Olemaun In Stranger At Home

Improved Essays
“My mother suggested I make friends, but I didn’t fit in and had no idea where to begin.” Throughout the nerve-wrecking, book called Stranger at Home by Christy Jordan-Fenton, I learned about a young Inuitalkivalk girl name Olemaun, that has finally returned home from the outsiders’ school. Unfortunately, when Olemaun comes back home, her family had moved to a new town. Where Olemaun has a struggle for a while, due to the fact she is an “outsider”. Also forgetting how speak her own mother language and also disliking the food. In commencement, when Olemaun had returned home, she has been ignored from her sisters, even her best friend didn’t talk to her, since Agnes’s mom doesn’t want her to speak English. Sadly, Olemaun had also been laughed

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    The Ethics of an Upbringing Guiding Question What are the ethics of writing about a place? What qualifies someone to tell a story? Overview In Velma…

    • 365 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Acceptance in a community is crucial for a healthy, fulfilling life. In Dancer and Shinny Game that Melted the Ice, an examination of the protagonists; Clarissa and “the one who went away”, and the mood in the stories effectively set the tone for the importance of belonging. The authors use of symbols, mood and character traits demonstrate this importance of belonging in a family, whether it be biological or not. Clarissa, a young foster girl from an Assiniboine tribe came to live with a new family. She experiences the typical traits of being a child in a new place.…

    • 1061 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Chapter One Zaphkiel sat on the green grass that was beginning to turn yellow, contently watching the pink and orange sky. The trees around him stood still, but the air was stiller as if the whole world were frozen in time. As the sun sank behind the horizon, a cold wind broke the stillness. Red and orange leaves fluttered to life in the gust of wind. Some of them broke free from their branches to dance in the breeze.…

    • 1348 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Most children require a decent and nurturing role model, otherwise they cannot see the optimistic qualities of life nor form lasting relationships with anyone. In Monique Truong’s Bitter in the Mouth, Harper Evelyn Birch or Great-Uncle “Baby Harper” befittingly serves this niche as the role model for the protagonist, Linda Hammerick. Throughout the text, there is evidence of their sincere bond such as Linda confiding and finding solace in him which is significant because comparatively speaking, it is arguably the only healthy relationship Linda has. As a result of this bond, his involvement in the story is to not only serve as a confidant to Linda, but rather a much more essential purpose; he highlights the positive aspects of the three reoccurring…

    • 1099 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Have you ever had the feeling or thought that nobody understands you, you cannot talk to anyone or everything that happens is your fault? What would you do if you found yourself taking more care of your mother more than she is taking care of you? The author, Cea Sunrise Person, struggles with her life and accepting whom she. In the memoir North of Normal, Person depicts the hardships in life she experienced as a young child all the way until she left to be on her own at age thirteen. Between her mother’s constant heartbreaks, smoking pot and having a child at age thirteen herself, Person never had the guidance and support she needed at a young age.…

    • 525 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    As a pre-service teacher, while watching both of Alanis Obomsawin's documentaries, "Richard Cardinal: Cry from the Diary of a Métis Child" and "Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance," I imagined how I would integrate these visual texts into my own future classrooms. First, I considered the pedagogical implementations necessary to teach such grave and profound content. Second, I contemplated the documentaries as visual texts with structure and form, both elements of the films (the content and the structure) bearing equal relevance. I then questioned, how I would use these texts, and other like them, to not only teach my students about the subject matter but also, to teach students about structure, form, and rhetorical choices. Thus, while viewing…

    • 622 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    We’re all different in one way or another. On the surface level, being different only means appearance or intelligence wise. But what if all letters and words had a color and texture? Mia Winchell, 13 years old, lives with synesthesia in a book titled A Mango-Shaped Space. Synesthesia is the crossing of two or more senses, and there are many different versions of it.…

    • 937 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    It gave her uncomfortable feelings and forced her to blush if her mother was speaking. Only when she got older she realized her own mistake – judging by the way the person talks, instead of the way he or she thinks. It made Amy Tan perceive that her own “perfect English”, which she used to implement in her early writing, does not stand a chance and that it is boring and useless. She decided to write in the simple, the “most full” language, so people like her mother would understand it. Her mother and her “broken English” created the writer with a unique style of presentation.…

    • 808 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    There is a thin line between normal and abnormal. Normality is completely relative to the society in which one exists. Each culture has its own definition of average and each person is expected to live up to that definition. When someone does not meet that expectation, they are often ostracized from the group and labeled an outcast, or even a monster. Although the “monster” itself faces many struggles throughout life, the family of the “monster” is often left conflicted between fitting in with society and supporting their loved one.…

    • 1748 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Overcoming challenges in life requires one’s mental strength and courage. Though challenges are demanding, challenges can also be very rewarding and valuable. Even the most strenuous challenges prove to be beneficial. This applies to Himani Bannerji’s story “The Other Family” in which a ethnic family immigrates to Canada. The mother is often questioning her decision to immigrate her daughter to Canada and ponders if it caused more harm than help to immigrate.…

    • 794 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Introduction: Oh no how has uncle got me into this! In this essay i'm going to be talking about a character from the novel Lost In The Barrens, he goes by the name of Jamie. He was forced to live with his uncle in the Cree camp in Northern Canada as he could not afford to keep him in boarding school in Toronto. Jamie had no survival skills what so ever and had no idea how he was going to survive.…

    • 820 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the words of James Baldwin, “An identity would seem to be arrived at by the way in which a person faces and uses his experience”. What Baldwin is discussing is the idea of adversity being the core of which identity develops. Struggle shapes individuals. Without hardship, every individual would be completely synonymous with each other. Each individual develops their identity through adversity in unique ways.…

    • 920 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Thus, she creates a new persona and written self and soon, “this impersonal self, this cultural negative capability, becomes the truest thing about [her]” (121). When she writes about her new experiences in English, she is creating a new Eva who is completely different from the old Ewa all because the language is different. There are no longer “sentimental effusions of rejected love, eruptions of familial anger, or consoling broodings about death” in her writing because “English is not the language of such emotions” (121). Hoffman has lost the ability to express herself in the way she is familiar with in Polish and the emotions that she wants to write cannot be fully expressed in…

    • 1234 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Grounded by Language In Mother Tongue, Amy Tan begins her short story by giving the audience prior knowledge that Tan is not a scholar of English and she is not able to give much more than her past knowledge on the English language. She then proceeds to give the readers an idea of how much she is fascinated by language itself and gives it a grading scale from complex english to simple English. Tan presents her short story by giving the readers a recent experience that made her rethink the past, present, and future.…

    • 1004 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This story is a heartfelt story, much like Angelou’s “Graduation” Amy gives the reader an emotional input of an event in her life that places the reader in the mindset of Amy as a child. Amy begins the story by describing her love for language, “I am a writer. And by that definition, I am someone who has always loved language.” Amy very deeply expresses her love for language which sets the tone as well as the mood of the story. Tan begins to describe the “different Englishes” she uses.…

    • 1578 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays