Nancy Mairs Essay

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    the lessons and values they got from their life experiences to write a compelling essay. In both Nancy Mairs’s “On Being a Cripple” and David Sedaris’s “A Plague of Tics,” the authors had written essays that related to their disabilities and ways they coped with it. These two essay might be similar in more ways than one, but the overall message that they give to readers are completely different. Mairs uses her experience and disability to convey a specific message that is inspirational to her…

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    Identity In Cold Blood

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    besides, “differently abled.” Mairs thinks that words describe no one because "Society is no readier to accept crippledness than to accept death, war, sweat, or wrinkles" (Mairs 245). She says she fears "...that people are kind to me only because I 'm a cripple" (Mairs 250). She does not like that society is obsessed with a physical image and ordinariness. She quotes that, “In our society, anyone who deviates from the norm had better find some way to compensate" (Mairs 251). This creates the…

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    Little Things make big difference How do little things can make a big difference? There are three articles, The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell, Disability by Nancy Mairs and The Way We Lie by Stephanie Ericsson and they prove that little things can make a big different. Those articles have different story to told, but all of them has situation that they change into a bigger problem. In the story Tipping Point, Gladwell talk about a man name David Gunn, who is a new subway director. He want…

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    essay “Mairs argues that the invisibility of physical disability in the media can cause people with disabilities to feel unattractive or inappropriate” (54). The media is only pushing out the negative stereotypes, therefore the society only has offensive opinions on the disabled. The media doesn’t want to put the incapacitated in the media because they don’t want the viewers to think the products are just for the disabled and that the able bodied can’t buy the product. For example, ’Mairs asked…

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    Ntozake Shange Language

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    Shange’s use of language is also important to examine in the context of writing against the grain. The English language has been used to oppress black women for centuries. The stereotypes we see regarding black women in the spoken and written word, and the power that language has in shaping the way we think and act are impossible to ignore. Shange, in her interview with Luster, discusses the idea of “[l]anguage as a liberator” in conjunction with how women are oppressed through language, stating…

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    as noted Mairs made a remark demonstrating one of the ways a person can reclaim a negative word to be used in an empowering. yes, she did this but she also brought about an important point being that “Society is no readier to accept crippledness than to accept death, war, sex, sweat, or wrinkles” (260). the point Mairs is trying to make is basically reminding and letting people know that even if they personally are…

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    All throughout my life it has been assumed, that since I am a girl, I would have “girly” handwriting. One of my friends, would comment on it every chance could to tell me how unfeminine it was and compared it to hers, “Mines swirly, pretty, and neat; Like a girl’s handwriting should be.” This friend has not been the only one to complain about my ungirly handwriting. I have heard this from my parents, other peers and friends, and teachers. One specific time, I was asked by a teacher to write on…

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    should still be in my life today, but things will come and go and that has made me who I am today. The loss I experienced was my aunt not by death, but by actions and choices. The poems that best connected and related with my loss were “Naming” by Nancy Mairs and “Raised Voices” by Jack Brannon from What Have You Lost? The poems both hold similar qualities to my loss, and they easily relate. My loss happened about two months ago with my dad’s sister. When I was younger, my aunt and I were…

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    Across many essays that have been written, it is common to see Bitzer's Criteria for setting up rhetorical situation. This allows for the context of a rhetorical event, that consists of an issue, an audience, and a set of constraints, to be seen and analysed by the audience. First, Within James Baldwin's “Notes of a Native Son”, the audience can find all of the relevant characteristics described by Bitzer in his six characteristics of rhetorical situation. For the first characteristic of…

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    Bedford Reader Summary

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    In summary, the first section of the Bedford Reader assists students in writing, and reading in ways that are different from what we know, yet are easy to understand. Also, we learn how to truly analyze an essay. The second section covers writing, and its importance in daily communication. Overall, an essay should keep the audience interested to understand your work. An essay and should be drafted to be efficiently revised to correct anything that does not fit well. Lastly, in writing, we should…

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