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How Does Janie Change In Their Eyes Were Watching God
In Chapter 6 of "Their Eyes Were Watching God" Janie's character has shown a significant change
in the way her character behaves. Janie has gone from a very independent and self run young
women to a submissive wife to Joe Starks. Chapter 5 as well shows the audience how Janie's person
has changed from the beginning to Chapter 5 and 6. Janie's responses to Joe's criticism and
comments of her and women in general provide additional evidence of Janie's change. For Example,
on Page 55 Joe orders Janie to tie up her hair when around the store as seen in the following line,
"That night he ordered Janie to tie up her hair around the store." due to him seeing other men
admiring her hair and in once instance even touching her hair , but Joe never said
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The Gem Of The Ocean, Joe Turner 's Come And Gone And The...
Myth as a semiological system in August Wilson's
Gem of the Ocean, Joe Turner's Come and Gone and The Piano Lesson
Abstract
Myths are one of the most important elements included in the history of not only African–American
lives but also the lives of each and every one of us. Myths are inevitable human resources at times
when no other idea justifies our being. As Barthes posits, for it is human history which converts
reality into speech, and it alone rules the life and the death of mythical language. Ancient or not,
mythology can only have an historical foundation, for myth is a type of speech chosen by history: it
cannot possibly evolve from the 'nature ' of things. This study looks into the significance of "Myths"
and their determining roles as semiological systems in August Wilson 's dramatic twentieth century
cycle plays; Gem of the Ocean, Joe Turner's Come and Gone and The Piano Lesson. In these plays,
myths take the forms of individuals, rituals and even ancestral objects. It can be observed that each
one of these elements performs the most important role in conveying the significance of the
African–American psyche and delicately portrays the eminent influence of ancestral backgrounds in
shaping the lives of each character. The works of scholars such as Roland Barthes, Henry Gates, as
well as many more, have been employed to better grasp this matter. Key words: Myth, semiological
system, African–American psyche, mythical language, ritual
Introduction
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Short Essay On The Monster Hunts
The house was atop a small old hill. Surrounding the house was a once neatly kept metal fence, now
all rusted and covered in overgrown foliage. An old worn gravel pathway lead straight to the door.
Weather had taken its toll on the house. The bricks were worn and faded from their original color of
red. The door was barely hanging onto its hinges, and the windows were cracked and broken. Jackie
and Joe got out of their old black Ford Mustang. Jackie's long blonde hair was tied up in a ponytail.
She had on blue jeans, black combat boots,and a brown leather jacket. Jackie immediately ran to the
back of their car and opened the trunk. Joe went over to the gate and checked out the place. Joe was
wearing his blue jeans, his faded brown leather ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"It smells absolutely awful." " I think that is coming from the basement." Joe replied, also covering
his nose with his shirt. "Let's start to make our way down there." Joe said, disgust all over his face.
"Joe make sure your weapon is ready, we don't know what will we find down there." Her voice
shaking as said it. Chills started to run down her back as she and Joe neared the door to the
basement. Joe slowly reached for the door handle. His hand was shaking uncontrollably as he did.
Slowly he opened the door as to not alert anything that was down there . The aroma was even
stronger. Blood stained the wooden steps leading to basement. The walls had scratches all up and
down them. Some even contained what looked like human fingernails sticking out of them.They
made their way further down the steps. When they reached the bottom a faint light was coming from
a table in the center room. Exposed water pipes lined all the walls. Cobwebs were everywhere. Rats
and other small rodents were running around on the blood stained floor. Disappearing and
reappearing through little holes in the walls. "This doesn't feel right what so ever." Joe whispered,
sweat starting to build up around his forehead. They inched closer to the table. It was draped in a
white cloth. A candle was placed in the center of the table. Complete silence filled the room. The
only thing able to be heard was Joe and Jackie's faint breathing. Everything else seemed to
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Analysis Of The Film ' Sankofa '
Sankofa is an Ankan word which means, "We must go back and reclaim our past in order to move
forward ( Diop, 2014)." The film Sankofa was produced in the year 1993 in Ghana directed by Haile
Gerima. It is based on the Atlantic slave trade. It is the story slavery from the point of view of
Africans. In the film, all characters represent an element of African American culture (Gerima,
1993). It also shows the traditional racial scale with the whites at the top followed by Half–castes in
the middle and blacks at the bottom.
The film is the story of Mona, who is an African–American woman who is brought back to Africa
and finds herself as a slave on the Lafayette sugarcane plantation (Gerima, 1993). In a previous life,
she was born on the sugar farm and named Shola. She was caught and sold and transported as a
slave in North America. This brings the interplay between the African American identity on one side
and the other African identity. The film achieves this through reconstructing the past and history and
also through the conception of blackness and race.
By looking keenly at the main characters in the movie, one can see the mixed racial architecture that
prevailed and that still exists to some extent in the American society. The first character in the film,
Shango, is a maroon slave who was brought to the Lafayette sugar plantation from West Indies. He
is key figure among the slaves in the plantation and also the leader of the rebellion. Shola, the
narrator, is not only
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Their Eyes Were Watching God Book Analysis
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Oprah Winfrey alters the novel's story line so much, that Zora
Neale Hurston herself is unable to recognize her own story. The novel is a great story about a young
woman finding herself, but the movie is made into a love story, which is not what the story was
meant to be. The strength in the Characters and their relationships have been changed from the
novel, to Oprah Winfrey's movie, which causes heated arguments and characters to do things that
they would not do in the novel. Oprah Winfrey purposely took out characters in her movie to
remove the black on black racism and placed the typical white man to be racist. Zora Neale Hurston
would not understand Oprah Winfrey's movie after reading her book.
Their Eyes Were Watching God is a novel Throughout Zora Neale Hurtsons novel, Janie searches to
find her inner horizon and the woman that she is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the store Janie is supposed to mess up on cutting the tobacco for a man and Joe has to come and
fix it for her, but in the movie Joe was old and shaking and couldn't cut the tobacco so Janie has to
go cut it instead."How about cutting me a plug of that fine tobacco you got right there" Joe starts to
cut the tobacco, but he starts shaking "I get that for you Sam" (Their Eyes Were Watching God.
