Karen Russell Essay

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    The topic of emotional labour was largely unexplored when Arlie R. Hochschild introduced the term in The Managed Heart, published in 1983. Her book is probably the most quoted work with regards to service work and emotional labour. Since then her work has been used widely in fields from psychology, organizational behaviour, law, nursing, business and public administration to the social sciences in general and sociology in particular. This introduction is to briefly review Hochschild’s ideas.…

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    short story, “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves,” Karen Russell, the author, shows the unity of the wolf-raised girls as they were so close together, until their unity later disintegrated as each character distinguished themselves as separate entities instead of one character. Near the end, these girls reunite towards a new culture: our culture. This all happens throughout the three stages of the assimilation process, in which Karen subtly presents this essential information by showing…

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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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    In Karen Russell’s short story “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” she uses the epigraph, which is based off a book named “The Jesuit Handbook on Lycanthropic Culture Shock”, to show the reader what the wolf-Girls should be thinking or acting like during that stage. An epigraph is a quotation at the beginning of a text or a section of a text suggesting the text’s theme or central idea. In Stage One Karen Russell shows this by devolving the majority of the characters in this stage.…

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    The short story, “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, by Karen Russell, is an allegory about the pressures children face as they grow up, and what they lose as a result. First and foremost, one of the most important reasons that this short story is an allegory about the pressures children face as they grow up, and what they lose, as a result, is when the pack starts to become jealous of one another. The sisters were correcting Mirabella for her bad behavior when Sister Maria de…

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    Russell Brand Addiction

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    Russell Brand’s insightful documentary highlighted the effects of addiction has on drug users and argued for the funding of abstinence-based treatments, rather than methadone-based treatments or sending addicts to prison, in order to confront the issue of addiction. Drug addiction has been a controversial subject in Britain since some people, like Peter Hitchins from the Google Debate, view addiction as a result of people’s own actions and is something people need to take responsibility on their…

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    Play the Even Tenor In “St Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves,” Karen Russell depicts a group of girls, Claudette, Jeanette, and Mirabella, who become sheltered in a rehabilitation home for girls raised by wolves. Once there, they struggle to assimilate themselves according to the expectations and demands of a different culture or society. Through point-of-view and conflict, Russell divulges the roles that are imposed on individuals when transitioning to a new culture; ultimately revealing…

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    Trying to adapt to a new culture can be troubling, stressful, and a lot of other things. St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves by Karen Russell is a story about a pack of girls that are sent to St. Lucy’s to rehabilitate and to eradicate their wolf identity. Claudette is the main character of the story and the story and the narrator. The story talks about how Claudette, along with other members of the pack, develops their human characteristics. The story also talks about how Claudette’s…

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    that may not be right to them, but do it anyways, because they want to fit in. But this burden of conformity is not only present in the real world, it can be found in literature as well. The story "St. Lucy’s Home For Girls Raised by Wolves" by Karen Russell depicts that in order to conform to society, individuals abandon their selflessness and compassion and become selfish and apathetic. In “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls raised by wolves”, the main purpose, is that society attempts to conform an…

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    of its negative nature, people tend to prevent shame to themselves and others at all costs. However, through these efforts to avoid shame, people are often pushed outside of their comfort zones and accomplish what seem to be unattainable goals. Karen Russell establishes the theme of “Shame is a motivating force” throughout her story “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves” through the wolf-girls’ eagerness to succeed in becoming civilized despite their desire to return home and maintain…

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