Claudia Kolker’s book “The Immigrant Advantage” (Oct 2011) is a book that touched on the advantages of immigrants coming to the U.S. bringing along their customs, religions, teachings, and traditions. Kolker wants to inform readers that there are good things that come from immigrants like food, fashion, vocabulary, and customs. Kolker points out in her book that there is many ways that immigrants benefit to succeed from others in everyday life. For Example, “The Vietnamese Money Club” (Kolker 19) it is said that to start a money club you need people that you trust from 3-6 people at the least. They all need to pitch in a certain amount of money aside and who turn it is first they get all the money.
“Was it fear or compassion that motivated the gift?”(Pg. 47) Ascher wonders why the mother gave the homeless man a dollar even if he did not ask for it. She also wonders why the French waitress gave the homeless man a coffee and a paper bag of food. “…Twice I have wondered, what compels this woman to feed this man?
(11-12), as in they would not starve themselves just to get to where they are. They would work hard and use everything in their power to get what they want. Finally, in the stanza five, she addresses, that real woman who works hard, and it shows in their hands. They wouldn't have
It's Rex and Rose Mary not being able to provide food for their children and or them blatantly using the money they have on non essential items like alcohol and paint supplies. We see this in the first couple pages of the book when Jeannette, age 3, gets sent to the hospital after her dress caught on fire when she was cooking her own hot dogs on the stove. While being in the hospital she says “That was the thing about hospitals, you never had to worry about running out of food.” (12) for Jeannette to think about this at such a young age and early in the book shows its prominence in her life as we read. Jeanette's relationship with food throughout the book is very eye opening to the American dream.
Mother does not eat her meal. She gives it to me instead. She does not say “I love you” in hugs or kisses, but her love fills my plate, and I gobble it up.” In this example, we see a Jewish family, who lives in a Ghetto of a city, and are very poor. They can’t always get food on the table for everyone.
We never put into consideration others who are battling to purchase their own food, having a difficult time supporting their families. In Night it describes throughout the book where individuals battle over food and water, pursuing everything in their will to survive. “Dozens of men fought desperately over a few crumbs” (100). Our society has grown immune to ignoring and overlooking those who are not like us. We fail to pay attention to those with belongings not as valuable as ours.
Throughout African American History, there have been many migration concerning African Americans. From the Middle Passage, all the way to the Modern Migration that is happening right now. African Americans have been moved from where their African roots lies, to being moved all over the United States. These movements have done a great deal to African American History, as they have affected the customs that African Americans have practiced over time. These movements have been great in their own right, and the greatest one of all of them is the Great Migration.
During the Gilded Age, industrialization and urbanization flourished in the United States. This occurred because of the movement of Americans from the East to the West, and also from the massive amount of “new immigrants” from eastern Europe and Asia, into cities. Americans disliked this influx of immigrants because it created competition for jobs for Americans “who deserve the job”. This feeling of Nativism caused many immigrants like the Chinese to face persecution and unfair treatment through laws like the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which prohibited Chinese workers from entering the United States. Due to the overabundance of people who wanted to work in factories, business and factory owners were not concerned with the availability of
Most immigrants who came to the U.S had high expectations that they would find wealth but once they arrived they realized their expectations weren’t what they expected. Although, they were disappointed in not finding wealth the conditions in which the U.S was in by the late 1800s were still a lot better than the places they all had left behind to come. The majority of the immigration population anticipation was to find profitable jobs and opportunities. When the large numbers of immigration were migrating to the U.S, it was during the “Gilded Age”, which was the prime time for the country’s expansion of industrialization. This rapid expansion of new industries led to the need of workers which motivated people from other countries to come to
“One of the greatest glories of the public school was its success in Americanizing immigrants” Christakis quoted Ravitch in paragraph 20 is what surprised me because I have never heard of this concept before. Personally, I believe that would depend on the student. For example, one of my friends is from the Democratic Republic of Congo (Africa) and at first she was not really Americanized, like she did not use slang, she was not procrastinating. But, as time went on she made more American friends and became accustomed to America that was when she did start using slang and procrastinating. I agree with Christakis when she said “public schools also provide students with crucial exposure to people of different backgrounds and perspectives.”
They encountered a man on the road that had been struck by lightning and was also suffering from starvation. The boy wanted to turn back and help the wounded stranger, but the man had to explain to the boy that they did not have enough of anything to share with him (McCarthy 49-52). They barely had enough to take care of themselves, and if they gave away anything that they had, they would be more likely to starve. It was a decision between their own lives and others’. There was also another occasion where the man and boy were on the beach and were robbed of most of their belongings (McCarthy).
She tries to cite facts of her experience as a witness when she was in a French bread shop and a man walked in the shop and the owner of the shop gives the man a cup of coffee and bread from leftovers and walks away without a word. Then the author uses the same rhetorical element Logos of asking herself “what compels this woman to feed this man? Pity? Care? Compassion?
An immigrant family wants the best for everyone lives, however moving to a new country brings struggles. There struggles include finding a home, a good paying job, avoiding to be deported, being separated ,and continuing their education. Immigrants expect a better life because their old home and country did have much benefits as the new country gives them. The advantage of an immigrant family is family values which tends them to be closer. Disadvantages of an immigrant family are the struggles that were first mentioned and including that they face other people calling them a threat.
She does this by aiding a child with money for a lunch which he had forgotten at home. It is
I felt guilty that I was able to afford food and other, like the woman before me, were not. I was not exactly rich, but I was not poor either. So, I did had enough money to live comfortably, unlike these women, whom marched from Paris to Versailles in the rain, probably had not had a meal for a while, and somehow there they were full spirited, their strength