St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves Essay

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    St. Lucy Girls

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    The girls of “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” and the Native Americans of the forced assimilation into the American culture were both treated poorly and disciplined harshly. The American Indian Relief Council states that, when the Indians of the forced assimilation made a mistake, they were confined and did not receive food (American Indian Relief Council) (1). The Indians were just learning, so it was unfair for the Americans to treat them so poorly. Also, in St. Lucy’s, Mirabella…

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    in St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves and Sonny’s Blues. The girls in St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves were told to abandon their wolf nature and they embarked on the difficult task of changing everything they knew about the world. Sonny in Sonny’s Blues was a Harlem raised kid with a dim future who turned to heroin and had trouble deserting it, as most heroin addicts do. These challenges stemmed from their childhood environments. The characters in St. Lucy’s Home for Girls…

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    Comparison In the nearly not-a-short-story “Girl,” Jamaica Kincaid tells of a girl growing up in Antigua and receiving a long list of rules from her mother, while in the short story “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves,” Karen Russell writes about girls who were raised by wolves until taking in and reformed to fit into human society by nuns. Both stories have significant differences, but despite them, both “Girl” and “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” share the issue of gender…

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    short story, “ST Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” by Karen Russell. In the texts, Hardy uncovers the ruin conformity can bring upon a person, whereas Russell illustrates the ongoing struggle of conformity in children to meet society’s expectations. In the poem, “ The Ruined Maid,” a young country…

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    In “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, Claudette and the other wolves progressed through five stages of transitioning to the human culture. Along the way, some of them developed human traits. Claudette in particular had many signs that she was more humanized than her fellow wolf girls. As a result, Claudette was successfully integrated into human society. Although the first stage does not offer much detail or evidence of Claudette’s integration into human society, it still shows…

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    2. St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves told the story of werewolf girls raised by wolves and their journey of education and civilization. This piece incorporated vivid imagery that transported me, the reader to a surreal supernatural world. Reading about the girls’ journey in becoming anthropomorphic evoked feelings of recognition and sympathy in regards to difficulty of adapting to a new environment, culture, and language. By the end of the story, I simultaneously felt proud of…

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    “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves,” by Karen Russell, is a short fiction story that was published in 2006. It depicts these young girls and their struggles of transitioning from two different life styles. These girls were raised by wolves in the woods and overtime they inhibit the style of living like wolves. They were unfamiliar with the human ways, until they were forced to go to a place that changes them. St. Lucy’s Home was a place for girls raised by wolves. It consisted of nuns,…

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    “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” by Karen Russell is a story about a group of girls that suffer from lycanthropic culture shock. This causes the girls to believe they are wolves because they are raised by wolves. The girls are sent to a school, St. Lucy’s Home for Girls, where nuns will teach the group of girls how to be human. They would be taught human traits, the human culture, and human habits in an attempt to eradicate any wolf culture in them. Out of the first three stages of…

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    Karen Russell’s “St Lucy’s Home for Girl Raised by Wolves” is a short story about a pack of wolf-girls going through five stages of development. Specifically the character, Claudette. As she develops a human-like identity, it appears that she starts to relate to all five stages, and loses her wolf-like identity as this happens The first stage of lycanthropic culture shock states that the girls will find everything new and exciting. During this stage, Claudette starts out with a wolf-like…

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    Betrayal: “Lusus Naturae” and “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” Betrayal is a violation of trust which creates conflict within a relationship. Margaret Atwood’s “Lusus Naturae” calls attention to a protagonist, who understands and copes with a disease which turns her into a ‘monster,’ and who forfeits her own life for the sake of her family. Similarly, in Karen Russell’s “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves,” the theme of betrayal is present when Claudette realizes her desire…

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