In "The China Coin" written by Allan Baillie‚ the main characters Leah and Joan went on a journey to china in purpose to find out the mystery of the broken coin. As the journey progresses‚ Leah learns to be independent to look after herself and help Li-Nan with some easy job when Joan was in the hospital. She gains understand of her cultural heritage. This is shown in her attitude toward the journey is changing from being uninterested to passionate and joyful. Leah gain new insight by learning to
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It’s kind of funny to think that I’ve spent my last 3 years of education at a school where I was the only white kid. You see I felt like I belonged and never once felt like an outcast‚ but I stand at the gates of my new school in a new country‚ promising a safer lifestyle and a higher level of education and I’ve never felt so detached and nervous in my life. The funny part about that is my new school is quite multicultural but I’m definitely not the only white student attending yet I felt I belonged
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Life requires us to move to new stages‚ each with its own set of obstacles and challenges which‚ if successfully overcome‚ can enrich one’s experience. A significant role in this process is played by familial and social values and external interventions. Stephen Daldry’s film ‘Billy Elliot’ (2000) depicts the protagonist’s growth as he discovers a passion for ballet which drives him to break free from traditional masculine stereotypes in his mining hometown. This similar drive traces the quest of
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The Only Living Boy in Paris Day 1: Flying Away This transit into the clouds symbolises everything I am afraid of‚ yet seems a beacon of every god given opportunity that might await me. Leaving the city you’ve always lived in‚ to live in a big city such as Paris is an undeniable risk but for me it seems the only option. I need change. I’ve lost my place in Sydney – I am essentially living off food‚ water and warmth. I’ve no family‚ no friends and as I seem to loathe waking up everyday‚ I ought
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Frankenstein explores the power of the human mind to push boundaries while providing a chilling insight into human nature By Chloe Jaggard Frankenstein by Mary Shelley brings readers to think about the effects of pushing the boundaries of life and the consequences that come from these actions. The human mind is known to constantly want to push our boundaries‚ because we want to progress in life as a society. This basic human need can have both good and bad endings‚ and Mary Shelley’s novel
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Deicide The crusted cliff top sighed empathetically in the burning embers of his fiery wake. He sat there‚ gazing upon the gentle planet that the deity’s society had named Earth. Lonely‚ he began to conjure a wheel of fire with his fingers to play with. Behind‚ hiding in the dry trees stood a human-like figure with blue eminence from its eyes. The place he lived in was Valhalla‚ the realm of the Gods‚ an intense dimension that was fashioned for the prosperity of higher beings. This forlorn god sitting
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Film and television has taken over the world we live in‚ becoming one of the most popular ways for different personalities to express their stories in local and worldwide settings. Film allows auteurs to capture the essence of time‚ emotional circumstances and cultural differences in order to create stories that linger in the minds of their audiences. In particular‚ this is demonstrated in Australian film. Historically‚ Australian film tends to explore the cultural difficulties associated between
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“There is a reason the word belonging has a synonym for want at its center; it is the human condition.” ― Jodi Picoult Belonging is the perceptions held by individuals‚ which enables them to be inherently connected and to develop an affinity with themselves as well as an intimate bond with place. I believe I have learnt that belonging is the most basic human desire‚ a part of the human condition. In order to achieve true belonging‚ however‚ many feel the need to belong to a particular place
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their experience of belonging.’ This statement can be readily depicted through various texts which include Raimond Gaita’s memoir‚ Romulus My Father and Universal Studio’s 2004 film‚ Hating Alison Ashley. Both of these texts involve various techniques that assist in portraying the concept of belonging to both an environment and to relationships. Belonging is a concept that is more complex than it first appears. It may be experienced on many levels between belonging and not belonging‚ be it to a family
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Belonging Essay – “Who we are and how we belong is a choice” When we construct an identity for ourselves‚ we are constantly shaped by our choices. To where and how we belong is ultimately one of those choices‚ through which we develop our sense of self. In this development of ourselves‚ we often search for a feeling of belonging to culture‚ places‚ and groups‚ but are hindered from constructing a sense of self by barriers to belonging such as racial and cultural prejudice‚ violence‚ hypocrisy
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