Barbara Branden

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    Page 11 of 12 - About 111 Essays
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    Hunt Like a Girl Living in everyday society there are certain things that are expected of you, they’re not written down as any law but everyone knows them and almost everyone abides by them. In Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible the Price family has to exchange their old morals that they were raised apon for some completely different. The Prices were completely unprepared for the life ahead of them; they thought that would arrive the Congo and start ¨calling the shots¨ (22) but that…

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    Steadily Fading Most people think that being in college and living far from their family is a relief. Lisa Parker’s “Snapping Beans” tells how a young lady’s college experience was different. It wasn’t a relief from home. The “hickory leaf still summer green” blown off the tree symbolizes the young lady because she left her comfort place when she left for college in the North. She blew away from her family, as the leaf blew away from the tree. Smoldering inside, wishing she could answer her…

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    While writing my book review of Nickel and Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich, I discovered that there are a few occasions where I can relate to what the author is trying to portray. A person working for minimum wage can also relate to this, because it’s about the people working low-wage jobs in America. I learned a lot while writing this paper. I learned about how we don’t pay attention to the people working minimum wage and how they try to survive with making that sort of wage. I mostly learned how…

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    Barbara Ehrenreich, in her book Nickel and Dimed, brings attention to and informs readers of the issues she faced throughout her experiment regarding nutrition and health - an often overlooked byproduct of poverty. Ehrenreich often speaks of dietary and nutritional matters throughout Nickel and Dimed because that issue becomes a byproduct of working low wage jobs which she experiences directly. For example, in Florida, Ehrenreich mentions how her daily lunch consists of the same, small sandwich…

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    Although Barbara Ehrenreich does not directly state her purpose, she wrote the excerpt “Serving in Florida” to share an experience she had and explain how it is relevant to her readers. The author writes to raise awareness about the economic issues that many American families face as part of the “working poor” socioeconomic class. This article was intended for an audience of educated, financially stable readers with the time and money to buy and read books. Ehrenreich’s story is about how she…

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    Rec-N-Crew Case Study

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    As a pillar in the community, the Rec-N-Crew has facilitated and generated charitable funds to the youth and businesses of Blythe. Although working under the umbrella of The Joe Wine Blythe Recreation Center, the foundation continues to give back and nurture the Blythe and Palo Verde Valley community. History: In existence since the mid to late 1950s, The Blythe Recreation Foundation was formed, which would later encompass the Rec-N-Crew, a non-profit organization, which was formed to purchase…

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    Poverty effects thousands of Americans everyday, no matter the persons race, gender or age. In the book Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich, writes about her "experiment" on low paying jobs and blue-collar Americans. Ehrenreich reported on life at minimum wage by settling into three areas of the country. At each place she worked a month, working as a restaurant server, Wal-Mart employee, and as a maid. Ehrenreich learned quickly how difficult it was to live off of a low wage paying job. The…

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    Set in the Congo for the majority of the novel, The Poisonwood Bible uses this plot point to alter its various characters through their personalities and interactions with one another. By continually experiencing treacherous and stressful situations, Leah’s ideals changed and her true values came to light. With the shifting of said beliefs, she was eventually pushed to sacrifice the tradition embedded within her morals and a significant relationship that she once held dear. Over the course of…

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    Culture, it’s what define a nation. It also plays a key role in shaping the reactions and the events that play out through the story of The Poisonwood Bible. It can be evidently seen in characters such as Nathan Price. Nathan is witnessing the congo after years of turmoil caused by king leopold and his cronies. “For Europeans, Africa remained the supplier of valuable raw materials—human bodies and elephant tusks. But otherwise they saw the continent as faceless, blank, empty a place on the map…

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    In Batwoman Elegy, by Greg Rucka and J.H. Williams, Kate Kane is aware that there is a set of rules she has to follow in taking up the bat moniker, however, she also uses her military experience, paternal mentor, and cunning to alter the rules to her advantage. Batwoman is, in essence, a part of the bat family and therefore must fit into the Bat-mythology. Kate Kane adheres to many aspects of Batman's code, she does not kill, seeks for the triumph of good over evil, and will go to nearly any end…

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