The conflict of English learners being in mainstream or private classes has been raging for decades. Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai is a work of historical fiction. First Ha, her three brothers, and her mother were forced to leave their home country of Vietnam due to the war. They have to face this hardship without the support of their father, who was captured by the Communists and disappeared many years before. Then they travel on a boat in terrible conditions to a refugee camp in Guam.
Economics and Psychology in Appalachia, An Analysis of the Novel: Above the Waterfall In the novel Above the Waterfall, Ron Rash decides to focus on the main theme of Loss. The culture within the beautiful ecosystem of Appalachia is encased with family ties that are hard to deny. Rash writes, “In a county this rural, everyone’s connected, if not by blood, then in some other way” from the relationship between Darby and Gerald to the friendship between Les and Becky, their relationships show a true loyalty to the ones they have grown up with and show that Appalachia is a tight knit community (Rash 90). The characters within the novel: Above the Waterfall demonstrate signs of loss of self, domestic violence, as well as poverty.
"Running for His Life" In the story "Running for His Life", Michael Hall explains the genocide Gilbert Tuhabonye experienced when he was in high school in East Africa and how he managed to escape and relive his life in Austin, Texas. Tuhabonye's teachers and the Tutsi teenagers were burned alive and beaten to death by friends of theirs. A couple of students tried eluding, but we're caught and killed by the killers. The building was on fire, burning corpses, and burning to death any students who remained alive.
The book Long Walk To Water by Linda Sue Park where a young boy named Salva walks across South Sudan during a civil war and eventually he gets to the United States and helps South Sudan by planting wells across the country. The poem “Lost boys of Sudan” is by Leslie Lane. Many young boys survive walking for hundreds of miles through disease, war and starvation to live, but their lives will never be the same again. The theme of both texts is in the face of obstacles, maintain perseverance in order to overcome them. Though both texts present the common theme in similar ways, there are also differences in their approach and development.
Oftentimes when reading texts about liberation, whether the liberation is physical, metaphorical, or otherwise, there is a tendency to expect an overcoming narrative of sorts. Namely, when presented with a figure that is suffering, an audience expects a clean ending. However, concerning memoirs, this isn’t always the case. If anything, overcoming narratives within autobiographical texts can flatten out the nuances and struggles that are presented within, making the arc of the text seem flat and unconvincing. This is far from the case with Jimmy Santiago Baca’s autobiography, A Place to Stand.
In the novel, Inside Out and Back Again, Thanhha Lai tells a story of a 10-year-old girl, Ha, and her family’s experience of living in Vietnam and having to flee to Alabama due to war. Background Info: When fleeing a country, many refugees experience the universal refuge of becoming refugees because they are forced to leave their destroyed homes and travel to a new, different country. This could turn a person’s life “Inside Out” which means that their lives is impacting negatively. Preview 3 points: 1. Many refugees around the world experience losing family members as they flee their homes, which Ha also experienced through losing her father.(explain wym by loss of family member) 2.
As night fell, the house shook as bombs exploded into the starry night sky. The book Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai, reveals the story of a young girl named Ha. Ha lives with her Mother and three brothers in Saigon, Vietnam in 1975 during the Vietnam war. Ha and her family are affected emotionally and physically by the life they are forced to live during the war.
The essay “The Joys of Reading & Writing: Superman & Me” by Sherman Alexie has three effective writing techniques: metaphor, title, and point of view. One metaphor, which is good, is “I realized that a paragraph was a fence that held words” because “it worked together for a common purpose”. The paragraph held words that connected together. The title of the story is perfect because he uses “Superman and Me” superman saves people. Much like a comparison, Sherman also tries to save students by encouraging them to read and gain knowledge that can be achieved by books.
In the article “It’s Later Than You Think” author Sahil Bloom uses Pathos and Visuals to help show readers how short life truly is. In his article he talks through the story of when he made the realization about how much time he has wasted when his friend mentions he will only see his parents 15 more times. Bloom uses the writing move pathos to appeal to the emotions of the readers. Bloom also uses visuals throughout the article to create a feeling of sadness in readers and create a depressing mood throughout the article. The sadness he hopes to cause the readers is a ploy to ultimately motivate them to take advantage of the time they have left and not waste it thinking they have more.
The Heat contains a prevalence of humor, happy ending, magnified disorder, and an uplifting existential worldview that fits the nature and composition of comedy as a genre. This film presents us with a multitude of kinds and intensities of humor which grab the audiences’ attention. There are moments within the film that cover all ends of the spectrum from droll to dry or even uproarious humor. An example of droll can be the tracheotomy scene, whereas Mullins continuously mocking the albino illustrates a more uproarious scene. Throughout the film there are a variety of conflicts and challenges that get resolved ultimately leading to the happy ending.
Have you ever felt like that there was no hope left in the world for you? I Have Lived a Thousand Years, an autobiography written by Livia-Bitton Jackson, is a story about herself living through the Holocaust whilst experiencing the barbarity of the Nazis and abhorrent events. There were myriad amounts of cruel inhumanities that the Nazis did to the Jews as the Nazis did experiments on them without their consent and put them into death and concentration camps. Nonetheless, Elli, a prisoner of the Holocaust, went through obstacle after obstacle, but she never capitulated or caved in. The way that Elli never gave up has influenced me to persist and to never give up even when it may seem that there is no hope and no way out of a problem.
In the novel I can think of three examples as to how Atticus Finch shows tolerance. Atticus shows tolerance towards Tom Robinson. A a black man accused of raping a white woman. Despite the racism from the rest of the town, Atticus defends Tom and fights for his rights as a human being. Atticus shows tolerance towards his children, Scout and Jem.
Uneven Geographies of Race and Class The story “Walking While Black” by Garnette Cadogan from topic 8 follows a young man from Kingston, Jamaica and his struggles due to being a person of color. Let’s start off with some backstory before we get into it. Like I said, this young man grew up in Jamaica. He would walk the streets like nothing, at one point he even described his way home as home.
Various minority groups have long histories of oppression, including Native Americans, and the brutality that they endured in the past has shaped their race today. In an attempt to advocate for better conditions, Native Americans are spreading awareness for a greater future. Linda Hogan is a writer of Chickasaw Native descent and often incorporates “Southeastern tribal histories and [native] spirits and culture” (Wikipedia contributors) in her work. “Tear” takes on the perspective of a Chickasaw Native, first in the past recounting hardships, then to the present to reflect on the speaker’s connection to others in her tribe. The poem also describes the environment that surrounds natives and the neglection of their lives.
“Superman and me,” by Sherman Alexie is about a boy, Sherman, who grows up in an Indian reservation and becomes different than most Indians around him. He began teaching himself to read and other things at a very young age. What he learned to read with was actually a superman comic book. The heroic vibe is definitely well used throughout the story. You can look at many different quotes in the story that would do the heroic vibe justice, but this one in particular sticks out; “I throw my weight against their locked doors.