Her
Her
In her essay “The Fighter Bird” Mary Aparicio Casterjon communicates her childhood experience during the holiday Noche Buena. Her family goes to pick out a turkey for Christmas dinner to appease her grandmother. At the meat market Aparicio Casterjon is disgusted with the revolting conditions the animals are kept in. Christmas dinner preparation repulses Aparicio Casterjon but she desires to gain her father and grandmothers approval and to do so she helps in the plucking of the feathers.…
Every aspect of the film is imbued, created and viewed through the lens of the black female spectator as filmmaker. Nana is arguably the center of the film – she’s an old wise woman and the leader of the Peazant family. She is regarded as the seat of knowledge in the family – which is already a subversion of mainstream cinema that usually gives that type of knowledge to old white men. Nana Peazant’s knowledge is ancestral and cultural, yet gives her the wisdom of any great scholar - the African intelligence is put toe to toe with the Greco-Roman mythologies in a manner similar to the asserting of the African Griot style as valid in comparison to the linear narrative. The respect of African knowledge is also evident in the peaceful co-existence…
Through the various opinions towards Native Americans from main characters such as Eunice, Rev. Williams, and Stephen, it is better understood the opinions the groups have towards each other. From the opinions of Eunice, it is revealed that the native way of life is perhaps not as “savage” as assumed. If it was, Eunice would not want to stay and get married to a man from the tribe. Instead she would want to return to her family. Rev. Williams writings represent a typical view towards natives.…
The concepts of genre, audience, and rhetorical situation are alike in their significance to the process of writing. They can be distinguished not only by their definitive meanings, but by a series of questions considered in the early stages of writing; what do I want to say, how do I want to say it, and who do I want to say it to? To these questions there are no clear-cut answers, empowering the writer to explore a variety of topics. It is important to understand that genre, audience, and rhetorical situation are not considered in a sequential order, nor are they exclusive to planning. In fact, the development of new ideas can occur in any stage of writing.…
We all have dreams that are so close, but seem so far away. There may be something stopping us from reaching for these dreams such as, other people’s opinions, cultural traditions, or our own self-doubt. A controversy lies between what we wish to accomplish and what others think we need to accomplish. It all comes down to our personal responsibility and the opinions of others that keeps us from moving forward. It is simply reality.…
The main topic of this essay is comparing and contrasting the short story The Medicine Bag and the video “ Apache Girl’s Rite of Passage”. One important feature of the story is how Martin's feelings are described and how and why they are changing gradually from plain comfort to deep embarrassment to nervous unrest to strong pride toward his grandpa and the medicine bag. Also, an important feature of the video is how camera angles, music, special effects, and dialogue go together to set the general mood of the video for the viewers. These and more details will be used in comparing and contrasting the short story The Medicine Bag and the video “ Apache Girl’s Rite of Passage”.…
Nea, who is a main character and narrator, is Sourdi’s younger sister in May-Lee Chai’s “Saving Sourdi.” She offers insight to the story as a child, young refugee in America, and as a hopeful and extremely protective sister. My goal is to explore the importance of Nea’s perspective to “Saving Sourdi,” as well as how the viewpoints of other characters would change the story. As the one who’s “always saving Sourdi,” like the title suggests, it seems natural that Nea is the narrator.…
Sandra Cisneros is the author of a short story entitled "Mericans”. It has a young female narrator is stuck in an “old world” culture. In this particular case it is a Mexican culture. The narrator does not seem to understand the traditions, this shows a rift between the children that are Mexican but are being brought up in America and their grandmother who has migrated here from Mexico. Ciseneros uses the setting and symbolism to create the theme of individualism conflicting with cultural traditions; the individual children show confusion when it comes to showing which culture they belong to.…
In the article “Body Ritual Among the Nacirema,” Miner successfully persuades the audience that American’s fixation and obsession with the body’s appearance and well-being is absurd by using pathos to help persuade the readers to think the same way. He is able to achieve this by allowing his readers to form a view of this “tribe” before they realize mid-way through the essay that this article about people with bizarre customs and rituals are actual modern-day American’s. The author is writing this essay to the general public. He is doing this to inform his readers of a culture called the Nacirema. These people partake in rituals that seem unfamiliar to modern-day humans.…
The essay tolerance by Em foster and when Mr. Pirzada came to dine share many themes. For example, in both stories we see an example on how tolerance can help us achieve great things, but the ways it is shown in the stories are different. In the case of “When Mr. Pirzada Came to Dine” we can see how tolerance is a theme when the family of Lilia allowed Mr. Pirzada to stayed with them to the news because, in his house he didn’t have television and in the essay, “Tolerance” is shown in a different way. The way it is shown in the essay is giving us example, why love is not necessary, but to have a successful society you need tolerance. Another difference we can see in these stories is that one of them doesn’t have characters so they need to use…
Maria Chona’s life was during a transitional time for her people. When she was born, her Tohono O’odham people lived their lives in a traditional way without many outsiders. Tohono O’odham had contact and were influenced by the Spanish, but still retained many aspects of their culture. Towards the end of her life, around 1936, Chona’s people had connections to Tucson and Anglo outsiders. This was a stark contrast from when she was born.…
The author aim was to show his view towards “Capital Punishment”. This story is told from the perspective of a cook who prepares the last meal for a man on death row. The author in this poem is very sympathetic with the man on death row because he think that he is there because of his skin color. Throughout this paper we will see how the author dealt with the fact that he is a witness to these such things and how he managed to deal with them.…
In Maria Chona’s “Autobiography of a Papago Women” (1936), the author speaks in detail about the Folkways of the Papago people and their change and continuity in the face of encounters with other cultures over the centuries. Maria Chona was very closely connected to the land being that she grew up amongst the desert. Culture was a great deal to her and her family since they followed the traditions that were performed by past generations. However, throughout the years the culture became civilized. There was also acts of extreme cruelty and brutality amongst the Papago and Apache people.…
In Caribbean literature one cannot bare to miss the relationship between parent and child. It so happens that when it comes to one of these relationships, authors draw more attention to the relationships between mother and daughter. Why? Because many after reading such literary works with the subject of the Caribbean culture, one can see the repetition of the mother and daughter relationship has one of the most fundamental human interactions. Now like most relationship, the relationship between mothers and daughters are not simple but very complex.…
Analysis and interpretation of Rudyard Kipling’s short story “Lispeth” The short story “Lispeth” is about the Indian Hill-girl Lispeth, who, ever since her parents died of cholera, is a half-servant, half-companion for two Englishmen; a priest and his wife. The story deals with many issues, such as identity crisis and unrequited love, but most of all a critique of Christianity and on the Western mindset towards the natives. The point of view in this short story is a 3rd person point of view, but as a reader you do not know who the narrator is, except that it is an omniscient narrator with great sympathy and compassion for Lispeth. It could easily be Lispeth telling her story from a 3rd person point of view while being omniscient.…