Christina Symanski of Freehold, N.J. was a young art teacher who had a full, vivacious life ahead of her. She was contemplating marriage and family with her boyfriend of 6 months. Then, in 2005, her life came to a screeching halt in an accident. She found her quality of life suddenly deteriorated significantly when she broke her neck from diving into a shallow pool. As a direct consequence of the accident, Ms. Symanski suffered from quadriplegia, a form of paralysis that results in the loss of use of all four limbs and torso.…
All around the world are different types of people, each being unique in their own ways. Since everyone is vastly different, they’re all sure to have differing opinions, beliefs, and customs. Taking away a person’s rights just because they’re not the same doesn’t make it acceptable. The memoir Night follows the life Sighet Jew, Eliezer and his father. Going from concentration camp to concentration camp, Elie learns about himself and discovers what religion truly is.…
Night Night by Ellie Wiesel starts off in a small town in Hungary it was the spring of 1944 the rise of the nazi army was on the horizon every person in the town was scared not a single soul was living yet everybody seemed to be alive ….. At the beginning of the text we are introduced to Ellie and his family we find out he has a mother a father and a younger sister we find out that the Wiesel family is going to be moved to the camp Birkenau because of the fact that the person warning people to leave was a bit too late in warning the family so father does the next best thing he hides all the family's valuables and stores them away so that the german army doesn't repossess them and take them away. When ellie arrives to Birkenau he is separated from his mom and sister…
The book “American Jezebel” was written in 2004 by Eve LaPlante, who is from Massachusetts and has written various other books about powerful and influential women in history. The thing that makes this book unique is that Anne Hutchinson is actually an ancestor of LaPlante which allows her to have a different point of view on the situation and she is able to write the book in a different way and explain it differently than another author would. Anne Hutchinson was a woman of change who was very open minded and saw things differently than other woman in her time did which is what makes her so interesting. (LaPlante 1) Anne Hutchinson was born in Lincolnshire England on July17, 1591, she was a midwife with sixteen kids and in her late 40’s who…
Anne Bradstreet was not only of the first of female poets of England, but was also one of the first American residential poets of the New World. This being considered, she was a highly influential woman. With her writing she brought light to subjects she thought were worth writing about. Those subjects included: the role of women, her faith, and theological and scientific trends of the European world. INSERT QUOTE…
Conflicts are faced every single day, but how you approach them can make an enormous difference. According to the law of attraction, if you adopt a positive attitude, good things happen to you, whereas a negative attitude always attracts negative. Having a positive attitude let’s both sides express their opinions, dismisses the unpleasant ideas in one’s mind, and surprisingly can directly affect your life! According to a study done by Dutch students, people having a positive outlook had a seventy-seven percent lower risk of heart disease than pessimists. Also, in StudySync when Anne Frank and Louise engaged their conflicts with a positive attitude, they felt that they had not lost everything and still had hope.…
Elie Wiesel Elie Wiesel writes about the horrors of the concentration camps during WWII that claimed the lives of his mother, father, and his younger sister; in the trilogy Night. Elie Wiesel struggles with his faith in God, and his faith in humanity, as his world crumbles around him, all the while just trying to survive. Studying his writings you can see Elie Wiesel’s opinions of God and Humanity, come out through the plot as he retells his experiences so that the world can see what happened under the cover of Night. Elie Wiesel has been through many things that have influenced his writings, but being a survivor of the Holocaust has had the greatest influence, because he lost many things to it, but also gained in sight over humanity.…
Night Final Essay In the memoir Night, Elie Wiesel uses the motif of faith to demonstrate the idea that when humans are constantly put through unbearable pain and suffering, it is difficult to maintain faith, but one must believe in their own ability to save himself. Wiesel describes his experiences at multiple concentration camps where he survived the Holocaust during World War II. Throughout his time in concentration, his identity changes immensely. Before concentration, Wiesel’s religion consumes him, but when the Hungarian police come to take him away, they pull him from his prayers, unknowingly tearing away at his faith in God.…
For the duration of the winter months, people tend to develop habits specific the season. They make attempts to hide themselves under their thick covers in the icy mornings to avoid having to leave them behind. They put on a few, or perhaps more than a few, pounds to insulate their cold bones. Bitter or melancholy moods set in to reflect the weather. In Margaret Atwood’s poem, “February”, she makes use of similes and metaphors to compare humans to animals in order to emphasize her gloomy, apathetic tone in her discussion of human survival during the winter months.…
After viewing the two links, “Sophie Scholl – The Final Days” Part 1 and 2, several similarities were found between them, and the article “Cognitive Dissonance” by Saul McLeod. The links consisted of two films about a woman named “Sophie.” The films were set in Nazi Germany during World War II. The main plot involved Sophie, and her brother, making political leaflets and distributing them throughout a university campus. Writing and distributing the leaflets were considered a crime, because they contained political messages that attempted to persuade its readers that Hitler was ruining Germany.…
Growing up in two different time periods, you might see things differently then someone who grew up in a different time period as you. Violence, drugs, laws, people, and crimes change as the year’s progress. When it comes to my parents thoughts on how our neighborhood is, compared to what it use to be, is completely different from mine. My parents were growing up around the 1980’s in, and New York City experienced 1,814, homicides during the year of 1980. This is three times what we are experiencing today.…
It is hard to believe that humanity is capable of dehumanizing men, women, and children for their race. When faced with such cruelty individuals are compelled to loose their desire and ambition to move on and start to question their faith in humanity and in God for letting such terrible events from occurring. In “Night” by Ellie Wiesel, the author portrays when an individual is faced with extreme hardship, our faith inevitably starts to dwindle and vanish. Through Ellie’s struggle for survival during the Holocaust, allows the author to demonstrate that having very little hope can prevail any obstacle.…
How far would you go in order to survive? In times of desperation and need people will do things that can be looked at as unacceptable by society in order to survive. In the book Behind the Beautiful Forevers Katherine Boo explores the life of the people in Annawadi and shows us the very defined line between the rich and the poor in this community in India. Annawadi is a “Slum” in India made up of lower class people who live in shacks that sell trash as their main source of income. Boo shows us how this line of work does not generate enough money for the people of Annawadi to be able to survive.…
Girl, Interrupted is a memoir written by Susanna Kaysen in 1993. In her memoir, Kaysen recalls her time spent at a psychiatric hospital after being diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. Her story is told through a collection of nonlinear vignettes as she chronicles her two years spent at psychiatric hospitall and her life after her time there. Kaysen recalls that in April of 1967, as an eighteen-year-old, she was admitted to McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts after attempting suicide by overdosing on fifty aspirin pills. Kaysen recounts her suicide attempt by saying:…