the Influence” by Scott Russel Sanders is a personal essay about Sanders’ father and specifically, his alcoholism. As the title of the essay suggests, his father is under the influence of alcohol, but this essay will argue that Scott Sanders is under the influence of his father. Sanders uses the structure of the personal essay to reflect on how his childhood was negatively impacted by his father, and to reveal to himself how his childhood affects his present adulthood. Sanders writes that “the story
Black Dynamite, by the director and writer Scott Sander, is a parody of the exploitation film genre, reflected the values and issues of 70s America through over-the-top acting, terrible editing, and humorous dialogues. The story follows Black Dynamite, a Vietnam war veteran who, in the wake of his brother’s murder, vows to end the drug circle responsible for this crime. The plot, which the movie revolves around, addresses themes which were extremely relevant in the 70s. The Vietnam war devastated
In 1993, Scott Russell Sanders responds to an essay written by Salman Rushdie, to counteract the idea of “people who transplant themselves in ideas rather than places.” Sanders provides the American public with acknowledgements of counter-arguments, historical references, and patriotic appeals to convey his message that “movement is inherently good” isn’t as it seems from Rushdie’s point of view. Sanders respects Rushdie’s views on migration and uses them to strengthen his argument through
Under the Influence Scott Sanders In the piece Under the Influence, Scott Sanders seems to have a few different main points. A lot of things that supported Sanders’ points were experiences that I’ve had. I don’t feel as though something is being argued in this piece, rather a showing of his childhood with the events and how they affected him to this day. In the beginning of the story, it seemed repetitive, Sanders was merely showing scenes of his father in a drunken stupor. He didn’t just come
“Under the Influence” is Scott Russell Sanders’ recollection of his childhood burdens created by his alcoholic father. Through this essay, Sanders reveals the impact of alcoholism on himself, his father, their family as well as his own children. The following commentary will examine the various languages used in Sanders’ essay and the most significant as well as difficult aspect of this essay. In the first half of his essay, Sanders describes his sufferings and emotional struggles as a child with
“Under The Influence: Paying the price of my father's booze” is an essay that was written by Scott Russell Sanders to describe his father drinking habit. In this essay, the author has used both comparisons and allegories to explain how his father’s drinking habit was very serious and how it affected his whole family. In addition, the essay describe explores the connection between excessive drinking and excessive working and compares the two. To start with, the author has talked about father’s extreme
Analysis of “Under the Influence” by Scott Russell Sanders In his essay, “Under the Influence,” Scott Russell Sanders is brutally honest about his experience with his father’s drunkenness. He utilizes intense and descriptive language to explain the discomfort of his experience in his own home. There’s a slight twinge of pain in his writer’s voice, but also a plain bluntness as the writer explains his situation with an honesty that only comes with a life full of painful experiences. He utilizes familiar
Commentary essay on Identity In Scott Russell Sanders’ “Under the Influence” Student: Alan Ping Kin Pang Student Number: 301120507 Student Email: alanp@sfu.ca Course: ENGL104W, Introduction to Prose Genres, Fall 2015 Tutor Marker: Scott Marsden, October 25, 2015 Due Date: October 25, 2015 Handed In: October 25, 2015 Introduction The purpose of this paper will be to summarize Sanders’ “Under the influence.” By analyzing and critiquing his writing style, a better understanding of the narrative
In Scott Russell Sanders “Under the Influence” is the story about the painful memories of the author’s childhood memories. The author’s experience of his father’s alcoholism is addressed right from the start. Throughout the entirety of the story, Sanders talks about the effect that his father’s drinking problem has on his family and how it is even effecting Sander’s children. Multiple times throughout the story, Sander’s explains how his father’s drinking problem created a lot of fear in Sanders family
Under the Influence by Scott Russell Sanders “Under the Influence” by Scott Russell Sanders is a poignant essay relaying Sander’s struggles with his father’s alcoholism. Sanders’ essay is revealing in ways that statistics and studies on alcoholism cannot possibly contain. Sanders’ essay is like a catalog of the devastating emotional effects of his father’s alcoholism. In his essay, Sanders convincingly counteracts misconceptions about alcoholism and supports the argument that alcoholism is more like
