Anita Selzer’s I am Sasha novel is written about a young boy named Sasha who lived in Poland during World War 2. This story is based around a single mother and son trying to escape the horrors that Nazi Germany were inflicting on them. With escaping Poland almost impossible, many people were left no choice but to remain in Poland, hiding from the dangers of Nazi Germany. Sasha and his mother, Larissa never gave up and had to sacrifice many things to stay alive.
Isabel Wilkerson is very thorough in this reading. She covers the exodus of blacks from the Deep South beginning with the First World War up to the end of the Civil Rights Movement, and even slightly beyond. Because this occurrence of migration lasted for generations, it was hard to see it while it was happening, and most of its participants were unaware that they were part of any analytical change in black American residency, but in the end, six million African Americans left the South during these years. And while Jim Crow is arguably the chief reason for this migration, the settings, skills, and outcomes of these migrants ranged as widely as one might expect considering the movement’s longevity. I liked Wilkerson’s depiction of Ida Mae,
Reaction Paper Amy C. Steinbugler the author of Beyond Loving, examines interracial intimacy in the beginning of the twenty-first century and it has continued to developed new ideologies. Segregation, slavery, court cases, black lives matter and many other historical movements occurred decades ago and people were not allowed to form a relationship outside of their race, because of biracial which was looked upon as wrong. It became a phase of racial denials in which interracial relationships are seen as symbols of racial progress. This book examines the racial dynamics of everyday life of lesbian, gay heterosexual of black and white couples. Overall, this book analyzes cotemporary interracial through “racework”.
In "Little Girls or Little Women? The Disney Princess Effect", Stephanie Hanes makes the argument that Disney princesses and modern day media influence young girls in negative ways. Hanes suggests that sexualization is everywhere including cartoons. She points out that any detail such as Ms. Piggy showing cleavage, leads girls to assume that doing so is okay and natural. Furthermore, Hanes asserts that allowing girls to see themselves as sex objects is a contributor to depression, eating disorders, and many other health problems for young girls.
In the story “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls raised by Wolves” by Karen Russell, the character Jeanette makes emotional decisions that led to different outcomes. Her decisions are impacted by many emotions, such as when she is prideful, Cautious, Lonely, Angry, Uncertain, Panicked, and revengeful, as she is led into terrible situations. In the story one can see many terrible instances that were caused by such emotions. For example, Claudette says, “The pack hated Jeanette/
Carrie Joe worked at a funeral home in Charleston, MI. She got a job offer in Mobile, AL to become a chief historian along with her friend Mia to make a catalog of inventory for a antebellum home named the Seven Sisters. She left behind her ex boyfriend William and refused to talk to him. When she arrived in Mobile she already had an apartment fully furnished waiting on her. Her first night she met the owner Ashland Stuart who right off caught her attention.
After being unaccompanied with any partner for three decades, Nicole Hardy shows her loneliness in the article “Single, Female, Mormon, and Alone” because she had no luck with guys. The article revolves around her feeling like an outcast for being a virgin of 35 years in a modern society and isolated in the Mormon community for not being married yet in her mid-thirties. In the Mormon communities are very family oriented and they also believe that marriage should come before sex. But outside of Mormonism, being in a virgin in the mid-thirties is already considered as outlandish. Hardy at this time is already 35 years-old so she does not fit in neither of the communities.
Lucille Parkinson McCarthy, author of the article, “A Stranger in Strange Lands: A College Student Writing Across the Curriculum”, conducted an experiment that followed one student over a twenty-one month period, through three separate college classes to record his behavioral changes in response to each of the class’s differences in their writing expectations. The purpose was to provide both student and professor a better understanding of the difficulties a student faces while adjusting to the different social and academic settings of each class. McCarthy chose to enter her study without any sort of hypothesis, therefore allowing herself an opportunity to better understand how each writing assignment related to the class specifically and “what
“Don’t be Uneased My Children” Finding Strength in Stories of the Enslaves” In the article “Don’t be Uneased My Children” Finding Strength in Stories of the Enslaves”, Lisa Gilbert, discussed how to take on teaching difficult topics in the classroom, such as slavery. Finding age appropriate ways to teach painful facts and stories from slavery had been a struggle for Elementary teachers. Starting a focus group, Gilbert invited teachers, nonprofits, and other leaders in her surrounding region. This group later lead to a roundtable for teachers.
Anne Moody wrote the autobiography Coming of Age in Mississippi where it begins in 1944 highlighting the struggles of her childhood as it progresses to her adult life in 1964. Moody sought a different path than the rest of her family which led her to be apart of the civil right movement that occurred. Coming of age in Mississippi starts by introducing the narrator of the story, Essie Mae. She discusses her childhood where her father left their family for another woman, and her mother struggles providing for her family. Essie Mae had a traumatic experience in her time on the plantation to where in her adult life she was “still haunted by dreams of the time we lived on Mr.Carter’s plantation.”
A memoir of a childhood lost to multiple mysteries illnesses , Julie Gregory tells us about the unseen abuse she endured as a young child and how it affected her into her adult years. Now as an adult Julie reminisces on her dysfunctional family, from her schizophrenic father to her low key mentally ill mother. From a young age Julie Gregory was continually tested for a sickness that was non existent, made up in the mind of her mother she had “suffered” from many different illnesses including a heart condition. Her childhood in Ohio consisted of doctor visits, x-rays, medication, and operations all of which were unneeded. Only when Julie was an adult did she realize that the person who was sick was not her
People may think that movies aren't as different as their book counterpart. While that may be true, there are many aspects between the book and the movie that aren't as similar. The book The Joy Luck Club written by Amy Tan share many similarities and differences with the movie by the same name. The book and the movie possess similar qualities; nevertheless there are many parts where the movie diverged from the book. However, although there are many differences, both movie and book place an emphasis on the same themes.
“Perfectionism is self-abuse of the highest order.” People who always strive for perfection are the impatient ones who eventually give up, because never is it possible for everything to be pure. This natural disease is portrayed in the short story “Pancakes”, by Joan Bauer, where due to the perfectionism the protagonist Jill had, tragedy was caused. This story basically describes the life of a young girl named Jill, who suffered from the incurable disease OCD, and constantly attempted to make everything ideal. Although wanting all things to become flawless is not always bad, in Jill’s case it was.
They do not care what the Barbie doll looks like because to them, the toy is still a Barbie on the inside. This short story shows that beauty is not what is on the outside, but what is in the inside. It focuses on beauty and what beauty means to the two young girls. When the two young girls look at a Barbie, the only thing they see is the beauty within it and what it could become to them. “So what if our Barbies smell like smoke when you hold them up to your nose even after you wash and wash and wash them.
Ironically, the displacement of Palestinians, from the late 19th century forwards, is in turn removing the scattering of Jews with the State of Israel. Thus, Palestinians have to turn elsewhere, to become refugees and immigrants in other countries. Susan Abulhawa’s first novel Mornings In Jenin explores the 4 generations of a single Palestinian family, the Abulhejas, who existed before Israel was established in Palestine in the 1960s. In the small village of Ein Hod, Susan starts with a prominent farm and house owner, Yehja and Basima Abulheja, with their two sons – Hasan and Darweesh. Hasan weds a Bedouin girl, Dalia.