At one point in “Pilgrims” Orringer explains how the site of watching her mother get a chemotherapy treatment effects Ella, “She remembered it like a filmstrip from school, a series of connected images she wished she didn’t have to watch: her mother with an IV needle in her arm,… her mother shaking so hard she had to be tied down” (Orringer 489). In these words, Orringer has shown chemotherapy treatment through the eyes of a confused and scared child. We are taken to a place where everything has been magnified, and the smallest things cause an impact on the emotional well-being of the child. This is one reason it is important for families to get guidance from the beginning of the illness, so they can better understand what steps will help the…
Being poor is just as hard on children of the family. Gordon Parks uses pathos in his photography making the audience feel pity, guilt, and sorrow. In this picture I felt really sad because of the conditions that these two young boys were in, there clothes looks very old and raggedy. The lighting in the background of the picture is dark but majority of the light is on both Flavios and Zacarias face and body, they’re the central focus of the picture. The photo represents Flavio as a very hard working brother or parent to his younger brother Zacarias.…
Everyone has problems that they try to hide deep down, but if one does not face their troubles, they will just keep coming back. In the novel Tangerine, written by Edward Bloor, the residents of Tangerine County, Florida spend much time and effort hiding their troubles, while simultaneously being oblivious to them. At the beginning of the novel, Paul imagines his past troubles in Texas as a giant zombie, following him to Florida. Fumigated houses also show the nature of how people respond to issues.…
In Harriet Jacob’s Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, the garret atop her grandmother’s house, in which Linda chooses to spend seven years of her life, symbolizes both the evils of slavery and the blessings of freedom. The garret, otherwise known as the loophole of retreat, measuring 9 feet long, 7 feet wide, and 3 feet sloping, fails to afford Linda with material comfort, consequently, deteriorating her physical and mental health. Lacking ventilation and light, the loophole’s narrow restraint alludes to the calamity of slavery, just as the Flints physically incarcerate Linda to domestic servitude prior to her escape. The absence of light represents the Flint’s depriving Linda, and all slaves, access to their children and self-awareness. However, through the act of choosing her retreat through a self-sought sanctuary, Linda equips herself with the tools to claim her agency by way of…
I chose to analyze the The Family - 1941 portray for this essay because I like the usage of the colors on this work. I feel confident analyzing colors in artworks because I learned about the emotions transmitted through colors in various art classes that I took in High School and College. Most art professors like to stress the importance of color in a work of art. They say that the understanding of the usage of the colors in a piece is important when criticizing an artwork. Colors are very important in an art work because it can give away a lot of information about the emotional state of the work.…
In the three novels, shelter plays a role in defining the main characters in the novel. The way characters act towards shelter, the condition of the shelter, and the actions that happen inside the shelter give it a symbolic meaning that relates to the main character’s personality and social life. In the novel, “Boys in the Boat”, shelter symbolizes the hard work ahead of Joe and the status of his family relationship. Joe, the main character, often lives in unfinished or very small structures which represent his current state. Just as it takes lots of effort to make a small run-down shelter into a comfortable home, Joe would have to put in lots of effort to get a better life.…
Writers often find inspiration for their literature through their imagination, people they meet, or past experiences. Ernest Hemingway’s past experiences encouraged an abounding works of short stories, non-fiction, and novels. Considering him being a war veteran of World War I, his short story Soldier’s Home is similar to his struggle through reconnecting with his home town. Even though the main character is Krebs, there are several indications that he is a reflection of Hemingway’s 20 year old self. There is evidence as to this assumption between Krebs and Hemingway: actions, thoughts, and emotions.…
Main Events - Parvanna was burrying her father when a man saw her. The man kept Parvanna to live with him and his family. Since she had no where to go she stayed with them. One night one of the man's daughter told her to escape because her dad and is friends were planning to sell her to the Talibans. She escaped from the shelter of the man and started her journey which is to search for her family.…
Steinbeck presents the bunk house as an unhealthy, forgotten prison. ' ...there were small square windows...a solid door with a wooden latch... there was a nailed apple box... it made two shelves for the personal belongings.' The bunk house is a building where all the migrant workers – who work on the ranch- stays.…
“A women is unstoppable after she realizes she deserves better.” – Anonymous. In the drama, “Fences” the relationship between husband and wife is one to inspect. Rose and Troy are a couple that do not always see eye to eye, yet Rose always looks for the best in him. Even toward the end, although Rose is wants nothing to do with Troy she still takes in his new daughter.…
Japanese American Internment Camps The United States throughout history had many faults in their actions and mindset against minorities. During the era of World War II, there was much distrust and tension between the counties of the Axis Powers. Because of the conflict between the countries, many people of German, Italian and Japanese heritage were treated poorly and disrespectfully at the time.…
The texts The End of Remembering by Joshua Foer and “The Ordinary Devoted Mother” by Alison Bechdel, while are stylistically very different, addresses the same themes of the memory and one’s self-identity. Foer, while not as cold or detached as a scientific paper, uses a more formal and traditional tone when compared to Bechdel who approaches these themes through the lens of a graphic novel. The result of this gives two very distinct perspective on how memories affect one’s self identity. Foer’s theoretical framework of how memory functions and Bechdel’s more anecdotal approach of the effects of her personal memories on her life, provides two very distinctive perspectives on how the prioritization of memories are connected with the creation…
The narrator and her sister, Vanessa appear to be good children who listen to their parents commands, and we can see that from “Mum hisses, “Try and look hungry kids.” I suck in my belly as far as possible,..., Vanessa sinks her head to her chest and shrinks with not-wanting-to-be-here. ”(5-9) Both the narrator and her sister do not question their parents and do as needed. We can also determine that the father is the man of the family, meaning, he is the leader of the family and both the children and the mother follow him. “If Dad starts tearing tickets and his face becomes folded and deep, we feel ourselves become quiet and wishing-we-weren’t-here.…
She shares the polite manner of young Heinrich’s diaries reminds her of her life at her grandmother’s house. At the tender age of six Susan moved in with her mother’s mother after her parents decide to get a divorce. Susan and her family would often take photographs together and they were all posed, and directed to smile. While Susan was looking back at the photograph that was taken close to her parents’ divorce she now saw the look in her mother’s eyes when she was drunk and the face of a broken man, her father. She states that she must have felt obliged to see only what her grandmother wanted her to see.…
Have you ever wondered what it would be like losing both of your parents, and have the one important thing in your life go missing? Well, this horrible scenario happened to Mickey Bolitar in the book Shelter, by Harlan Coben. In this book Mickey has moved from town to town all his life, but his parents have decided to settle in a small town in New Jersey, to finish out high school. At the activity for new students Mickey meets a girl named Ashley and soon gains lots of feelings for her and cares about her to a great extent, but soon after Mickeys dad had an awful fate in a car accident and his mom was taken to rehab, Ashley disappears. Mickey acquired a couple new amazing and permanent friends on their adventure, as they put many clues together,…