Harpo Production, 2005). This scene was created to show Janies strength
Janie lays with tea Cake after he is in bed with rabies. The doctor tells Janie that he would back in a
couple days with the medican that Tea Cake needs in order to help with his sickness, he also while
the doctor talks to Tea Cake about him being bit, he tells him to not sleep with Janie. "Just keep
Janie out ya bed for a while" (Their Eyes Were Watching God, Harpo Production, 2005). Janie does
not listen in the movie like she does in the book, and Tea Cake gets angry and pulls a gun on
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Old Ranger Joe: A Short Story
There is an old brown house across the street from mines it is brown, rickety, dilapidated that will
fall to pieces with a simple touch of the pinky. Cow webs decorate the house and the windows have
been shattered. Some people would say witches, old people, and even fallen celebrities live in that
run down house. But no one suspects Old Ranger Joe. Old Ranger Joe a mysterious, quiet man in
his mid 50's. He has blue eyes fill with rage and envy; his hard hardy hands could crush a bone with
one simple squeeze. His silky golden hair runs with the wind and he has a fairly white complexion.
Every night he goes into that house and doesn't come out until everyone has gone to their work or
school. As you walk into the house you are greeted with rats
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Religion In August Religion
Everyone views religion in their own unique way. Everyone's own unique upbringing and
perspective on life help shape their views on religion, and if it's important. In William Faulkner's
novel Light in August, the people in the fictional town of Jefferson Mississippi strictly uphold
religion and use it to create their social standard. The citizens of Jefferson Mississippi display the
stereotypical southern charm, and the various Christian symbols in the novel symbolize how much
faith is a part of the life in Jefferson. This feeling of openness and comfort in Jefferson turns
superficial when the citizens are forced to appeal to the conventional societal standards. The irony
of the situation is the conventional societal standards are contradictory ... Show more content on
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There are many righteous people in religion and a few good–hearted people in the novel, but the
hypocrisy in religion is exposed in the chaos and cruelty that the citizens of Jefferson bring upon
individuals like Christmas. The harsh and unfair treatment of Christmas corrupts Christmas and
limits people in Jefferson from seeing Christmas' intended divinity. The values professed by the
religious people of Jefferson, Mississippi do not align with their actions that abandon and separate
others in society. The hypocrisy demonstrated by the southern citizens of Jefferson show that the
religious standards and expectations that are set are impossible to achieve. The hefty goals,
aspirations, and standards that people thought humans could achieve in the romantic era are not able
to be achieved today. If humanity can no longer meet religion's standards or recognize a person who
represents their savior, what role does religion have in modern life
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'Slavery In Ticey's Big Laura'
In 1863, previously Ticey, Jane meets a confederate soldier named Mr. Brown and changes her
name. This is significant because it is the first time Jane was treated with respect and it symbolizes
the first sign of improvement for slaves in America. Also in this year, a group of former slaves,
including Jane, leave their plantation and journey northward. Not long after they leave, there is a
massacre killing many, along with the group's leader, "Big Laura". The only two survivors, Jane and
Laura's child Ned continue in hopes of reaching Ohio, but end up staying on another plantation in
Louisiana as indentured servants for Mr. Bone . Jane: 11 Ned: 5 By 1875, Ned and Jane have lived
on Bone's plantation for almost 11 years and Ned is a young adult now. He changes his name ...
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Under lots of pressure to "find religion", she finally gets a vision one day. During her vision, she has
to carry a heavy sack across a river. Jane: 54 Around 1925, Robert Samson's two sons, Timmy and
Tee Bob are introduced to the reader. Timmy is six years older than Tee Bob, but Timmy has to be
behind his brother when they are riding horses because Tee Bob is white and Timmy is black. Tee
Bob does not understand this, so he gets extremely upset when Timmy is sent off the plantation to
"find his place in the world as a black man". Jane: 73 Come 1934, Tee Bob is in college. However,
Jane finds that he is coming home to visit almost every single day to see a teacher on Samson's
plantation named Mary Agnes. Mary has black roots, so their love is forbidden. Again, Tee Bob
does not understand why it is such a big deal, so he kills himself with a letter opener. Because of
this, Jane wants to move. Robert does not want her to leave, so she ends up staying for five years
then she moves from the big house down to the quarters. Jane:
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Their Eyes Were Watching God Analysis
"The Negro artist works against an undertow of sharp criticism and misunderstanding from his own
group and unintentional bribes from the whites". This quote from Langston Hughes' essay "The
Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain" demonstrates that around the time of the Harlem
Renaissance, there were many pressures acting on black artists to present their race in a certain way.
Hughes described not only pressures from black people to portray their race as "respectable" and
"nice" people, but also conflicting pressures from white people to portray black people as
conforming to their longstanding stereotypes of them. Hughes then puts his own pressure on black
artists in which he states that "it is the duty of the younger Negro artist... to change ... Show more
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Finally, Janie realizes that "she hated her grandmother and had hidden it from herself all these years
under a cloak of pity. She had been getting ready for a great journey to the horizon in search of
people... but she had been whipped like a cur dog, and run off down a back road after things" (89).
Janie finally resolves the growing tension between her own ideas and Nanny's ideas by realizing that
she "hated" Nanny and her narrow view of the world which had been shaped by slavery. Due to
Nanny's experiences in slavery where she did not own anything, Nanny's materialistic goals in life
were to obtain "things", instead of "people". Through this realization, Janie finally breaks free of
Nanny's slavery–shaped view of the world in which Nanny only dreamed of gaining "things" that
she believed could free her from the struggles that came with being a black woman. However, when
Janie moves to Eatonville with Joe, the townspeople "murmured hotly about slavery being over, but
every man filled his assignment. There was something about Joe Starks that cowed the town. It was
not because of physical fear... he had a bow–down command in his face" (47). While Janie believes
that she has broken free from Nanny's views of the world in which blackness is
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Their Eyes Were Watching God Figurative Language
The high chair or stool in Their Eyes Were Watching God serves to symbolize a person being in a
position of extensive power or intense authority. Social class is an important topic throughout the
course of the novel. Although Janie is a black woman, she, as a result of her marriage to Joe, is a
member of a higher socioeconomic class than her fellow black counterparts. Janie, however, does
not equate money with power or worth. On the other hand, Joe believes there is a correlation
between a person's wealth and the extent of the authority they are capable of exhibiting over others.
