry… that what happened to Sibyl Thomas will happen to me and.. .(A pause) Could what happened to Sibyl Thomas ever happen to you? I don’t mean the dying part. I know we all have to die. I mean the other part - having a baby before she was married. How do you think it happened to her? Do you think he loved her? Do you think it was the only time she did? You know… (A pause.) Old, common, Anna Landry said in the girls’ room at school, she did it whenever she wanted to, with whomever she wanted to and nothing ever happened to her. And if it did she would get rid of it. How do women do that? I don’t trust Anna Landry and I don’t know who else to ask. Can you imagine the expression on Mama’s face, or Aunt Lucy’s or Mrs. Cookenboo’s if I asked them something like that? (A pause.) Anyway, even if I knew I would be afraid to do something like that before I got married for fear God would strike me dead. (A pause.) Aunt Sarah said that Sibyl’s baby dying was God’s punishment of her sin. Aunt Lucy said if…
Let’s say you’re a little girl in a toy store. You walk down the aisles, touching all of the toys available to you. How lovely to have all of these things to play with! You finally land on a box of action figures. When you show them to your mother, she wrinkles her nose at the superheroes and army men. “Wouldn’t you like a doll instead?” she asks. You don’t know how to answer. Maybe she’s right. After all, that’s what all the other girls want.…
Throughout the year we have read many stories where reality and fantasy come into question. Once again we have this same problem with “The Youngest Doll”. What makes us question reality or fantasy in the story is the vivid description the author gives of the dolls that the aunt makes for the girls. With the description of the “wax mask of the child’s face” or the “porcelain of the hands and face”, it gives off the allusion that what may seem as a reality may in fact be a fantasy and it is that allusion that gives off the feeling of uncanniness. This is not the only theme that is displayed throughout the story, the others being “eyes”, as well as women being created as objects, and it is these themes that stand out in the reading and continue to add to the uncanniness of the story.…
Inside, it tells the story of 15 year old Riley and her aunts voyage to New York, to start a new life in hopes for a better one, but ends up finding herself in reverse. Sad, hungry, tired and poor. In her diary, it had, also told about how she and her aunt were making little money, lived in a run-down tenement, worked back breaking jobs, and also describes their horrific voyage to the United States and on top of that, how they were treated differently by…
In “The China Coin”, Leah struggles to accept the fact that she has to travel to China, especially with her mother Joan, earlier mentioned as the ‘evil aunt’. Leah’s overreacting intolerance towards the foreign culture is presented through her inner monologue “I am being taken to a village so primitive they file their teeth and eat meat raw.” In this quote, we discover that she fails to recognise the culture by describing the village as ‘primitive’. The exploration continues, and Leah’s personal rediscovery occurs after six weeks in China, when she realises that her ‘Aussie’ heritage does not matter anymore. Similarly, Billy Elliot is hesitating to enter the boxing hall and explore his opportunities. A long-shot of him, swinging the door and being aggressively pushed by another boy, reinforces the idea that he is already an outsider. The swinging door is represented as a barrier to entrance in a discovery of ballet and rediscovery of growth and change of a boy who is different than the boys in the working class community. In addition, “The Treasure Box’s” main character, Peter, is forced to go on a sudden personal discovery. Before the enemy burned the whole village, a flashback from the past is illustrated. The composition of the illustration shows limited objects, suggesting that Peter, similarly to Billy, is poor and lost his mother. Thus, Peter’s father metaphorically says: “This is a book about our people, about us… It is rarer than rubies, more splendid than silver, greater than gold.” The insignificance of wealth is further emphasised after the death of Peter’s father, having nothing but a Treasure Box, just like Leah’s coin, that later has to be concealed. Upon adulthood, Peter returns for the hidden treasure and a little girl approaches and asks for treasure, but Peter has rediscovered again, that wealth is worthless when it comes to…
