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    society a common strategy to gain authority and power is to dehumanize, denigrate and to make a person or group feel less cofident. The pronouns ”girl”, ”woman”, ”female” etc are frequently used and referred to in a condescending way, for example to claim that someone is a bad runner: ”you run like a girl” or a bad driver ”you drive like a woman”. The use of female pronouns to critize someone makes these words diminishing, marginalizing and in some occasions offensive. Languages are one of the…

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    Orwell And Anzaldúa

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    What function does language have? What role does it play? Can language reflect an individual or even a culture? Can slight changes in diction completely change the meaning? Through history, language has always been the central focus of communication; however, it also entails a factor of influence in the daily lives of not just individuals, but also societies, cultures and communities. In their essays, both, George Orwell and Gloria Anzaldúa, explore language and how it is changing and defining…

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    “violates” her greatest duty by “urging” this crime and, thus, is at the center of its execution (Klein 168). Feeling the slightest inklings of regret, she begins by preemptively separating herself from the average person by using the demonstrative pronoun, “that.” Attempting to fortify this separation, the Lady tries to contrast the effect of alcohol on others, “drunk,” with alcohol’s effect on her, “bold”; however, these two effects are nearly one and the same. This weak contrast cannot…

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    service talked about the concept of Tikkun Olam. The speaker asked us all to pray about how we would fulfill our own visions of this concept. Most notably, in the prayer book there were sections where portions of the prayer were replaced with different pronouns for god besides “he”. In addition there was even a section for nonbelievers that I read after the service. The section started out with a quote from Albert Einstein and recited a prayer about science and how everything is…

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    Susan B Anthony's Speech

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    when she quotes the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, saying that women already have the right to vote since it states it in there. Of course Anthony’s strongest counter-argument is when she points out that there are only masculine pronouns used thus women don’t have to obey any laws or be…

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    suffering from hypothermia. On the other hand, Heaney’s poem is an illustration of uniform identity in the adversity of “fear”, characterised with the destruction a powerful storm causes to an island. “Exposure” makes use of first person plural pronouns- “us” “our” “we”-…

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    Benjamin Banneker in his letter to Thomas Jefferson, argues that slavery is a great injustice. Banneker supports his argument by highlighting the hypocrisy of the United States and its official documents. The author writes in a respectful, yet critical tone for Thomas Jefferson. The author’s purpose is to convince Jefferson that his views are unjust and inequitable so that slaves can receive the rights and the equality they deserve. In order for Jefferson to convince him of his narrow minded and…

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    In her book entitled "Whistling Vivaldi", Claude M Steele formulates a concept called identity contingencies. In his book, he defines that identity contingency is the situation where you are affected by your identity. He says that "This book is about what my colleagues and I call identity contingencies- the things you have to deal with in a situation because you have a given social identity, because you are old, young, gay, a white male, a women, black, Latino, politically conservative or…

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    Valerie Dubinsky 6 March 2017 English E Take-Home Macbeth Practice Explication In Act I Scene 7, Macbeth is pondering whether he should commit the murder of King Duncan. Macbeth is trying to understand the reasons for assassinating the king. Through the use of language, metaphors, and allusions, Macbeth shows his ambivalence his hesitations about committing the crime. The passage suggests that Macbeth is a God fearing man and he worries that by completing the murderous act, he would forever…

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    reader into the story by using very specific pronouns throughout the poems. For example, in the first lines of the poems, she starts using pronouns such as: “I”, “Ourselves”, and “He”. And later on uses the pronoun “we” in three out of the four lines in the third stanza. As Harold Bloom, editor of “Bloom’s Major Poets ‘Emily Dickinson’ ” points out, “When Dickinson declares her ‘I’, these instants become our own” (Bloom 38). By Dickinson using such pronoun, makes us, the reader be more engaged…

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