While Joe wants Janie to reside in "a high chair" to "overlook the world", Janie simply wants to be
on the same level as her black counterparts in order to avoid being ... Show more content on
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Hurston conveys this tone through words like "wrestled", "heat", and "arched". Hurston utilizes
asyndeton and anaphora to describe the sensual setting, as well as to heighten the emotion of the
scene. Hurston employs asyndeton through the use of semicolons to make the scene more dramatic
by quickening the rhythm of the sentence to align with the harmony experienced between Janie and
Tea Cake. The pace of the sentence coincides with the quick movements of their bodies.
Furthermore, Hurston employs anaphora when the word "till" is used at the beginning of two
successive clauses in order to emphasize Janie's growth as a character. Janie has yet to have a
physical connection like the one she has with Tea Cake. Rather than simply stating that the couple is
having sex, Hurston vividly describes what their bodies are doing in order to emphasize that the
couple is not merely connected on a physical level, but on an emotional one as
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Grandma Persuasive Speech
It was a cold October 30 of 2016. Corbin and his friends where walking home from school. Corbin's
three friends names where Lizzie, blond hair girl with brown eyes with a pink jacket and black
jeans, and was 15 years old. Jon and Joe were brothers, or twins. They both had red hair, with light
brown eyes and were both 15 years old. Corbin dark brown hair, blue eyes and was 15 years old.
Lizzie had just lost her Mom two days ago in her sleep. Corbin had lost both his parents the same
way. Joe and Jon say they lost an uncle the same way to, but they don't really believe them. The four
of them had been planning a sleepover for a while now, and finally they were going to have a sleep
over now. Corbin stopped by his house to get his stuff, and so did Lizzie. The four of them were
sleeping over at Jon and Joe's house. They were planning to watch the new Captain America Civil
war movie with a bunch of junk food. When they had got there, John ... Show more content on
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Corbin gathered up his friends and told the the plan that he had. " I have a plan to kill that Reeper
that is killing adults around the town." As he told them the plan they all started to get the just of the
plan. They were using Corbin's grandma as bait to kill the Reaper. We stayed up a lot of the nights
until they felt a calmness come upon the house, and a shiver run down each of their backs. The
Reaper was here! As they got into position they saw the Reaper come in it was about to get her until
Corbin yelled NOW! Lizzie flicked on the lights, Corbin, Jon, and Joe turned on their flashlights,
and forced the Reaper into a corner. Corbin's grandma woke up and saw the Reaper and past out.
The Reaper was so loud as is started to fade away, and it disappeared into thin air. There was four
bright light that shot out of the body, And started to fly away. Jon and Joe ran after the two light's,
and Lizzie and Corbin followed the other
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A Successful Black Man In August Wilson's Radio Golf
In the play, Radio Golf, author August Wilson address the idea of the working black man. He
contrasts this characterization of working black men with unemployed black men to show their
progression. Wilson challenges the idea that to be a successful black man, simply means making as
much money as possible. The character, Harmond begins the play by representing the ideal black
man. Harmond was highly educated having graduated from an Ivy League school, married, a
business owner, wealthy, and involved in local government. From afar, he looked like the ideal
representation of what a successful black man should be. Harmond works for himself and readers
are meant to view this as honorable. However, as the play progresses, issues arise with Harmond's
status as a successful working man. Readers find out that Harmond's success is due in large part to
his father's success, thus it seems less like he earned his status and respect by himself. Additionally,
it comes to light that not all of his business proceedings are legal. In fact, readers find out that he has
possessed houses in an illegal manner. Readers see that Harmond's morals are questionable and are
meant question the idea of the successful working black man. ... Show more content on
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Roosevelt is not portrayed as honorable as Harmond initially was. Roosevelt makes it clear that
morals have no place within his business life. His character wants to attain money and success
through whatever means necessary. He gains a position at the bank that his boss didn't think he
deserved, agreed to be a pawn for a white man so he could make some money, willfully ignores the
fact that he and Harmond acquired property illegally, and in the end turns his back on his partner
and friend in order to help a white man and earn himself some additional money. In addition to his
immoral business life, Roosevelt speaks of wanting to cheat on his wife, leading readers to further
question his
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What Is The Impact Of Joe Louis Rematch On American Society
What was the Affect of the Joe Louis Versus Max Schmeling Rematch on American Society?
Word Count: 2,861
Abstract
In the late 1930s Joe Louis and Max Schmeling were two of the world's best boxers. Joe Louis was
the American brown bomber and Schmeling was the black man of the Rhine. Joe Louis was the
world heavyweight champion in 1938 and Max Schmeling was the man who took away his
undefeated record in 1936. When Louis was named the heavyweight champion he felt that he
needed to beat Schmeling to prove that he truly was the best boxer in the world. On June 22 1938
the two boxers would fight a rematch. This fight had much greater social and racial meaning to
Americans than just a simple boxing match. How did the Joe Louis ... Show more content on
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He was almost impossible to dislike even for the staunchest racists. He was famed for his "Personal
Ten Commandments", which included rules like never being seen with a white woman and never
gloating over a fallen opponent. He was incredibly humble with the press. He was viewed as a self–
made boxer coming from a family that lived in a shack; formerly share croppers, to the man that he
became. He represented the American dream for most Americans, that anyone can make something
of himself or herself. In Germany he was viewed as a dumb black man who did not deserve the title
belt. He was hated but not hated with only anger. He was also hated with sheer contempt. He was
viewed as inherently inferior simply because of his skin color. In America Max Schmeling was seen
as purely a villain. He was seen as compliant with Hitler's Nazi views. He was the stereotypical
Aryan race member. America saw his previous match against Joe Louis as a fluke. He was one of
Hitler's best friends and therefore the boxing extension of Louis. Hitler had previously said a black
man could never beat a German boxer. America hated Hitler and therefore hated
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Comparing Faulkner's Light in August and James' Portrait...
Comparing William Faulkner's Light in August and Henry James' Portrait of a Lady
Light in August and Portrait of a Lady are two novels which embodies within them, life affirming
morals. Authors like William Faulkner and Henry James possess the art of making the reader learn
by experiencing for themselves. William Faulkner uses the technique of introspection as well as by
showing how characters and their actions can affect one another. Henry James also shows that a
character's actions and decisions can greatly affect one's future and happiness. Both authors focus on
the power of words that function only to categorize individuals into certain races or social classes.