A Doll’s House, by Henrik Ibsen, portrays a young married woman, Nora, who plays a dramatic role of deception and self-indulgence. The author creates a good understanding of a woman’s role by assuming Nora is an average housewife who does not work; her only job is to maintain the house and raise the children like a stereotypical woman that cannot work or help society. In reality, she is not an average housewife in that she has a hired maid who deals with the house and children. Although Ibsen focuses on these “housewife” attributes, Nora’s character is ambitious, naive, and somewhat cunning. She hides a dark secret from her husband that not only includes borrowing money, but also forgery. Nora’s choices were irrational; she handled the situations very poorly in this play by keeping everything a secret. The way that women were viewed in this time period created a barrier that she could not overcome. The decisions that had the potential to be good were otherwise molded into appalling ones. Women should have just as many rights as men and should not be discriminated by gender; but they should also accept consequences in the same way without a lesser or harsher punishment.…
In this essay I am going to focus on the character Owen and how his character develops throughout the book. The main character Liz is 15 when she is involved in a car accident. She dies before she reaches the hospital and she is taken to ‘Elsewhere’, which in the book is a place like Heaven. In Elsewhere everyone ages backwards and she meets her Grandma who is…
Toy Story is the groundbreaking 1995 motion picture developed by Disney and Pixar and directed by John Lasseter. The film was so revolutionary not only because it was the first feature length animation to be created completely by CGI (Computer Generated Imagery) but also, also the film was more rounded in all respects. The characters not only looked more sophisticated and three-dimensional but their personalities were also more human and fewer cartoons like. The film uses a constructed text in order to put across a theme of two very different characters learning to work together beyond their rivalries to rise above a common enemy and work towards a common goal. The film uses characters and imagery very cleverly to portray this theme. The music used in the film is also different to other Disney features. Rather than the characters bursting into song themselves as in Aladdin or Hercules, the songs are played and sung by an outside person (Randy Newman) and reflect the mood and emotions of the characters in a particular scene. For example, the title sequence song "Friend in Me", when Woody and Andy are playing together, and the scene where Andy's room has been made over to a Buzz Light Year theme, "Strange Things" where the song reflects Woody's confusion and fear not only about the change in his surroundings but also the change in his friends and his own character and self-confidence. The attention to the smallest detail for example the reflections in Buzz's visor give the film even more realism and depth. The use of unusual and imaginative camera angles, made possible by the use of CGI, also adds to the texture and pace of the film.…
Individuals have been lamenting the most recent fever — fidget spinning toy — via web-based networking media. Truly, while my bolster has been peppered with sobs for assistance from companions with children and instructors, I'd never known about these things. In any case, surprisingly fidget spinning toy can help diverted grown-ups. So, this is what you have to think about them. The fidget spinning toy is another handheld toy that you can turn and use to do traps. Well that sounds cool, correct? Why might individuals detest on that?…
The darkness is slowly scaring me making me feel overwhelmed. I can’t see anything. I feel suffocated and musty with all these boxes stocked next to me and on top of me. I’ve been here for so long and I feel so hopeless and useless. Then suddenly a bright light shines on me and I finally feel free from this very comfortless home. I wish someone would open this lid on top of me so I can breath in fresh air. But here I am staying strong and just patiently waiting. Then suddenly, I am lifted, opened, and place on top of a flat surface. I feel so nervous. I am hearing human voices. My wish is granted. It is my time, and I am free!…
With Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, you start out by having this poor little boy, Charlie, who was very sweet, polite and never did anything that would put him or his family in jeopardy. This little boy’s family didn’t have much but they had each other and that’s all that mattered. This family lived in a town where there happened to be a chocolate factory owned by none other than Mr. Willy Wonka. Mr. Wonka came up with a plan to hide 5 golden tickets in certain candy bar wrappers so that the winners could take a tour of his factory. Five kids and their parents became winners and this certain little boy was one of them accompanied by his grandpa. This book showed 5 different personalities, 5 different children who were all brought up in various ways. During this tour, various things happen to certain children who either aren’t listening, are not behaving, all the while and this little boy, Charlie, and his grandpa are just following this tour and aren’t really there for anything more than just to be there. After the other 4 children are somehow eliminated through their character flaws, Charlie who was in a contest the whole time wins none other than the chocolate factory…