Judgement and its connections to racism What do you think when you see a drunk homeless native? A person who can’t handle responsibility and drinks away every cent the native gets? What about a black woman who has 7 kids and is rude to you while collecting welfare checks? Do you see someone taking advantage of your money? Or not a functional member of society due to “ that’s just what blacks do”? What people don’t see is the way these people been hurt‚ that native man could have horrible things
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ALICE WALKER Alice Walker was an activist and feminist because she protested for the right of blacks to vote in Georgia and Mississippi. She was against racism and also sexism. On March 8th 2003‚ 5‚000 protestors and Alice Walker marched from Malcolm X Park to the White House for women to have the same human rights as men. She also made an activist group with 60 other female activists in order to persuade Israel and Egypt to open their borders in Gaza. She wrote and supported various civil rights
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The character Victor from “This Is What It Means To Say Phoenix‚ Arizona” explains how he received news that his father is dead and that he has money he can clam‚ but in order to get the money he must go to Arizona. To collect the money and the car also his childhood best friend Thomas buildsthe-fire wants to go along with him. Victor seeks the death of his true friendship with thomas buildsthe-fire. Victor and thomas were best friends since childhood and as they grew older they got the more separate
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A mother’s love is an unconditional love. In Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use” the mother’s thoughts‚ words and actions depicts a lot about her daughters; Dee is all about her image while Maggie‚ doesn’t have much going for her outside of her home and she is so insecure. Dee has the looks and opportunity while Maggie has the heart. Dee is a beautiful‚ curvy woman that is very confident in herself and knows what she wants. The mom compare her to Maggie and stated that “Dee is lighter than Maggie‚ with
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Prize novelist Alice Walker is best known for her stories about the life of African American women‚ their struggle with society for survival‚ racial‚ sexual and inexpensive equality and spiritual unity. She writes through her personal experiences. Most critics consider her works as feminist‚ but Walker describes herself as a “womanliest”‚ showing appreciation of women and their abilities no matter what the color of their skin is. On February 9‚ 1944‚ in the small farming community of
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In Sherman Alexie’s essay‚ Superman and Me‚ he uses repetition and extended metaphors to transition from a personal to social level as he illustrates his poor childhood‚ and how reading saves his and others lives. The essay is introduced with the Superman comic books that taught Alexie how to read. He uses the repetition of “I cannot recall” to explain that he does not recall the exact details of what he read but the idea of reading. He then contrasts this by stating what he can remember – being
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Arizona is a fascinating and diverse state‚ even though it seems like a desert may be a bad place to visit or live. The state has many places with huge differences‚ arizona can be‚ exciting‚ peaceful‚ Cold as ice and hot enough to cook your food on the pavement. Arizona also beholds a number of wonders such as The Grand Canyon and Antelope Canyon. The climate in Arizona differs intensely by location and date. In Phoenix‚ Arizona the summers are over 120 degrees and in the winter can be less than
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I have chosen “Superman and Me” by Sherman Alexie to discuss about. This literacy narrative first appeared in “The Most Wonderful Books: Writers on Discovering the pleasures of Reading.” Sherman Alexie is a well known Native American writer that publishes short stories‚ novels and poetry. Out of the three narratives‚ I found myself connect with this story more than the others. Alexie tells us about his childhood as a Indian boy that grew up on the Reservation. His father was a big reader so as a
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In “Everyday Use”‚ Walker began to discuss principles of tradition and ancestry. When Dee was a child she hated her surroundings and culture. Mama indirectly says that Dee burned down the family’s old home. Dee also used to say that she hated her grandmothers’ handmade quilts. The irony in the story is that Dee arrives back home to take pictures of her family’s house and to retrieve back the old quilts that she supposedly hated. Walker is trying to tell the reader that one should embrace the past
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Sherman Alexie story “The Joy of Reading and Writing‚” lets us know about his educational journey‚ the journey in which he figured out how to read. He does not recall any of how he learned how to read‚ but knows that he was three years of age. His father had a passion for reading‚ and would buy cheap books from pawnshops‚ the Salvation Army‚ and other cheap stores. It rubbed off on Alexie‚ who would start “reading” the books that his father claimed. In spite the fact that he experiences‚ childhood
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