Breaking Women is an ethnography piece by Jill McCorkel that speaks of how prisons changes over time given the War on Drugs movement, but she just doesn’t talk about men prisons. She talks about women prisons. She also mentions how race and gender affect the encounters women have in prison. The book starts off with McCorkel talking of how prisons use to be.…
This fiction and mystery book called “The Lovely Bones” by Alice Sebold, with the protagonist Susie is a young girl living life and was a very happy person but then she is brutally murdered by the antagonist Mr. Harvey the neighbor who lived next door to the Salmon family. The setting is in her hometown living with her mom, dad, sister, and brother. They all want to find out where Susie went.…
The book winter’s Bone written by Daniel Woodrell is a multifaceted story that looks into the world of small town methamphetamine that uses and gives the reader a vision from inside the circumstances. Throughout the story of Ree Dolly who is the main character, readers learn many things concerning Woodrell’s own life which is growing up in the Ozarks. Wood ell paints an image of the condition during the eyes of someone who is really fighting to stay alive in (Egan page 5-10) that world, and who is intensely exaggerated by methamphetamine, but definitely is not a user. This tale of endurance may be a imaginary one, but the themes which is incorporated in the book recount intensely to Woodrell's knowledge, and to the very real plague of little town meth use. BOOK SUMMERY…
Sickness is, through the events of Ward’s Salvage the Bones, a recurring theme: Esch realises that she is pregnant and gets sick because of it; and Daddy loses his fingers, getting sick too. Salvage the Bones is a novel set in the mid 2000’s during the previous days before Hurricane Katrina. During Salvage the Bones, illness creates difficulties both in long term and short term that disrupt the family, but after the family overcomes these illnesses, the family becomes stronger. During the second chapter of the book, we become aware of Esch’s pregnancy, a pregnancy which continues affecting her through the book: she is almost unable to outrun the dog chasing her in chapter 4 and continuously feels nauseous.…
Judging by the covers and the synopses of the books, Jungle of Bones, The Beginning of Everything, and Gated, you wouldn’t think they would have anything in common. However, they do. The main characters in each book face and overcome very difficult conflicts that are very different at first, but then reveal that all relate to each other in one way or another. The first way these books are similar is that they all have to do with “survival”.…
“If your not afraid of the voice inside you, you will not fear the critiques outside you”(Goldberg) . In the book, "Writing Down the Bones" by Natalie Goldberg, she writes a series of stories that she has experienced throughout her life. Because she a writer, she give the student and teacher tips on writing. With these stories and tips Goldberg does a really good job of pushing the reader and motivating our ideas. These both stories taught me a lot like, self appreciation,not doubting myself , and freedom.…
Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within by Natalie Goldberg is an instructional and explanatory novel that 's main goal is to, as it states, free the writer within. Goldberg strives to have each reader achieve the level of utmost appreciation and recognition of writing that she has also. She looks at writing as a way to escape life, but also to dive deeper into it, both at the same time. Right at the beginning when talking about the purpose of the novel, she directly states, " It is also about using writing as your practice, as a way to help you penetrate your life and become sane.…
It is relevant to several stage 5-syllabus outcomes (EN5-1A, EN5-3B, EN-4B)(BOSTES, 2012, pp.134-140). However, the first impressions students will receive would be that the skull is a representation of Indigenous people being hunted by colonials. Indeed, as the story continues, the issue is not about the death of an Indigenous person but the disrespect for the land as well as values that people uphold. Farmers dug out the burial sites of Aborigines and visitors stole skeletal parts as a souvenir. Students are able to perceive…
Black women have been oversexualized throughout their existence. Since black women were taken from their homeland of African and brought to this country of America, there has been a constant oppression of black women through the stereotypes that have been created. Stereotypes with different meanings and connotations have been designed to explain and justify the behavior of black women. This ideology of oversexulization falls under the stereotype of the “Jezebel complex” which is the modern-day equivalent of a “freak” currently in today’s society. In Salvage the Bones, Esch’s character portrays characterization portray the Jezebel stereotype among black women and her “situationship” with Manny displays this phenomenon of black girls searching for intimacy through sex.…
Social Class and Trauma The film depicts the differences between social classes and their response to a traumatic event. Typically, upper class individuals feel protected within their environment, whereas, lower class individuals are more susceptible to outside influences. The Headless Woman portrays these differences quite clearly. During the opening scene children of the upper class are seen playing in and around Vero’s car as the parents stand by. In film, cars are seen as a form of protection.…
In Bram Stoker’s, Dracula, we see the New Woman first being introduced to the reader by the three women that Jonathan Harken encounters in Count Dracula’s castle. Mina and Lucy are a representation of the good, traditional Victorian women in comparison to those three women. In her article "Bram Stoker 's Dracula and Late-Victorian Advertising Tactics: Earnest Men, Virtuous Ladies, and Porn", Tanya Pikula argues that “Dracula not only functions as a ‘kind of ‘test-bed’ for competing arguments and sensibilities,’ but it reflects the ways in which its society’s ambivalent responses to consumerism and advertising were repeatedly elaborated through models of femininity and female sexuality”. I strongly disagree with because I do no think that the…
The Bone Sparrow – Analytical Piece Characters and Setting: The Bone Sparrow is a heart touching story, set in an Australian Immigration Detention Centre. A young refugee, Subhi, tells the story from his perspective but some chapters of the book, are told from third person. Subhi lives with his older sister, Queeny, and his mother who he refers to as ‘maa’. Subhi was born within the camp, and therefore has never experienced the ‘real’ world, beyond the fence.…
The roles of motherhood and fatherhood have been distinctly separated and distributed amongst the female and male respectively for as long as anyone can remember. Now it is clear that these roles and relationships don’t actually have to be gendered. After reading both Salvage the Bones and The Motel Life, I think one can safely say that the role of motherhood is not gendered. However, the role of fatherhood is.…
Nicole Ocasio Dr. Johnson- Lewis Humanities 1020 764 Words Good Bones by Maggie Smith The poem Good Bones by Maggie Smith was published in an online literary journal in June 2016 and grabbed the world's attention. Good Bones was birthed from the worries that dwelled within her as a mother. It deals with the innocence of childhood against the harsh realities of the outside world. How or exactly when should the conversation of what really lies in the outside world, beyond our comfort zone, begin with our children. Maggie Smith is a poet that has published three full books of poetry: Good Bones (Tupelo Press, 2017);…
In What Ways Did Nawal El Sadaawi Convey Her Ideas for Social Change to Females in Woman at Point Zero? Nawal El Sadaawi writes in Woman at Point Zero a fictional story regarding Firdaus, a female prostitute on trial for killing a man. Firdaus reluctantly shares her life story with a woman psychiatrist who documents her change in perspective on female oppression for the reader. The cynical plot conveys the unfair life of Firdaus and her attempt at overcoming the unjust social environment that surrounds her. El Sadaawi shows how through the presence of minor characters Firdaus was consistently let down by both the men and women in her society and forced to take matters into her own hands – becoming a heroic martyr for overcoming female oppression.…