Every job Ehrenreich had was unskilled‚ but it required for the workers to learn more through their jobs. She had to learn how to manage the tools she was working with while concentrating on her work. The three moments of glory for her were at The Maids where she finished cleaning to help out others. The other two was when she realized she could earn more at Wal Mart by keeping quiet and when she fed the Alzheimer’s ward and still had time to clean. Ehrenreich is proud of her physical ability because
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poverty. First Body: What: Allusion Pg. 2‚ Logos Pg. 37. How & Effect: Ehrenreich uses these personal‚ rhetorical strategies based on her experiences as a low-wage worker in the poor working class. The effect is that Ehrenreich is able to show the readers the conditions in which the impoverished work in and the daily obstacles that they face in life; also there is an appeal to logic and a reference of a poverty idiom. Why: Ehrenreich is deliberately using these rhetorical strategies to incite the readers
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psychological trauma‚ embarrassment‚ and emotional discomfort” from both patient and their parents (Ehrenreich‚ 2005‚ p.13). On the other hands‚ anti-FGC activists‚ and Western feminism has attacked the “African genital cutting as primitive‚ irrational‚ harmful‚ and deserving of condemnation.” This type of practice is equally problematic to intersex surgery which occurs in own country (Ehrenreich‚ 2005‚ p.13). Regarding to both cases‚ the articles suggested that performing intersex surgery procedures
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Name of Book: Nickel and Dimed Author: Barbara Ehrenreich Plot Summary: The author‚ Barbara Ehrenreich‚ works for the prestigious New Yorker magazine. One day over lunch with a famous editor discussing possible stories to write‚ she comments that the minimum wage is too low. She thinks someone used to more money should try to live on this pittance. The editor‚ Lewis Lapham‚ assigns her the story. This is not good news for Ehrenreich. Having spent her childhood with middle class struggling
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"Serving in Florida" by Barbara Ehrenreich‚ is an effective essay derived from Ehrenreich’s book Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America. This essay is a personal reflection of Ehrenreich’s experiences working "under- cover" in low paying‚ blue collar jobs in Florida. This essay is a descriptive narrative that shows how hard it is for low paid‚ working class Americans‚ to make it in the world. Ehrenreich vividly describes her experiences and sends a message to the reader that many working
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Analysis of Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America In “Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America”‚ Barbara Ehrenreich‚ a well-off white woman with a Ph.D. in Biology questions how low-income workers‚ especially females‚ make a living. Due to the welfare reform‚ 4 million women were about to have to enter into the workforce‚ usually for less than minimum wage. Ehrenreich decides to make an experiment out of her ideas. She decided she would travel to three different cities: Key West‚ FL.
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Name Instructor’s name Class February 25th‚ 2013 Families Are Not Dangerous Barbara Ehrenreich in her article titled Are Families Dangerous?‚ tries to argue that the family institution is the root cause of much violence in the world. Ehrenreich brings up many infamous cases of murder and violence‚ ones that the general public knows about due to the seemingly endless media coverage covering these violent acts‚ in essence glorifying the individuals charged and accused of their heinous crimes
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The Destructive Effects of Healthism Healthism places our primary importance in our personal wellbeing. It results in destructive effects on the American society‚ creating a hostile environment by reinforcing victim blaming. Healthism also reinforces longstanding prejudices which promote a false illusion that bases personal worth off of fitness and health. Rather than unify a culture‚ healthism creates division in American society. First‚ healthism fosters destructive tendencies toward society
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Serving in Florida is an essay written by Barbara Ehrenreich that is a first-hand experience by the author in the world of working minimum wage jobs. The author tried to balance two low paying jobs in order to make ends meet. Ehrenreich mainly uses pathos‚ or the emotional appeal‚ in her essay to persuade young adults to go to college and strive for high paying jobs and uses ethos‚ the ethical appeal as the secondary rhetorical appeal in her essay to convince her readers that she is indeed a credible
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paragraphs of the novel‚ Nickel and Dimed‚ Barbara Ehrenreich emphasizes that the middle‚ to upper class is oblivious to the misery of the working class. The lack of disclosure between the working and upper-middle class makes the upper-middle class oblivious to the working class’s hard work effort. In the first paragraph of the passage‚ Ehrenreich conveys a tone of annoyance and sarcasm. When the maids arrive at the home‚ they are unable to get inside. Ehrenreich voices that her itchy pink rash‚ “Must be
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