William Faulkner, in Light in August, centers ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Even though Christmas looks white and was raised in a white orphanage, he is treated as black man.
Even though Christmas looks white, he cannot escape from the expectations of a black man.
Christmas, throughout his relationships with black and white women, always tells them that he is
part black. When Joanna Burden asked Joe if he knew for sure that is he part nigger, he answers, "I
don't know it...If I'm not, damned if I haven't wasted a lot of time." (p. 188) Christmas could just
hide his ethnicity. However, the label taunts him and leaves a lasting impression. The label causes
Christmas to experience an identity crisis. He lives his whole life based on his own expectations of
black men.
Joe Christmas induces pain on himself by fighting with white men and black men. Christmas teases
white men into calling him "nigger" and black men into calling him white. He fights, and is
sometimes beaten. Christmas hurts himself in order to find out if he belongs in a distinct category.
The label of "nigger" affects the way he lives his life. The way he lives his life affects the society
around him as he vents his frustration and confusion on others.
The racial expectations of Joe Christmas also includes sexual expectations. Black men were
expected to be vigorous in bed. They were also expected to be violently passionate. Physically,
black men were expected to be more powerful and more developed. When
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Examples Of Sexism In Their Eyes Were Watching God
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston in 1937 was written during the time of the
Harlem Renaissance, also known as the New Negro Movement. The New Negro Movement came
about as a rejection of the racial segregation between blacks and whites. The black women felt this
effect of racism more acutely than the black man. For centuries, Black women have been called the
"mule of the world" and had been giving the status of inferior to white and the black man. Their
Eyes Were Watching God encloses many elements of both racism and sexism. It is a story set in
central and southern Florida. It follows the novels protagonist Janie in her search for self–awareness
as she goes through three marriages. Elizabeth A. Meese has argued that one of ... Show more
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When Janie is about sixteen her grandmother finds her in the act of kissing a boy, and afraid for
Janie, she arranges for Janie to be married to Logan Killicks, who is an older man with vast property
to his name. Nanny, as Janie calls her, is unable to wrap her mind around the idea of marrying for
love and mocks Janie saying, "So you don't want to marry off decent like, do yuh? You just wants to
hug and kiss and feel around with first one man and then another, huh?" (Their Eyes Are Watching
God, 13). Her grandmothers' gift of life is different from the life that Janie wants to live. She tells
Janie, "De nigger woman is de mule uh de world so fur as Ah can see.'" (Their Eyes Are Watching
God, 11). Nanny doesn't believe that trying to find love and make a better life for you will succeed,
she tells Janie that marrying and older man with land to his name will bring security, and she
shouldn't want more than that. Because of this Janie agrees and goes along with the plan. She is
depicted as very compliant and rarely speaks her mind, even saying "But Ah hates disagreement and
confusion, so Ah better not talk. It makes it hard tuh git along" (Their Eyes Were Watching God,
90).
Later on after her first marriage has ended we can see that she eventually overcomes her desire to
avoid confusion in her second marriage to Joe, after he has humiliated
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A Short Story : A Stormy-A Narrative Story
It was a cold stormy winter's day In England. Joe was sitting by the fireplace with hot chocolate in
his hand and a blanket wrapped around him whilst watching t.v. "It's like a snowglobe out there" Joe
said. "Sure is sweetie! why don't you go get your snowsuit on and play in the snow with your little
sister." Said Joe's mom. "Okay. Just where is my snowsuit? NEVER MIND FOUND IT!" Joe
shouted across the room. So Joe went outside to see his sister nowhere to be seen. So Joe started to
remember that his sister wanted to see Santa at the mall. So then we was off! "Okay so where is this
"Santa thing," umm... OH! there it is!" Joe then found his sister standing in line to go see him. Joe
then ran over there to bring his sister back home. "Blake! what were you thinking? you can't just run
away from home, and how did you get the money?" Joe said with confusion and anger. "Sorry Joe I
really am sorry, also I stole the money from your room." said Blake. "Gah" Joe said. So then Joe and
Blake were almost out of the mall doors until some guy called Blake over. So of course Blake went.
Joe didn't realize until he got home. "Blake!" Joe screamed as he was in shock. Joe then had to go
back to the mall, but of course it snowed even more so he had his mom drive him to the mall which
would be extra help for him looking for Blake. Joe then remembered that she wanted to see "Santa"
So Joe and his mom ran over there but she was nowhere to be seen. They then called mall security
to go help
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A Story Of A Short Story
"Nico!" Joe called out. It was getting pretty close to midnight and the boy was nowhere to be found.
"I knew he would get himself lost!" Mari exclaimed. "We should just head back to camp, I'm sure
he's not dumb enough to get eaten or something. Plus, my boots are getting dirty." Adrien said as he
ran his fingers through his hair. "It's getting really late, Joe. I promise we'll look first thing in the
morning if he doesn't come back." Mari said as she glanced at her phone to see if Nico had
responded to her spam of texts. "Ok, fine. Whatever." Joe said dejectedly. "I know Nico is your best
friend, but let's just go before something happens to us." Adrien retorted. The group started their trek
back to camp. A chill went down Joe's spine. He never wanted to come to this forest in the first
place. 'It's called Man–Eater Forest for God's sake!' Joe said to his friends the day before. They were
only going to spend one night. That was until Nico had gone missing. They were going to leave this
afternoon, but Nico never returned from his morning hike. We asked him if we could join, but he
said he wanted go alone. Joe looked up at the sky. It was a full moon tonight. Something in the
venerate seemed to be following them. Joe's mind drifted off to try to calm himself. He started
thinking about his friends. Mari and Adrien. They were a pair, if one of them had gone missing, God
knows what the other would have done. Nico and him were the same way. Nico and him were like
brothers.
