"A sense of belonging can emerge from the conection made with people places" Essays and Research Papers

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    “In their search for belonging‚ individuals must navigate the pressures that impact on their identity” It is the challenges and pressures of society that shape our identity‚ allowing us to discover who we truly are and find a sense of belonging. Emily Dickinson’s poem I had been hungry all the years and Sean Penn’s film Into the Wild explore the underlying themes of alienation from society and belonging to nature‚ and through each protagonist’s search for belonging‚ it can be seen that the trials

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    Question: Significant moments in time shape our understanding of belonging. Link this to belonging. To be effective a belonging text needs interesting characters‚ a developed structure‚ narrative elements and significant moments to shape our understanding of belonging. To create significant moments in time in a belonging poem the poet needs poetic techniques and structural techniques to create a connection and sense of acceptance. To also create significant moments in time in a story the composer

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    interaction with others‚ whether that interaction is positive or negative‚ can either enrich or limit their experience of belonging. The idea that negative interactions between an individual or others is directly related to their limited experience of belonging is extensively explored within Peter Skrzynecki’s St. Patrick’s College and Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange‚ as the protagonists in each text have a limited experience of belonging due to their negative interactions within a group majority. The

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    Belonging to a community or a group can impact someone through their attitudes‚ behaviour and habits. It can also affect them socially as it may prevent them from revealing their true identity and in some cases may allow them to broaden their beliefs. A persons place in the community affects the entire community and their actions can affect the community in a positive or negative aspect. These ideas have been reflected in the texts Strictly Ballroom‚ Neighbours and Drifters. Strictly Ballroom directed

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    Belonging is an instinctive human desire that is difficult to obtain due to the immensity of barriers placed to prevent it. Belonging can be achieved through the development of relationships between others as well as the establishment of a connection to place. Furthermore one can choose to renounce the conventions of society and thus achieve personal understanding and belonging. Various barriers‚ such as language barriers and the inability to conform within society can lead to feelings of displacement

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    significance of belonging broaden and deepen an individual’s understanding of themselves and their world? Refer to at least TWO of Skrzynecki’s poems and one related text. Through the study of ‘Ender’s Game’ by Orson Scott Card and the poems ‘Postcard’ and ‘In the folk museum’ by Peter Skrzynecki‚ an individual’s understanding of themselves and their world is broadened and deepened. These texts show that a sense of belonging can be difficult to find and that not belonging or uncertainty can dramatically

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    the road‚ watches people walk by and contemplating his role in society Notices one of the girls walking past as old neighbour‚ she makes eye contact and looks in the other direction ashamed to associate with him‚ starts whispering to her friend Guy becomes ashamed of who he has become‚ influence of not belonging socially and the difference that money makes Sits on the same corner every day‚ belongs to the setting but equally doesn’t belong due to social status Watches same people walk by every day

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    is generally achieved through the act of belonging and the connections that we have with various individuals‚ groups and places. However‚ acceptance and belonging is not always reached. This idea of self-discovery and belonging is presented in various ways in the poems‚ ‘St Patrick’s College’ and ‘Postcard’ by Peter Skrzynecki and the visual text featuring a girl celebrating her 10th birthday. Despite our individual identities‚ everyone requires the sense of connection‚ and by being an accepted member

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    Happiness can be Found in Unlikely Circumstances About a year ago‚ myself and a couple friends took a semester off school‚ went to South Africa for a vacation and for a chance to see a different part of the world. We set out for four months; three of those months we spent traveling up and down the garden route and the east coast and midway through our trip‚ we stopped at a hostel called‚ “Coffee Shack.” It was very laid back and relaxing hostel; there were many people there every night and the

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    Belonging The sense of belonging is something that we will all feel whether we mean to or not‚ if it is for good or bad‚ if we feel we belong or alienated. This sense of belonging can come through our family‚ friends‚ likes and dislikes‚ backgrounds and opinions. This belonging gives us connections to other people or things and we can gain other certain feelings with it such as security‚ happiness and pride. Mekaleya Eshete’s photograph reflects this sense of belonging through many different ways

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