families made their clothes themselves. Clothes had a special meaning to these people as told in Passage 2‚ "part of this practice took on a religious significance and was conducted in sacred spaces. Fabric itself could be very meaningful." The fabric was difficult to make‚ and as a result‚ was very expensive. Since the fabric was expensive‚ most cultures had a robe that was common among people‚ since robes wasted less fabric. There was no such thing as a zipper or even a button‚ so clothes were harder to
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Hour and A Rose for Emily‚ the two main characters Louise Mallard and Emily Grierson are both similar and dissimilar. These two characters lived in similar ideological societies and they shared a similar pattern of development. But also they differed in their goals and how they thought they could achieve their goals. First‚ Emily Grierson and Louise Mallard both shared a common shackle‚ the society in which they lived. Both Emily and Louise were women‚ and they both lived in times where society
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In the Mary Louise Pratt ’s essay‚ “Arts of the Contact Zone‚” Pratt reports the advantages and disadvantages that contact zones bring. Pratt emphasizes that a contact zone allows people to interact between cultures and break the cultural boundary. When a contact zone
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offering discounts to consumers who turn in their old clothes at H&M stores. The initiative started in February and will be in all of H&M’s 2‚900 or so outlets by the end of the year. It’s a brilliant piece of green marketing by H&M’s corporate responsibility staff. But the company’s number-crunchers deserve some credit‚ too; they have carefully constructed the program in a way that makes it hard for H&M to lose. For every bag of clothes (regardless of brand)‚ the Swedish retailer gives a small
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From Delicate to Empowered: Toshiko’s Character Evolution in “Swaddling Clothes” Michelle Dano ENGL 1302 Professor Schulz March 25‚ 2013 Imagine having the power to change one’s destiny. In Yukio Mishima’s story‚ “Swaddling Clothes”‚ the main character‚ Toshiko‚ toys with this idea. Mishima himself controlled his own destiny by committing suicide – an event that “Yukio Mishima had planned for over a year.” Toshiko also plans to commit suicide in a sense by confronting an illegitimate
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environmental and economical effects consumers and distributors have on our current world‚ two activist‚ who happen to be authors‚ come to mind. Annie Leonard’s essay‚ "The Story of Stuff: Bottled Water‚" and Emily Fontaine’s blog post‚ "Where Did Our Clothes Come From?" provides the reader with evidence that our current consumer/distributor relationship‚ is negatively affecting the environmental and economical make up of our current society‚ through examples such as the water bottle‚ and clothing.
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The Native Family Versus the Dominant Culture in "American Horse" by Louise Erdrich The current interest in what has come to be called "multicultural" literature has focused critical attention on defining its most salient characteristic: authoring a text which appeals to at least two different cultural codes. (Wiget 258) Louise Erdrich says she’s an emissary of the between-world. (Bacon) "I have one foot on tribal lands and one foot in middle-class life." Her stories unfold where native family
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1.Should Louise Serrate cashed the check before Donald Lovekamp expired. I think Lousie Serrate should cashed that check at the time she received it. Donald Lovekamp specifically told her‚ that belongs to her‚ because she returned after a divorce to stay with him. He was specific about his wish and made clear that she can cash the check if something would have happened to him. I am not sure if that was a smart decision. In case of death‚ she would not have any access to the bank account to cash the
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you can ’t get lost. Home is the place they cross. 8. The lame guard strikes a match and makes the dark 9. less tolerant. We watch through cracks in boards 10. as the land starts rolling‚ rolling till it hurts 11. to be here‚ cold in regulation clothes. 12. We know the sheriff ’s waiting at midrun 13. to take us back. His car is dumb and warm. 14. The highway doesn ’t rock‚ it only hums 15. like a wing of long insults. The worn-down welts 16. of ancient punishments lead back and forth. 17
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do you spend on clothes a year? Do you like shopping for new clothes? Do you often buy new clothes? Do you read fashion magazines? Do you sometimes wear a hat? Do you think it is important to wear fashionable clothes? o (Do you think it is important to be in fashion?) Do you wear jewelry? o If so‚ what kind of jewelry do you wear? o How often do you wear jewelry? Do you wear the same color clothes now that you wore ten years ago? Do you wear the same size clothes this year as you
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