Hai-Tue T. Ton MLL 1901-01 Instructor: Jeannette Wonder -Leighton See What I Mean Have you ever wondered the differences between deaf and hearing cultures? Last week I had a chance to watch "See What I Mean" and this video gave me a humorous and enlightening look at the differences between them. In this movie "See What I Mean"‚ issues such as attitudes toward time‚ taking time to say goodbye‚ complain about the use of phones and pagers‚ sharing information‚ giving and receiving criticism‚
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How white people became white. The story of how white people became white in the United States goes as far back as the 15th and 16th century. People born white in this country were born with great privilege. It was an honor to be classified as a white man‚ or woman because white people had the pleasure of enjoying the many benefits that other cultures could not. If a person was classified as anything other than white‚ they were called minorities. Being a minority meant that one had no rights. People
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Warming Her Pearls for Judith Radstone Next to my own skin‚ her pearls. My mistress bids me wear them‚ warm them‚ until evening when I´ll brush her hair. At six‚ I place them round her cool‚ white throat. All day I think of her‚ resting in the Yellow Room‚ contemplating silk or taffeta‚ which gown tonight? She fans herself whilst I work willingly‚ my slow heat entering each pearl. Slack on my neck‚ her rope. She´s beautiful. I dream about her in my attic bed; picture her
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1904: Lincoln Steffens‚ The Shame of the Cities U.S. History Resources 1904 Lincoln Steffens‚ The Shame of the Cities Perhaps the most influential of the muckrakers was Lincoln Steffens. Steffens’s articles were published in McClure’s magazine in 1902 and 1903 and then collected in The Shame of the Cities. The following excerpt is taken from the introduction to the 1904 volume. Now‚ the typical American citizen is the business man. The typical businessman is a bad citizen; he is busy
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“Here I‚ Frida Kahlo‚ paint myself‚ the image in the mirror.” Frida Kahlo (July 6‚ 1907 - July 13‚ 1954) was a Mexican painter who depicted the indigenous culture of her country in a style combining Realism‚ Symbolism and Surrealism. Drawing on personal experiences including her troubled marriage‚ her painful miscarriages‚ and her numerous operations‚ Kahlo’s works are often characterized by their stark portrayals of pain. Fifty-five of her 143 paintings are self-portraits‚ which frequently incorporate
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Pebbles Franks Handelman English 1101 24 June 2013 Shame to Fame: Teenage Pregnancy The Pregnancy Trap by Gerry Garibaldi creates the idea that society has become more accepting of teenage pregnancy (634-38). When Garibaldi learns all of his favorite girls are pregnant‚ he asks some of them‚ “Do you think getting pregnant when you’re a teenager is a good thing or a bad thing
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Her First Week ‘Her first week’ captures the emotions of a newly made mother and shows her feelings during the first week she spends with her child. Sharon Olds expresses her happiness of being blessed with a baby girl and shares the experience of emerging into motherhood. The poem transfers the joy and thrill of being with child and portrays the feelings of the mother with her child around. It also shows the beginning of a new bond between mother and child.
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misrepresented or criticized‚ leading him to create pieces that were seemingly difficult to understand and highly symbolic. John’s piece‚ Target with Four Faces 1955 explains the use of targets in his work. Used as a method of focus redirection‚ the blankness of the target allows for a viewer’s interpretative input‚ which along with the silent figures above the target create an overall portrayal of the individualist subcultures that existed in Cold War America. Johns also frequently used the image of
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A Woman in Her Prime by Asare Konadu. Heinemann‚ 1967. 107 pages Compared to the brilliance and brashness of so much Nigerian literature‚ the quieter literature of Ghana may seem in danger of being overlooked. A Woman in Her Prime is a good example of what a mistake that would be. Like its heroine‚ A Woman in Her Prime is modest‚ balanced‚ calm‚ and understated‚ but with a charm and quiet beauty that prove captivating. It centers on a domestic drama that can be stated simply: Pokuwaa would
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A Right to Her Genes by Susannah Gal Department of Biological Sciences State University of New York at Binghamton and Jessie W. Klein Science Department Middlesex Community College “But‚ doctor‚ what should I do?” Michelle was sitting in her OB-GYN’s office‚ having just confronted him with the dilemma she was facing. “My mother died of breast cancer when I was little and now I find out that her mother‚ my grandmother‚ has bone cancer and my grandmother’s brother and my grandfather both have lung
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