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The Lottery By Shirley Jackson: A Literary Analysis
In a span of two hours, in a village no more than about three hundred people, one simple black dot
can separate a family. Scratch off tickets in the United States have been around since the 1970s,
which everyone wishes to win. Although, in the story, The Lottery, by Shirley Jackson, no one
desires to win the lottery. Jackson reveals an idea that the society continues to allow a ritual to
dictate their lives. The idea that a tradition dictates a villages life can be recognized through Joe
Summers', Old Man Warner's, and Tessie Hutchinson's dialogue throughout the story. Joe Summers,
the villager's coal businessman, expresses an idea that continuing the ritual is important, even
though multiple aspects of the culture have been forgotten. Preserving the culture allows the village
to function as their ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Despite the fact, Tessie Hutchinson embodies the idea that tradition is cruel, "it was not fair, I think
we ought to start over" because her husband won the lottery. Today, countless families would be
thrilled to win the lottery; however; back in this time, no one desired to win. As despair builds up
within the Hutchison's family, everyone in the village relaxes as a result of escaping the tradition for
another year. The Hutchinson children beam with happiness after not receiving the black dot on
their paper. Although the children did not receive the dot, Mrs. Hutchinson pleads to Mr. Summers
"it isn't fair" considering she drew the black dot. Mrs. Hutchinson's dialogue indicates the central
idea that tradition can dictate someone's life based on the unpredictable slip of paper. Tessie cannot
overlook the simple fact that a black dot decides her destiny. Shirley Jackson expresses the idea of
cruelty by continuing the tradition through Tessie Hutchinson's
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Sankofa Identity Essay
In his 1993 independent film Sankofa, Haile Gerima worked to dispel Hollywood's negative
stereotypes and interpretations of the "black experience." Gerima's consciousness of American race
divide and prejudice helped him create some of the themes in Sankofa, the biggest being African
American's self–identity. Gerima saw that in the United States, a person's place in society was based
on the color of his or her skin, thus creating a negative relationship between African American's and
their identities. Gerima explores the theme of black self–identity in Sankofa through three
characters, Mona, Nunu, and Joe, using each one to show how the different levels of awareness of
African culture can affect a person's life.
Gerima uses the character ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Nunu is a slave, who unlike Shola, is not born into slavery, but rather taken from Africa and forced
into slavery. This gives Nunu a different belief about her identity than Mona. Nunu is a proud
African woman who wants to go back to Africa. On the plantation, she is seen as the spiritual center
because she is still spiritually connected to her homeland. On the plantation, Nunu tells African
stories to Shola and the other slaves, and even says that someday they will "fly in the air and be
home." Nunu's character is Gerima's way of showing the importance of knowing and being proud of
ones identity. Despite being taken from her home, raped, and forced into slavery, Nunu never forgets
who she is and where she comes from, something many Africans, both then and now, forgot. Gerima
included Nunu in Sankofa to show to African American viewers, both young and old, the
importance of always remembering where their African heritage. Gerima argues that because his
"place in American society" is defined by skin color and that Hollywood makes African Americans
out to be "the other," Africans not only need to be aware of their heritage, but also embrace and be
proud of
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Their Eyes Were Watching God: Jealousy
Their Eyes Were Watching God written by Zora Neale Hurston is about the life of Janie Crawford, a
girl of mixed race, trying to find true love. The novel talks about how she growths emotionally and
matures through different marriages. Janie's first marriage is planned by Janie's grandmother AKA
Nanny with good intensions to a farmer by the name pf Logan Killicks. Unfortunately, Nanny's
arrange marriage doesn't go to well. Janie becomes annoyed with Logan even though he is reliable
he has no inspirations. Logan is also abusive, he threatens to kill her when she does not obeying
him. Janie divorces Logan for Joe Starks a confident, high class man. Joe moves Janie to Eatonville,
Florida, which is America's first all–black city. There she lives a wealthy life as the wife of the
mayor. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In their relationship, they both experience their times of jealousy, but by working in the Everglades
Janie and Tea Cake find mutual joy. A hurricane comes, Tea Cake is given plenty of warnings and
even an opportunity to flee, but instead he chooses to stay. While trying to get away from the storm,
Tea Cake saves Janie from a dog but gets himself bitten instead. Tea Cake gets rabies from the bite,
and develops an aggressive behavior over Janie. At the end, Janie has shoot Tea Cake to save
herself. She's is then accused for murder, but found innocent. After Tea Cake's funeral, Janie returns
home to Eatonville. She cannot bear to remain in the Everglades because all the memories that
remind her of the love of her life. Once is Eatonville she meets up with an old friend, Pheoby
Watson, and tells her the whole story of her life. Thus, the story, which actually spans nearly 40
years of Janie's life, is "framed" by an evening visit between two friends. This frame becomes the
first part of the structure of the novel. The rest of the story is told chronologically in order of Janie's
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14 Year Olds-Personal Narrative
One stormy dark night me and 3 of my friends were about to the unthinkable for a bunch of 14 year
olds. My friend Dave was wearing a black shirt with a black beanie black pants and a backpack
filled with things we were gonna need for what we were about to do. My other friend joe was
wearing the same thing as Dave. And my other friend Zane was wearing the same thing as Dave and
Joe. we all pretty much wearing the same thing.
There was a reason for wearing all black. It's because their was no trespassing on the property so
that way if the cops came driving around near the house we could easily hide. We were about to step
foot on the most frightful house of all time.
We were gonna go into the old fowler house. It was supposedly haunted by one of the old fowler
residents. the house was over 100 years old so we had no problem believing that the house was
haunted.The house was hidden in the forest behind the dancing trees. As we approached the front
door of the house we immediately heard a loud thud coming from inside the house. My friends
jumped as we heard the loud noise.
I was the brave one out of the group. I turned the doorknob to the front door so we could enter. I
could tell my friends were hesitant about going in the house. We heard another thud from upstairs. It
almost sounded as if ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
We all darted up the stairs as fast as we could. I had never seen joe run so fast in my life.we tried all
the upstairs Windows we even attempted the bathroom window but they were all locked. We looked
for a back door but there was none. But I had an idea I always kept a bobby pin cause of an incident
I had were my family was on vacation and I was stuck in the bathroom. My idea was to try to pick
the lock with the Bobby Pin. We snuck across the creaky floor straight to the front donor.I tried my
idea but then I remembered that I'm not very good with picking locks. I've only done it once before.
