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Amy Foster Diversity

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The world is full of adversity, yet people tend to adhere to what is ordinary. Joseph Conrad was born in 1857 and had a unique childhood. Conrad was not always in one place growing up, yet he was almost always on the move. Having attempted suicide, Conrad was aware of the struggles and hardships that people endure at some point in their lives. Therefore, he was no tan author of fairy tales or happily ever afters; Conrad wrote in a way that pointed out the things that other authors veneered. In the short story, “Amy Foster”, Conrad uses the main characters, Amy and Yanko, to portray conformity in the England era. Amy and Yanko showed that one does not have to conform to society. These two characters stayed loyal, true to themselves, and they expressed diversity in a town where differences were frowned upon. The short story, “Amy Foster”, revealed what it is like to feel excluded and isolated, regardless of one’s social status. Having grown up in Poland but constantly moving, Conrad experienced this feeling of loneliness first hand (“Joseph Conrad” Biography.com).When someone is not accepted due to differences, it is almost easy for …show more content…

Even though this was not a physical act in which she could show she cared for him, it was understood. Yanko was no longer lost at sea, but his purpose was lost. When she began to open up to him, “...Amy Foster appeared to his eyes with the aureole of an angel of light”, and he found his purpose (Conrad 18).Amy was genuine with Yanko and that is something he had not seen since he started living in the village. Amy was not entitled to talk with or accept Yanko, in fact she was looked down upon for doing so. Yanko thrived off of her kindness.Instead of closing herself off and shutting out Yanko, Amy let him in. Conrad wrote this in hopes of getting the reader to reflect on his or her own life and the way in which it is easy to comply with

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