The Island of the Colorblind Oliver Sacks‚ author of “The Island of the Colorblind” and his comrades‚ Knut and Bob‚ embark on a journey through Pingelap then Pohnpei‚ leaning more and more about the indigenous achromatopes of the islands. Achromatopes are colorblind and have a painful intolerance of bright light and an inability to see fine detail. In Pingelap‚ they come to learn that all the achromatopes can easily discern each of the plants from one another. To the average color-normals‚ the island
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The next term Sacks satisfied is Pathos. He gave the readers the other view about the young people besides the postmodern scene at American in 1990s. It evoked the feeling surprised and depressed of readers before the consequences that postmodern had brought to. Sacks made people confused before the reasons why this reality had happened; while people were supposed to be diligent harder in the outstanding development of technology and entertainment‚ people especially is young generation was so lazy
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My Review of Uncle Tungsten Uncle Tungsten‚ by Oliver Sacks is titled as “Memories of a Chemical Boyhood”‚ but it is far more than that. This story is not just a biography of a kid’s childhood‚ it’s focused around the influence of chemistry upon a child’s life‚ the discovery of the periodic table and the elements on it‚ and the non-chemistry part of his life. Early in the story‚ we learn that Oliver Sacks‚ the child in the story‚ has a family full of chemists‚ physicists‚ and doctors. As of this
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suffering from those experiences‚ their minds can “pull” themselves out of their bodies for days. Similarly‚ in “The Mind’s Eye” written by Oliver Sacks‚ he discusses his understandings of the mind’s eye through the experiences of his own and the ones that have been shared with him by those whose senses are impaired. The concepts that are derived from Stout and Sacks’ articles can be connected to the soldiers’ experiences in “How to Tell A True War Story” by Tim O’Brien. He describes the unavoidable truth
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In Chapter 15: In the Moment: Music and Amnesia‚ Oliver Sacks describes the case of Clive Wearing‚ an eminent English musician‚ and musicologist who was struck by an overwhelming brain disease‚ a herpes encephalitis‚ that affected specifically the parts of his brain concerned with memory. Toward the start of his sickness‚ Clive would sometimes be perplexed at the odd things he encountered. For instance‚ his wife‚ Deborah‚ observed how one day‚ she saw him having something in his hand‚ and over and
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After reading through the book “The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales‚” by Oliver Sacks‚ one chapter in particular really stuck out to me for a few reasons. This book reminded me of the TV show “House”‚ where this doctor gets a bunch of unusual cases and has to figure out what is wrong and it seems like Oliver Sacks in this book. This whole book I found to be extremely interesting and hard to put down so it was tough to think of one chapter to focus on. I decided to narrow
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In Oliver Sacks’ The Man Who Mistook His Wife For a Hat‚ Dr. P‚ a teacher at a local school of music started acting in weird ways‚ not recognizing students by their faces‚ but once he would hear them speak he would know exactly who they were‚ by recognizing their
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in Tehran which repressed the rights of women. Freedom has the power to give salvation to those who suffer from totalitarian control or any type of appalling repression. On the other hand‚ the author of “The Mind’s Eye: What the Blind See‚” Oliver Sacks‚ explains how blind individuals are repressed from the world‚ as they are not able to perceive the world around them. However‚ with the abilities of imagination‚ these certain individuals were able to create individual worlds in their minds. These
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commonplace manner with over-lapping ideas that they each lose their own individuality. Reality is a subjective value that reflects what characterizes our world‚ whether it is our individual world or the world as a whole‚ and its conditions. Oliver Sacks’ "The Mind’s Eye: What the Blind See" and Tim O’Brien’s "How to Tell a True War Story" bring the relationship of truth and reality into question. O’Brien openly uses the thin line between truth and reality to convey the message that truth and reality
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“Reading More Than Lolita in Tehran” author Fatemeh Keshavarz and Author Azar Nafisi of “Reading Lolita in Tehran: a Memoir in Books” share a few similarities because they have both shed light on the struggles of Iranian women in their own way. Nafisi’s “Reading Lolita in Tehran‚” written in 2003‚ was a glimpse into the lives of seven Iranian women. Nafisi’s book‚ whether you agreed or not‚ paved the way for other Iranian feminist authors. Despite Keshavarz’s disapproval of Nafisi’s memoir‚ both
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