Conn 1 Jennifer Conn Professor Michael Hickman GWRTC 103 –Sect. 61 15 April 2013 Reader Response #3 Though Meyerhardt states that the opening account on female circumcision seemed “Amusing”‚ I personally found it far more disturbing. I was very shocked and disgusted while reading this piece‚ as I am sure my classmates were as well. The “small opening left for urination and menstruation . . . held open by a single piece of straw which is left there during the healing process” (1) forced me
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rest of the first stanza‚ Browning illustrates a joyful image of young‚ innocent children playing but in reality the cruel circumstances that the children are in only makes them weep. Browning emphasizes on ‘young’ by being repetitive to remind the reader of how the children have lost
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"Children‚ I come back today./ To tell you a story of the long dark way./ That I had to climb‚ that I had to know./ In order that the race might live and grow." --Langston Hughes. In his poem "The Negro Mother"‚ Hughes describes the prejudices and the struggles his mother faced growing up in a time of segregation. Hughes illustrates the depressing lifestyle the blacks lead by symbolizing their lives as a "long dark way". Similarly‚ in the novel To Kill a Mockingbird‚ Harper Lee teaches about the
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The consequences of a Dream Deferred In the poem “Harlem ( A Dream Deferred)” by Langston Hughes‚ he talks about dreams; dreams that society has‚ dreams that he has. Not a dream that you have while you’re sleeping but a dream that you have and want to pursue. He addresses the questions of what happens when a person’s dreams are destroyed. The author uses a lot of visual‚ descriptive language to try and show that nothing good can come from not achieving your dreams. For example‚ he compares not
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Langston Hughes (1902-1967) absorbed America. In doing so‚ he wrote about many issues critical to his time period‚ including The Renaissance‚ The Depression‚ World War II‚ the civil rights movement‚ the Black Power movement‚ Jazz‚ Blues‚ and Spirituality. Just as Hughes absorbed America‚ America absorbed the black poet in just about the only way its mindset allowed it to: by absorbing a black writer with all of the patronizing self-consciousness that that entails. The contradiction of being
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In the short story‚ “Thank You‚ Ma’am by Langston Hughes‚” Mrs. Luella Bates Washington Jones is a large‚ but very nice old woman. In the story‚ Roger‚ a little young fourteen year old boy‚ tries to take Mrs. Jones purse. After snatching her purse‚ he falls to the ground where she picks him up and asks him why he is so dirty. After making him pick up her pocket book‚ she takes him to her home. There‚ she makes him wash his face and eat a good meal. While making his meal‚ she asks Roger why he tried
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Reader Response for The Yellow Wallpaper Darlene Santangelo August 13‚ 2013 Vocabulary: • Derision – disapproval‚ disgust • Flamboyant – flashy‚ garish • Interminable - unending • Bedstead – hardware/woodenware on a bed • Querulous – irritable‚ difficult to deal with Difficult sentences: I always fancy I see people walking in these numerous paths and arbors‚ but John has cautioned me not to give way to fancy in the least. He says that with my imaginative
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In “Thank You‚ Ma’am” by Langston Hughes and “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost‚ the two stories both share a similar theme. It is portrayed by both authors that the moral of the stories is that all actions have consequences‚ whether they are good or bad. Langston Hughes writes a story about a sweet old lady that is walking down the sidewalk alone‚ when a boy comes up behind her and tries to steal her purse. Instead of being upset about the situation‚ the woman takes the boy into her house and
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Through Langston Hughes’ poem “I’ve Known Rivers”‚ Hughes reminds African Americans of their ancient history and heritage in a time of segregation and inequality. He empowers them by using strong imagery and provocative symbolism to remind African Americans of their strong roots. [INTRO TO EVIDENCE] “I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it” (Hughes). Hughes uses this image of raising the pyramids to reminds his African American community that their ancestors achieved great things
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very confusing way. The reader has to be actively reading the story or you will miss something which I did the first time reading through it. I was lost until I got to the end and understood the way the author structured the story. I was challenged as a reader at times because the story was written out of order on purpose. Being written the way it was‚ the story gets a more interesting edge and pulls the reader in‚ it intrigued me a lot. After reading it a second time the reader can see that certain
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