Comparing Jill Christman's The Sloth And The Professor Of Longing

Improved Essays
The obvious characteristic that defines Jill Christman’s “The Sloth” as a flash essay is the length of the essay. It is very short and minimal. In addition to this, the essay can also be defined as a flash essay through the author’s pacing. While the essay is very short, there are various things that are happening and being mentioned in the essay in a swift manner. The author switches from talking about temperature to their fiancé’s death to the description of the sloth within a couple of sentences apart.
While “The Professor of Longing” by Jill Talbot can be defined as a hermit crab essay because it is in the form of a syllabus. Talbot takes the form of a syllabus and turns it into her own personal. It is a unique and unusual format, which

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    How did Janie Crawford become a strong woman? Imagine how significant a woman’s life changed after she went through three marriages. In most cases, she would learn many valuable lessons from each marriage. In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston succeeded in creating the heroine as well as the protagonist in Janie Crawford. Having married to three different men who each had distinct perspectives, Janie learned more about different aspects of love, hopes, freedom, and eventually found the path to her identity.…

    • 1690 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In connecting and separating two stories and a speech, one must analyze the themes exemplified. Raven’s Song, “The Progress of 50 Years,” and A Widow’s Burden relate and differ in themes presented throughout the two novels and speech. The three elements of quest for power, change, and oppression of women are alike and incommensurable in many ways used throughout the three incongruous stories. While evaluating the theme of quest for power, one must deeply elucidate to find the crux.…

    • 723 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In Me and Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews the reader is taken along for the ride with Greg as he balances the social structure of high school and keeps up him and his best friends biggest secret, that is until rachel reappears in his life. Greg is in his senior year of High School and thinks he has things all figured out; he floats mutually in all aspects of the social pyramid, keeps up on his homework, has a playful relationship with his parents and teachers while secretly making movies with his bestfriend Earl. Once Rachel is diagnosed with cancer and Greg's life is flipped around; guess whose fault it is in Greg's mind? Rachel’s. Jesse Andrews has a similar writing style to the Author John Green, if his books seemed enjoyable,…

    • 205 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Power of People to Control their Day Albert Einstein once expressed, "All that is valuable in human society depends upon the opportunity for development accorded the individual." Hazel Hall demonstrates the power held within people to prevent advancement in their role and importance in his poem “Heavy Threads.” Opportunities give people the power to choose between being productive and useful or lethargic and futile. Personification displays the potential of daily events to bring meaning to people's lives.…

    • 492 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Bullhead Short Story

    • 272 Words
    • 2 Pages

    the ways you won’t ask how you can help” (Anderson 33). This ending line makes the reader feel hopeful that eventually the man, (you), may be able to help the woman. One of the strongest examples of emotional writing pieces in “Flash Fiction Forward” is “Bullhead”. The author writes of her mother’s first and truest love in the world. The mother made love once to the boy and the next day he moved away, leaving her to never see him again.…

    • 272 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    “Race is the child of racism, not the father.” As Tahesii Coates describes how the term race has caused severe distinctions amongst groups of individuals, which can go as far as a literal life or death issue. In the book Between the World and Me, Coates writes a letter to his fifteen year old son on how it is to be black in Amerikkka. He does that by intergrading his personal experiences, historical content, and knowledgeable developments. Coates was not too content on the ideal of school, however, attending Howard University allowed him to explore further beyond what his expectations prepared him for.…

    • 598 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In “Between the World and Me” Coates is writing a letter to his 15 year old son, Samori. He explains how one of color should live in America explaining his personal experience and history. He does this by explaining his childhood in Baltimore and how he never embraced the code of the streets. He also explains the understanding of why colored parents are so strict with their children, for the reason to protect them. Being colored in Baltimore meant that you were raised in a lower neglected neighborhood and treated in a negative way.…

    • 800 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In the short story, The Chaser, by John Collier, there are three areas that can be analyzed by using the feminist perspective the idea that women need to be controlled, through being overly attentive and by being jealous. The Chaser tells the story about a man, Alan Austen, who is deeply in love with a woman, Diana. But Diana does not like him at all. Actually, she seems to despise him and this is the main reason for Alan’s search for a man known for his abilities on doing magic potions. After entering the house he finds an old man sitting in a chair.…

    • 1284 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The narrator of the poem, “To a Mouse” appears to be a man, yet shares different views than most men through his defense and care for the mouse. In Of…

    • 1032 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    St Lucy’s Home for Girls is a safe haven for warewolf girls to learn and change into better humans. Claudette, a student at St Lucy's Home For Girls follows the nuns curriculum closely but sometimes she strays from it. This short story written by Karen Russell follows three girls as they learn please and adapt to their new way of living, all of them heading in separate directions. In the beginning of claudettes journey everything is new and different however She shortly learns that hard work is crucial to adaptation and that from that point on the stakes would be high. As her progress moves forward, she began to realize that she needed to go her separate way to succeeded and when she was finished at St Lucy’s…

    • 858 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Judith Ortiz Cofer was an amazing American writer, though she was originally from Puerto Rica. Cofer was an award winning author with a wide range of writings styles. She was best known for writing short stories, poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and essays. In one of Cofer’s essays More Room, she writes of memories of her childhood where she spent them at her grandmas house in Puerto Rico, known in the essay as Mamá.…

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Sometimes life is best explained in metaphors. Sometimes the hurt, pain, and anger found in life are more easily grasped when one looks at them in terms of other objects. This is how the poem,“The Minefield,” written by Diane Thiel, looks at pain and anger. Written in short and choppy lines with no clear rhythm or rhyming pattern, this poem tells the story of a man who witnessed his friend blown to pieces in a minefield. Because of this, the man who witnessed this terrifying tragedy has grown into an angry and broken soul.…

    • 1130 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    There are many ways the human body can be described. It can be literal, anatomical, or poetic. All of these wrapped up will sum up the essay “The Female Body” written by Margaret Atwood, who put words to the wonders and complications of a woman’s body. With an almost rhythmic writing style, Atwood addressed sexist views and rebutted with an intimate and intrusive account of the role women have within a male consumed society. Atwood successfully uses pathos and ethos argumentative points to bring attention to the hardships women face.…

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Sloths Essay

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Francesca Williams Writing- 1 December 19, 2017 8 Amazing Facts About Sloths Introduction: Deep in the forest lives the slowest creature on earth, the sloth. Sloths can live up to 10 years. They are commonly found in South America and spend their life in the forests. Sloths are a mystery to many people. Even though they are slow and seem like friendly animals, how much do you really know about sloths?…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Doll’s House Literary Analysis The play Doll’s House is not childish as it sounds; it reflects the reality of what oppression against women looked like in past. Nora, the play’s protagonist, struggles with situation where she unknowingly broke the law in order to aid her husband in ill by asking for money from other man; she tries to escape from her guilt by ensuring that Krogstad keeps his position in her husband’s bank, then tried to keep husband from reading the letter of their transaction, and ultimately she considered of suicide. However, the ending of play was surprisingly different than expected, and Nora had finally escaped from her “guilt” and lived a life where some people don’t know.…

    • 862 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays

Related Topics