In "Under the Influence," Scott Russell Sanders delves into his complicated relationship with his alcoholic father. Sanders displays the struggles of growing up in a household affected by alcohol addiction. He reflects on his childhood, how it affected him as an adult, and how he copes with it. For example, when visiting his father as an adult, “Like a child again, I pretended not to see him in his stupor, and behind my phony smile I grieved”(Sanders). Sanders' use of avoidance as a coping mechanism
Under the influence is generally a personal essay written by Scott Russell Sunders. The way in which Sanders uses the present tense in essay shows that he is still haunted by the everlasting remembrance of his father even today. This essay is personal but describes the situation of every third family in the world. so Sanders essay is personal and public where many readers can relate this as air own story. The Author starts his essay describing how much his father’s irresistible drinking and then
The former English Professor, Scott Sanders published ‘Under The Influence” in 1991, it was a part of his prized collection labeled Secrets of the Universe: Scenes from the Journey Home that dealt with topics of his troublesome childhood. Sanders spent his early years of life growing up in a small city in Ohio with his alcoholic of a father, his mom, and his other siblings. Sanders proposed congregation for this essay is general . The piece as a whole is a personal story in the form of a diary that
While analyzing the nature of American stimulus, Scott Russell Sanders proclaimed, “But who would pretend that a history of migration has immunized the United States against bigotry?” (Sanders 40). Sanders was a firm believer that America had transformed into a state of take-and-abandon. He made several observations and analogies that highlighted the privation of conservatism. Sanders saw that when people fished a stream, they did not fish it with concern for population of the fish, they fished it
Columbus, had a couple who overdosed on heroin with their grandchild in the backseat. Hence why “Under The Influence” by Scott Russell Sanders is extremely relevant. Sanders asserted his experience with his dad, who was an alcoholic. He thoroughly explained the effects alcoholism had on the family. Later in his essay, many of the father’s organs were damaged as a result of drinking. Sanders said, “My father , when drunk was neither funny nor honest; he was pathetic, frightening, deceitful.”(Under the Influence
In Scott Russell Sanders’ essay “The Inheritance of Tools”, Sanders explores the relationship that he had with his father. Concrete objects like the wooden tools that he inherits from his father provide the basis for the reflections on his relationship with his father. He manages to indicate his attitude very early on in the essay using both features of style and rhetorical strategies. The author establishes his love for his father and sadness at his passing by narrating an anecdotal story involving
To Scott Russell Sanders, the minds of individuals are slowly destroying our planet. Sanders contradicts with Rushdie’s positive outlook on “people who root themselves in ideas rather than places.” As Rushdie sees nothing but hope, Sanders sees nothing but fear and doubt. Scott Russell Sanders utilized various forms of strategy to effectively address his response to Salman Rushdie’s essay and the reasoning behind his stance. Sanders’s response mainly appealed to logos as he depended on historical
Scott Russell Sanders responded to an essay written by Salman Rushdie, about migration and the benefits of immersing oneself in different cultures, views, and such, going against his points of view. Rushdie said in his essay that being a migrant means being free of nationalism. Sanders argues that people should become inhabitants instead of migrants, and to do that people should root themselves in places and not ideas. Sanders says migrants often bring their visions with them, meaning they might
In response to an essay by Salman Rushdie on the profits of moving, Scott Russell Sanders, in his dialectic essay “Staying Put: Making a Home in a Restless World,” contradicts “the belief that movement is inherently good.” He claims that we should not root ourselves in places rather than ideas, but that we should care for the place rather than our own desires. Through his use of direct quotes from his opposition, Sanders relates his belief that we must settle down and end our endless moving if we
Scott Russell Sanders’ “Under the Influence” focuses on his life as the child of an alcoholic and how most people wouldn’t know his family was going through some of things they that they were because they carried themselves so well. The main focus he brings up in this article is that people don’t really know what goes on in an alcoholic home. Mr. Sanders also brings up how this influence has not only effected Sanders and his family, but also how it is affecting his own children. Sanders describes