First I would like to talk about how the book Oh! The Places You’ll Go relates to what I will learn in
First I would like to talk about how the book Oh! The Places You’ll Go relates to what I will learn in
Fever 1793 by Laurie Halas Anderson Do you think the characters/people and their problems/decisions/relationships are believable/realistic? Why or why not? I believe the book is believable, because the details show; that it is a common thing for nurses and doctors to do. The quote in the book, “After a few weeks of nursing the sick, and burying the dead.” (Anderson Page 176).…
Obvious Success "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" is a short story written by Joyce Carol Oates. The story was about a 15-year-old girl named Connie who "knew that she was pretty and that was everything" Oates pg. 308. The story mostly focused on Connie's regular teenage life, but the story took a turn when Arnold Friend, a boy that Connie saw on a parking lot of a restaurant, appeared in front of Connie's house when she was alone. Arnold Friend was inviting Connie out for a ride, but Connie did not get out of the house because she was suspicious of Arnold Friend and his partner Ellie.…
Superman and Me by Sherman Alexie challenges expectations based on racial stereotypes. Alexie, an Indian, was expected to be unintelligent and he was expected to fail in the non-Indian world. I Know Why the Caged Bird Cannot Read by Francine Prose confronts high schools and the reading materials that are encouraged to be read by the students. Prose makes claims about the messages and the depth that these books lack. Superman and Me begins with a flashback of the author’s life.…
"Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" by Joyce Carol Oates is a story about a teenage girl in the 1960's, named Connie, and her struggle to escape reality while simultaneously resisting authority and playing the role of beauty queen. Connie wants nothing less than to be like her mother or sister. She thinks that because she is prettier than them that she is above them. Connie's fascination with her beauty and her inability to distinguish reality from fantasy ultimately lead to her own downfall in the end. Connie, a victim of horrifying circumstance will be forever changed by her interactions with the antagonist of the story, Arnold Friend.…
"Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" by Joyce Carol Oates is a story about a teenage girl in the 1960's, named Connie, and her struggle to escape reality while simultaneously resisting authority and playing the role of beauty queen. Connie wants nothing less than to be like her mother or sister. She thinks that because she is prettier than them that she is above them. Connie's fascination with her beauty and her inability to distinguish reality from fantasy ultimately lead to her own downfall in the end. Connie, a victim of terrifying circumstance will be forever changed by her interactions with the antagonist of the story, Arnold Friend.…
“Temptation is the devil looking through the keyhole. Yielding is opening the door and inviting him in,” evangelist Billy Sunday described. For a teenager who doesn’t know who he is yet, or where he wants to go, it is easier to choose the wrong path if nobody is there to teach him to avoid temptation. The story “Where are you going, Where have you been?” by Joyce Carol Oates, depicts Connie’s susceptibility to temptation as a teenager who does not receive enough attention from her parents, and who gets to experience life without their guidance.…
In life, all people are faced with challenges and difficulties regardless of social status, racial background and desire for knowledge. Few people are given a greater number of hardships than others. How people deal with their circumstances can differ contingent on how everyone around them impacts them. All in all, what makes individuals effective? Success is a result of doing the right thing by learning from and overcoming mistakes and failures, achieving the goals set for oneself, positively affecting the lives of others, and being content in one's circumstances.…
Last October I participated in the Dartmouth Native Fly-In Program and while I was visiting I made a trip to the third floor of the Dartmouth library. I remember this experience quite well because out of all the wonderful memories I made on that trip, this was the one experience that had the greatest impact on me. I remember walking into the library where old, frail books lined the walls with dark, mahogany bookcases stretching high. There were antique lamps on the desks that let off just enough light for one person to study under and floors that creaked loud enough to draw attention to my friends and I. We finally reached the center of the library where I saw a bronze Native American sculpture that I recognized from a museum I have visited many times here in Oklahoma.…
Cognition is something that must be owned by anyone who has a goal of finding a place in today’s job market. This is because the ability to process and acquire information through thought experience and sense is crucial in ones working environment. In Sanford J Ungar’s essay “The New Liberal Arts” he believes that obtaining a college education focused on liberal arts is the best way that the workers of tomorrow will be prepared for the constantly changing job market that they will soon have to explore in the future. Because of Ungar’s argument one may ask the question, is a liberal arts degree the only way to obtain the skills needed in the workplace? While some may jump to answer yes to this question others may have something else in mind.…
Where Are You Going? Where Have You Been? By Joyce Carol Oates is the story of Connie, a 15 year old Texan girl, and one fateful summer day. Through characterization and symbolism the author shows that often teenagers rush into the fantasy of adulthood, never expecting how real it can get. By using the summer to represent her fall from innocence, music to show how Connie feels, and her habit of checking her reflection to prove she’s still young and insecure- despite how she may act, Oates provides an intense look at how there is always more to what is going on than initially appears.…
In his essay “No Time to Read,” David McCullough discusses how reading books is the best way for one to gather and learn information. McCullough talks about the lack of reading that occurs in our society today, that without reading books, we are not gaining knowledge. He believes that if people would actually take time out of their day and read books, that we gain more knowledge than the internet can offer us. He mentions even though we have easy access to the internet with a touch of a button, we still do not use out time wisely, regarding reading. McCullough’s main point within his essay is to encourage people to read more, no matter of the purpose of the book.…
What are your writing strengths and weaknesses? To be quite honest, I'm not too sure about my writing strengths, but I am aware of many weaknesses. Writing tends to stress me out a bit and I don't know why. It probably stems from some traumatic incident in my childhood.…
It is unsurprising for a seasoned author like J.K. Rowling to write an empowering piece; however, what is astonishing is the poignant way in which she delivered the commencement speech to the Harvard graduating class of 2008. Her speech was meant to enlighten the graduates about life after college by focusing on the benefits of failure and the importance of imagination. The commencement speech followed a topical pattern, thus she centered her speech around life after college and the equal importance of failure and imagination by utilizing her own life experiences as a mere twenty-year-old to explain her main points. Not only was the speech easy to follow because she clearly stated what she would speak about, She delivered the speech in a truly…
Ungar believes that such an environment can help students “develop high standards for themselves and others” (232). In Ungard’s view, a liberal arts education, unlike that of a larger university, provides more than just…
When it comes to teens and younger children it is important to keep in mind that they are new to the world. They will make mistakes without a doubt due to their ignorance towards reality and the type of people that dwell within it. Without the proper set of guidelines tied in through life lessons the child in concern can be greatly damaged in the process. Even in the case of full grown adults, without proper rules everything falls apart. Joyce Carol Oates tackles this need for government in her realistic allegory short story, “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”…