The Bobby pin broke
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Sunset Blvd Analysis
From coloring and lighting to music direction and the score, there are many ways for a film's story
to be told. Film noir mirrors its detective pulp book predecessors, where a strong narrative character
is key and the protagonist walks a fine line between hero and villain. The use of voice over, black
and white film, and evocative lighting techniques define the style we know today. Modern films,
such as The Artist (2011) and Sin City (2005), attempt to incorporate these creative devices, but
unlike their predecessors, these techniques don't support and further thematic developments. In
director/screenwriter Billy Wilder's classic features, Double Indemnity (1944) and Sunset Blvd.
(1950), use of voice over narrative, as well of the choice to ... Show more content on
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The ability to color film has been around since the 1920s and in 1939, films like Gone With The
Wind (1939) and The Wizard Of Oz (1939) utilized these processes to create a film spectacle. Film
noir translates to "dark film" and Sunset Blvd. and Double Indemnity fit that both physically and
thematically. The use of black and white film blurs the lines between good and evil. Without the use
of color to easily distinguish the villains from the heroes, we are unsure of who we can and cannot
trust. The lack of color allows the viewer to focus on content and forces them to concentrate on what
is on screen. It is easier to make color look good on film, as it requires less work. It is much harder
to make color associate with the story. Black and white film requires the skill of balance between
dark and light in a scene. When done correctly, it can become a character of its own, helping breath
life into sets such as Norma's immense mansion. Both films exaggerate the use of shadows giving
the feel of a horror film. Lighting does more than draw focus on a character. It can be used to
showcase the deceitfulness of a character and highlight their sinister deeds. Lighting can hide the
truth from the audience and shroud the plot in mystery. In Sunset Blvd., Norma is shown in the
shadows while she is in her home. During the famous "We had
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Colored People in Jazz by Toni Morrison
Toni Morrison chose the title Jazz of this book because jazz symbolize increasing complex styles
and that fits in the title because of the parts that happened throughout the story. It also symbolizes
movement because jazz is fast pace music and fast dancing so that is another reason why Toni
Morrison picked the title of this book. It was a lot of movement in the book with some of the main
characters in the story and their movement was fast just like jazz. I believe she also picked this title
because jazz also means honest, benevolent, brilliant, and full of high inspirations and that is what
some of the characters showed in the story. The meaning jazz can also tie into the story because
some of them showed a control over others affairs. The sitting and genre of this novel takes place in
Virginia during the Harlem Renaissance in the early mid 1900's. Basically most of the events in the
story took place on a street called Lenox Ave. I can tell that this street of Virginia has a lot of
excitement and is always busy. Everybody knows everyone business. The people in Virginia very
friendly too during this time period. One of the main characters have a lot of friends that she can go
to for information about people around the neighborhood. Just like any other television show or
movie from the early 1900s in the black neighborhoods every female can always go to the beauty
shop to get the latest dirt on people in town. My idea about the first main character
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Keith Dubois Double Consciousness Essay
Before Du Bois brought the term "double consciousness" to light, there was no way to describe such
an unspoken phenomenon. In W.E.B. Du Bois' The Souls of Black Folk (1903) he introduces and
describes how African Americans and their history have been shaped by the state of living in and
wanting to overcome double consciousness. Du Bois perfectly describes double consciousness in
African Americans as living behind a veil. The veil is bittersweet and produces a "second–sight" in
America. From one perspective, the veil is a curse. On the contrast, it is what has made African
Americans what they are today. In Du Bois' own words, double consciousness is a "sense of always
looking at one 's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one 's ... Show more content on
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His impromptu face and demeanor are now permanent, and his only option to be slightly
comfortable around ignorant white coworkers. Himes gives the idea that everything a colored man
does revolves around have a double conscious. Keith Richards is married to twenty–three year old
Clara. Clara and Richards are deeply in love but the relationship is already hanging by a thread.
Himes comments "If I really loved, baby, I would blow out your brains. Right now! Because all you
can ever look forward to, baby, is never having anything you ever dream about." (Himes, 26) This is
how detrimental the psychological effects are in Richards. At this point in the story Richards can
almost be labeled as a pessimist with such an amount of stunning and depressing statements. Himes
ends this short–story with an optimistic thought of his pride being priceless with him working for
the Army. The value of his pride, and being prepared to do anything to keep it is what brought Keith
Richards thus far. Dick, a nicknamed he'd have for years, in "Headwaiter" is exactly that. This
restaurant Dick works in, is inside of a high scale hotel that houses mainly upper class white
families. In comparison to Keith Richards, Dick has more of an understanding in his struggles with
having a double conscious. He knew discrimination, he took it in, and understood it. He knew he
had a double conscious and used it for his own gain. That was one side of Dicks' veil, being able to
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Gender Stereotypes In The Film Philadelphia
Question #3 In the movie Philadelphia, Andy's dismissal from the law firm was primarily based on
fear. The members of the firm held several assumptions, the first being that all homosexual men are
attracted to every man they come into contact with. The members of the firm realized in retrospect
that they spent a lot of personal time with Andy, including moments in the steam room, in which
members even exchanged homophobic jokes. This issue was aggressively addressed during Andy's
trial. His lawyer, Joe Miller, confronted the jurors and defendants assumptions about gay men by
asking about their sexual preference. Other stereotypes portrayed in the movie that attributed to
Andy's dismissal were in regards to HIV/AIDS. As discussed in class, the movie was indicative of
the early years after AIDS was discovered. Inconsistencies with how the disease was spread, and
who most susceptible, generated a distrustful and guarded population. After Andy's fellow firm
members recognized his lesions, he was promptly distanced physically (as seen in the board room
firing). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He was also very uncomfortable around gay men, and openly admitted to his homophobia. His
discomfort was visible during the first several meetings with Andy. I believe that he chose to accept
Andy's case because, as a small time black lawyer, he must have felt compelled to rise up against
injustice by this powerful firm comprised of all white men. His decision to support Andy's case was
initially based on principle of wrong doing, that is, dismissal due to discrimination, which he no
doubt was subject to in his personal life and career. While it was difficult for him to embrace this
case, knowing that it may be an unpopular decision, Joe eventually learned that Andy is a person,
just like anyone else. Despite Andy's ailments, and lifestyle, Joe got acquainted to his personality,
jokes, good nature, humor, and his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Hall Of Justice Analysis
During the conversation between Joe and Louis in Act II, Scene 7, Joe explains that the day before,
he accidentally showed up for work at the Hall of Justice on a Sunday. Due to the fact that the Hall
is closed on Sundays, Joe arrived to discover a deserted courthouse and panicked, thinking, "The
whole Hall of Justice, it's empty, it's deserted, it's gone out of business. Forever" (Kushner 78).
