The people who made good videos of skate boarding can be a good thing because they are making more creative moves while skateboarding and can be a bad thing because those new tricks my be very
Will society ever view African-Americans as people and not as less than? In “Chokehold” Paul Butler will discuss this very idea depth. Butler provides history on why and how society sees African-American men as violent thugs. Butler goes on to explain in detail how the chokehold plays a part in oppressing African-American men and how to avoid the ramifications of the Chokehold, if possible.
In the short story, “The Rip”, author Robert Drewe uses the idea of Sophie holding a jellyfish “at arms length” to display how she is becoming wary of her father, John, and is keeping him distanced from herself. he reassures her, as if he was trying to reassure himself that their relationship will not become an “anecdote”, but a reality. John is thinking about how he wants to be freed from his emotional turmoil, and how badly he wants to spend this quality time with his daughter and protect her. This “protection” is symbolised by the shark attack (the divorce of John and his wife), and the fear running through everyones minds. This makes the reader feel as if John is putting pressure on himself to make Sophie like him.
In Terrance Hayes’s poem “Mr. T-,” the speaker presents the actor Laurence Tureaud, also known as Mr. T, as a sellout and an unfavorable role model for the African American youth for constantly playing negative, stereotypical roles for a black man in order to achieve success in Hollywood. The speaker also characterizes Mr. T as enormous and simple-minded with a demeanor similar to an animal’s to further his mockery of Mr. T’s career. The speaker begins his commentary on the actor’s career by suggesting that The A-Team, the show Mr. T stars in, is racist by mentioning how he is “Sometimes drugged / & duffled (by white men) in a cockpit,” which seems to draw illusions to white men capturing and transporting slaves to new territories during the time of the slave trade (4-5).
Gunrunner Goes Hangman This is a the story of Riker Syke. One of the most famous gunrunners in the U.S. He had his own alliance full of lower-class gunrunners. You can imagine how rich he became. He was a very hostile man, never caught by the police, until one day.
Review of Vershawn Young Discussion After reading “Vershawn Ashanti Young: Should Writers Use They Own English?” against Rebecca Wheeler’s “Code-Switch to Teach Standard English (Young 111. Wheeler 108)”. Each paper expresses a different opinion regarding the teaching of English in the classrooms. Each author writes with different agendas, different tones, and different purposes. Each acts upon their beliefs as they perceive them, and as a result are poles apart.
Augusta Savage was one of the many women and men of color who participated in the Civil Rights Movement. She is known for her intricate dedication to sculpture and art and is remembered as an artist, activists, and educator, serving as a guiding light for her pupils, students, and those who she exposed her art to. During the Civil Rights Movement, Augusta Savage managed to make art inspired by the Civil Rights Movement and was a huge figure during the Harlem Renaissance, a period of Jazz music, art, and film. Yet, every artist have a beginning to a legacy of success and prosperity, and not much is known to juniors my age of how Augusta Savage has dedicated and contributed to the Harlem Renaissance and escorting an illumination on African Americans today. Augusta Savage was born February 29th, 1892 as August Christine Fells in Green Cove Springs, Florida.
The book highlights the good and the bad of the sport. For someone who may not be too interested in it, or just has to read it for a history class, he made it entertaining. Giving not only a history lesson on the sport but just as much on the working class of America and the emerging commercialized leisure’s and shifting social classes in the nineteenth century. Gorn is able to interweave social and political issues of the times all told with characters as colorful and wild as the early days of this country. Men crave the order of violence with rules and attach elevated importance to such contests in part because so much of life is entirely unjust and oppressive.
The Civil Rights Movement was a struggle for African Americans to gain social justice. This occurred between the 1950s and 1960s, and was very hard to overcome. At this time, blacks weren’t able to attend the same schools as whites, and be on the same team as them, which showed up in the movie and showed immediate controversy at the beginning of it. In Remember the Titans, the “Titans” are a racially mixed football team with an African American head coach, and a white assistant coach. Music was a binding force for the team, because it made them happy, encouraged them to want to play better on the field, and got them focused on the game, and it gave them a sense of hope through the toughness of racial segregation of some on the team.
The novel Mr. Was, by Pete Hautman, is a story about a boy named Jack, and his adventures throughout his time traveling life. Along the way he encounters Scud, who eventually becomes his best friend, as well as his worst enemy. Scud is a teen living in the year of 1941, who is very adventurous and rebellious. Scud and Jack join the war together, and face many difficulties and not just with their enemies. Scud finds joy in causing trouble and being a goof with his friends.
Target by Jasper Johns stands 66 x 66 in the Art Institute of Chicago (Figure 1). The large size of the painting draws the viewer in. The scale also makes it so the viewer is forced to look at the painting, it is not something that can be ignored. Johns created this piece in 1961, and it was one of many works in his Target series. Target was his last major work in this series and it ended up being the largest as well.
Sometimes it’s hard to figure out what really happened in a specific situation, especially when you are hearing two or more different sides of the story. This can be seen with the events surrounding November 9, 1918 in Germany. The first 4 items were all primary sources. This is because items 1 and 3 were direct statements from people who were there. Item 3 was a newspaper article published just days later with information from telegrams from people who were there, though their story does not line up with others.
Many people have argued for decades that Mortal Kombat is too violent for kids, but some people would disagree. Mortal Kombat is a video game franchise made in 1995 by Midway Games in Chicago. Mortal Kombat is known for it bloody gameplay. It is also known for its fatalities that a character can do. Mortal Kombat is not bad for kids because it is fake, it shows different cultures and diversity, and blood and gore can be turned off to make it age appropriate.
The short story “Sucker” by Carson McCullers portrays the one-sided admiration expressed by the main character’s younger cousin, Richard, towards him, as well as his own towards his crush. McCullers conveys the idea of the story through characterization and irony of the way the main character, Pete’s treatment of Richard, previously referred to as Sucker, parallels the treatment he received from his crush, Maybelle. Pete consistently took advantage of Richard because he was always eager to please his older brother figure, much like Maybelle was only nice to Pete as long as he was useful to her. In the end, after losing both his love interest and the respect of Richard, Pete learns that those who are cruel to others typically do so because they remind them of themselves. Characterization plays a large role in the development of the theme.
"How To Kill," by Keith Douglas, addresses the idea of how simple it is to kill, and how easy it is to detach yourself from what that kill really means. In the second stanza of his poem , Douglas says, "Now in my dial of glass appears/The soldier who is going to die./He smiles, and moves about in ways/ His mother knows, habits of his." The speaker of the poem watches the person he is about to shoot and recognizes that, once he pulls the trigger, somebody's little baby will be gone forever.