Countless Americans lack education of the Vietnam War and what treatment the Vietnamese population received during the war. Many times the behavior conducted towards the Vietnamese portrayed American soldiers mistreating the noncombatants. James W. Loewen’s chapter nine of Lies My Teacher Told Me leads readers through the occurrences in the Vietnam War by elaborating the war crimes enacted by American soldiers, examining the intervention of America in the war, and describing pictures that were taken during the war. One subject Loewen uncovers is the analysis of the war crimes throughout the Vietnam War.
Adriana Franco Mrs. Belina ENG3U1–7 2 April 2023 Two Truths and the Lie Everyone has told a lie before. Whether it be big or small everyone is guilty of being deceptive at least once in their life. Chances are, it ended poorly too. It could be one’s mom finding out they lied about finishing homework, or a sister finding out they lied about taking a shirt. Eric Wright’s short story “Twins” explores the outcomes of revealing the truth in a deceptive relationship.
In Chapter 9-14 Holden Caulfield leaves Penecy Prep and heads to New York City. Where he will stay for a couple days before winter vacation starts and he will head home. Delaying breaking the news to his family he got kicked out of school for as long as possible. These chapters are where Holden’s loneliness becomes abundantly clear. The reader is subjected to many long rants by Holden about the company he wants, though he attempts to settle several times.
Preposterous lying is a trait that Holden shows forth throughout the novel. In chapter 3 he warned the readers that he loves to lie and he does a good job at doing it (22). Holden would tell lies over and over again just to protect himself from any hurt or rejection. Another flip side to why Holden lies is because he tends to get bored with certain conversations he has with his peers so lying helps him to check out of reality for a while and in doing this, he tries to impress people and let them feel sorry for him. This makes him feel extremely superior.
Everyone wants to fit in either in school or at work and in the short essay “White Lies”, Erin Murphy discusses how a little girl is being bullied at school and what she does to prevent it. In the fourth paragraph it states, “ All of this changed in mid-October when Connie’s father got a job at a candy factory, news Connie announced tentatively one rainy day during indoor recess” (Paragraph four). Because Connie was an albino she was viewed differently in everyone’s eyes. She decided to announce to everyone that her father worked in a candy factory, therefore everyone would like her. When the news came out everyone started to like Connie because she bought everyone free candy.
Lying with the Wolf, is a drawing made with ink and pencil on paper by Kiki Smith. This drawing is a nude female laying down on the ground hugging tightly onto a wolf. This drawing is very realistic because I can see the mood she is in by looking at the expression on her face. Not only did Smith demonstrate a relationship between a women and a wolf, but this drawing has a meaning towards it. This represents Kiki's experience throughout her entire career.
In his short story “The Lie”, Kurt Vonnegut suggests that ignorance directly impacts one’s pressure to succeed, and causes corruption when expectations are not met. In the story, The Remenzels are on their way to Whitehill, and anxiously talking about the process that Eli will go through to start his high school career. However, Vonnegut tells the reader that Eli has been refraining from telling his parents the truth, that he was denied acceptance from the prestigious school. Soon after the reader learns this information, Vonnegut says “Doctor Remenzel and his wife had no doubts whatsoever about their son’s getting into Whitehill. It was inconceivable to them that Eli could not go there, so they had no curiosity as to how Eli had done on
( The Crucible, 106-107) And the girls besides Abigale responds by “run[ning] to one wall” and “shielding their eyes”
This article was written by Philip Gulley, the artical is about how in every relationship we all need to lie somewhat. It says we dont need to lie about huge things, like murdering someone, or having another wife in another state, or being a robber. Gulley considers these lies to be whoppers and should never be lied about. Gulley says lying over little things like telling your spouse she looks good in a dress when she doesnt, telling your boss he is awesome when in reality he sucks, or when your wife or husband ask you to help them out with something and you dont want to you do it anyway.
Kurt Vonnegut Jr.’s short story, “The Lie,” takes place at an all boys school called Whitehill in North Marston, Massachusetts. Eli’s parents are completely oblivious as to why Eli isn’t as excited as them for getting in. Eli is dragged down by the weight of knowing where his excitement for getting into the school, and it’s exactly where his rejection letter is-in the trash. One message demonstrated by “The Lie” is that there will always be consequences for every bad decision made. Vonnegutt decided to put Eli under pressure by having his mother say, “If I were you,” she said to Eli, “I’d be so excited I could hardly stand it.
The poem The Lie by Don Paterson displays a lie as a young child who has been imprisoned which illustrates of how people try to forget their wrongs and lies. In the poem the narrator every day would nourish the lie which was seen as a 3 to 4 year old child. This imagery informs the reader on how a lie has to be carefully nurtured so it does not reveal itself to the outside world much the same how you have to teach a 3 to 4 year old child to make good decisions so it does not get itself hurt. The poem also metaphorically states how the child has been gagged and locked up tight in the dungeon. This helps the reader find deeper meaning on how people lock up their lies deep inside their head so they so that they can try to forget them.
In The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, Mr. Antolini gives Holden Caulfield advice when he is at one of his lowest points. Already aware of Holden’s mental state and position on school, he quotes Wilhelm Stekel, a psychoanalyst, “The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.” (Salinger 188). Although Holden fails to grasp Mr. Antolini’s message, the quote applies directly to his life because of his relationship with death as a result of his younger brother, Allie’s, death. Mr. Antolini uses this quote specifically because he wants Holden take a step back and try to live for a noble cause instead of resorting to death.
In Tobias Wolff’s short story “The Liar,” the protagonist, James, lies to help him construct a new identity outside of his family. James tells morbid lies about his mother in order to distance himself from her. Since, the loss of his father, James no longer associates with people who are like him. The lies started after his father’s death and his mother starts noticing how much differently he was acting. Since his mother is treating him like she is disappointed in him, James begins to devolve into a state of repressed bitterness.
Lying has not been formally considered morally wrong or right regardless of the severity. Although it’s near impossible to go through a whole day without even stretching the truth once and decide which types of lies are okay or not. Stephanie Ericsson uses strong metaphors and personal experiences in “The Ways We Lie” to justify the use of our everyday lying. This unbiased essay will help readers decide whether it’s okay to lie on a daily basis. Ericsson starts out with saying she told the bank that her deposit was in the mail even though she hadn't written out the check (495).
In the stories, "The Lie," by Kurt Vonnegut and "Barn Burning," by William Faulkner, the main characters, Eli Remenzel & Colonel Sartoris (Sarty) Snopes, both mature from childhood into adulthood. This growth and maturity develops from having family support and a stable upbringing or perhaps their growth happened within their own self-consciousness. The main characters, in both these stories, use their inner maturity to be strong and courageous and make good decisions as they are growing up. In the story, "The Lie," Eli matures into adulthood.