Although it was deserted simply due to the fact that it was Sunday, the empty Hall of Justice
symbolizes freedom. Specifically, this can be seen when Joe states, "It would be...heartless terror.
Yes. Terrible, and...Very great. To shed your skin, every old skin, one by one and then walk away,
unencumbered, into the morning" (Kushner 78–79). This shows that an empty Hall of Justice would
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In turn, individuals would then have the freedom to determine their own beliefs regarding justice.
This can be seen when Joe states, "I just wondered what a thing it would be...if overnight everything
you owe anything to, justice, or love, had really gone away. Free" (Kushner 78), which again shows
that an empty Hall of Justice symbolizes freedom from both the Hall and the idea of justice itself.
Aside from this point in the play, the subject of justice had been brought up twice before.
Immediately preceding Joe's description of an empty Hall of Justice, in Act II, Scene 6, Joe had
struggled with the concepts of justice and ethics when contemplating accepting the job offer Roy
had provided him with. Specifically, Roy obtained the opportunity to join the Justice Department in
Washington, D.C. in order to help prevent Roy from becoming disbarred. Upon realizing this, Joe
proclaims, "Even if I said yes to the job, it would be illegal to interfere. With the hearings. It's
unethical. No. I can't" (Kushner 73), realizing that accepting the job opportunity would make him
obligated to act unjustly according to the law and ethics. In response, Roy argues, "I must have eyes
in
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We Will Pay You Langston Hughes Analysis
Langston Hughes, a writer during the Harlem Renaissance, argued that "the Negro artist works
against an undertow of sharp criticism and misunderstanding from his own group and unintentional
bribes from the whites. 'Oh, be respectable, write about nice people, show how good we are,' say the
Negroes. 'Be stereotyped, don't go too far, don't shatter our illusions about you, don't amuse us too
seriously. We will pay you,' say the whites." Hughes then writes in response to these pressures that
"... it is the duty of the younger Negro artist ... to change through the force of his art that old
whispering 'I want to be white,' hidden in the aspirations of his people, to 'Why should I want to be
white? I am a Negro––and beautiful.'" Both black and white ... Show more content on
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However, Hurston's writing also creates a positive perspective on black culture. Hurston describes
the town in the Everglades through the eyes of Janie, writing that "no matter how rough [joking and
teasing] was, people seldom got mad, because everything was done for a laugh", and "everybody
loved to hear Ed Dockery, Bootyny, and Sop–de–Bottom in a skin game" (134). Rather than
showing the town's lack of seriousness in a negative way, Hurston depicts the town as full of
"laughter," "love," and lighthearted games. The characters of Ed Dockery, Bootyny, and Sop–de–
Bottom live in the Everglades with Janie and Tea Cake and are a central part of the community.
Even though the Everglades town is stereotypically black, Hurston presents this town and its
blackness in a positive light. In addition, Janie is accepted quickly by the town; she can "listen and
laugh and even talk some if she wanted to" and can "tell big stories herself from listening to the
rest" (134). In Eatonville, whose African–American residents act less stereotypically "black" and
pretentiously try to emulate white people, Janie is unable to assimilate in such a community.
However, the more stereotypically black town in the Everglades is much more accepting towards
Janie. By presenting the culture of the Everglades in a favorable way from Janie's point of view,
Hurston shows pride for conventional black culture. The town in the Everglades is also illustrated as
lively and jubilant; specifically, nights in the town have "pianos living three lifetimes in one", "blues
made and used right on the spot", "dancing, fighting, singing, crying, laughing, winning and losing
love every hour". The town's residents "work all day for money, fight all night for love", and "the
rich black earth cling[s] to bodies and bit[es]
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What Is Janie Wrong
Throughout the whole book Janie was with black people that treated her wrong and did her bad.
They always had Janie doing what they wanted her to do she could never do what she wanted she
might have thought she was but she wasn't doing it. Everyone she was with all had a special reason
for her to be around. All of them always thought they knew what was best for her. They never once
stopped and tried letting her decide the things she wanted to do. The whites are not the ones holding
the black folks back us holding our own selves back. It actually all started when Janie was little and
she went to the black elementary school all the other black kids envy her because she came to
school with nice clothes. Also the little kids would pick on her and tease her because her hair would
always be done with pretty little bows in her head. Janie didn't do anything to the kids for them to
treat her like that. Janie wasn't going around acting better than the rest of the kids they just envy her
because she had better things then the rest. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Kellicks because "Nanny" felt that it was only best for Janie. She wanted Janie to marry him for
protection and for all the nice things the old man had. Janie was miserable being married to this
man. She thought she was going to fall in love with him because they were married but that didn't
happen. She didn't like the way he skin was she talked about how his fat neck would be all over her
when he try to lay up on Janie. She eventually ran off leaving him heartbroken. All this could've
have been eliminated if Nanny had of never forced that marriage. That's one black person that done
caused two blacks to be held back they could've been moved on with their
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Slavery and White Slave Master
Sankofa, according to Africa folklore was the protector of the African American people. He used his
drums to combat the evil spirits present among the world. The movie Sankofa portrays slavery in
Lafayette with some of the most gruesome and shocking moments I have ever laid eyes on. During
this movie there are many other subplots that occur but the ultimate goal for the slaves in Lafayette
is a better life. A life not directed by a White Slave–owner. They sought and enacted ways that they
could achieve one goal: freedom. Sankofa starts of with Shola, the main character of the movie
working under a number of slave–owners. She has a mutual friend by the name of Shongo who is
the verbal leader of the slaves but also Shola's foundation of ... Show more content on
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This was almost a turning point in Ali's view of how the white man viewed the blacks. They were
nothing but "Niggers". Eventually Nunu's promise she made was fulfilled as she couldn't be bought
from the white slave owner. She was deemed too old to be sold or bought any more. The story now
focuses on Joe who was taught to believe that blacks were inherently evil. Joe always went to a
preacher, albeit a corrupt one, to confess his sins and the preacher would constantly remind him that
his own mother was evil and he should not associate with her. Joe was at a crossroads mentally, he
felt more privileged than the other slaves because he was half white. He believed that the white man
saw him as being better as the pure breed blacks. He had been corrupted by the white community
and church. All these feelings and angst came to a head when a woman who was madly in love with
Joe gave him a love potion of sorts. Joe then started to gag and choke. He had always believed that
his fellow brethren were plotting to poison him. Joe then went to a river in an attempt to stop the
gagging and choking. His mother then comes to save her child and successfully accomplishes this
feat. Then something comes over Joe, it seems like he is possessed for a five minute span. He tells
Nunu with a passionate tone that she is evil that she wants him to die. Nunu responds telling Joe that
she could have let him die in the river but, as her son, she did
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Toxic Traditions In The Lottery
Toxic Traditions
Tradition is not always the best thing, despite what most people might think. In the story 'The
Lottery' we have an example of a toxic tradition. A toxic tradition would be something that has been
passed on from generation to generation, and the meaning of this tradition is then lost over the
years. 'The Lottery' explores the topics of tradition, rebelling against the system, and mob mentality.
The way the story is written is meant to shock the reader when they realize what it means to win the
lottery. The reader is an outsider to the town and can see what's wrong about the whole tradition,
despite the blindness of the townspeople.
In 'The Lottery,' we see a small town that follows tradition a little too closely. The tradition ... Show
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However, when she is introduced, it's almost as if she's being set apart from the other citizens. She
arrives late, and is more lighthearted than the others, joking with Joe Summers. His response is
almost foreshadowing the ending, saying "Thought we were going to have to get on without you,
Tessie." (par. 9) The opposition to the lottery in the play is quite obvious compared to the silent
resignation of Tessie in the short story. In the play, the stage directions help to show how
uncomfortable Tessie truly is with the lottery. "Tessie: (with forced pleasantness) Wouldn't have me
leave my dishes in the sink, would you Joe?" (page 111) This line shows that Tessie does not want
any part in the lottery. The play also shows Bill Hutchison taking Tessie aside and confronting her
about hiding Dave. This action shows how seriously he, and probably many of the other people in
town, take the lottery compared to Tessie's passive rebellion. In the play there is also the character
Belva Summers, who outright opposes the lottery. She calls the lottery a "heathen custom" (page
108) Joe and Belva blame each other for their brother leaving town. Belva blames Joe for it, because
he organizes the lottery, and Joe blames Belva for it, because she's the one who turned their brother
around and made him oppose the lottery. They do not seem to have a very good relationship because
of this conflict. Belva seems to believe
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Zora Neale Hurston Spunk Essay
Throughout history, everyone in the world has had to stick up for themselves at one point, no matter
the situation. "Spunk" by Zora Neale Hurston was written and published in 1925, this story
exemplifies the importance of sticking up for yourself. It was only the third short story Hurston
wrote, but it prospered. Zora Neale is best known for her works, Their Eyes Were Watching God and
Dust Tracks on a Road, both published in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was an African
American activist during the Harlem Renaissance who often focused on the African American
culture and experiences. Zora Neale Hurston was born in a small town, Eatonville, Florida, which
was one of the first all–black unified communities, her hometown influenced many of her works.
Hurston enjoys writing about anthropology, particularly, African American culture. The short story
is about a woman named Lena who is cheating on her husband, Joe ... Show more content on
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She does not care about her husband's feelings" ("Spunk"). Lena is a selfish woman who could care
less about her husband Joe. Everyone in town knows that Lena is having an affair, but nobody does
anything about it, including her husband; because they are all afraid of Spunk Banks. "A giant of a
brown–skinned man sauntered up the one street of the Village and out into the palmetto thickets
with a small pretty woman clinging lovingly to his arm" (Hurston). This expression conveys
feelings of intimacy because they are in public, but are not afraid to show affection towards one
another although Lena is married. The couple walks around the village with one another because
they do not care what others think of them. This topic builds the gossip in the small village, where
everyone is talking about this affair going on between Spunk and Lena. The idea of ignorance
repeats when Lena is unmindful to her husband Joe's feelings as she walks around with another
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of Joe Turner 's Come And Gone
Nothing takes away the dignity and self–respect of individuals like stripping them of their human
characteristics and viewing them as property instead of people. The quickest way to make someone
lose his or her direction in life is to destroy the identity he or she worked hard to forge. Through his
use of symbolism and indirect characterization, August Wilson establishes his theme that finding
and maintaining one's identity is important in life.
The title Joe Turner's Come and Gone refers to Joe Turney, the brother of former Tennessee
Governor Peter Turney. In the late 19th Century, Joe Turney was responsible for transporting black
prisoners from Memphis to the Tennessee State Penitentiary, located in Nashville. However, he
would often ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
'Cause you forgot how to sing your song" (II, ii, 68). According to Bynum, an individual's song is
synonymous with his or her identity. This is seen on a historical level, when one considers the
detrimental impact Joe Turner's chain gangs had on individuals: he broke each member until they
had all forgotten who they were. The loss of individual identity may allude to the fact that members
of a chain gang had to work together because they were chained together; they were no longer
viewed as individuals but were considered a unit. When viewed as a symbol for oppression, Joe
Turner exceeds chain gangs and is found in every level of the lives of African–Americans; he is the
reason men like Seth are unable to further their businesses, he is the reason police officers abuse
their power and arrest innocent black men like Jeremy, and he is the reason families like the Loomis'
fall apart. On a metaphorical level, the loss of identity could refer to the loss of one's self in the
sense of the values one holds dear. Regardless of the dimension in which the loss of individuality is
viewed, the central message remains the same: Joe Turner (oppression and the historical figure)
preys on the identity of African–Americans and works hard to destroy it.
Besides symbolism, Wilson uses indirect characterization to describe the different generations that
are present in the play and show how each generation struggles to find and
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Their Eyes Were Watching God Marriage
In the beginning of Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, Janie, the main
character, struggles to find what the true meaning the word "love" is until her last marriage. Janie
marries three times throughout the novel. With three different men at three different ages, she
encounters three new perspectives. Janie suffered two unhappy marriages before she could find her
true love.
The day Nanny catches Janie kissing a boy, she demands her to marry immediately due to her
personal experiences as a slave. Nanny arranges the marriage to be with Logan Killicks, an old, ugly
man, for security and because he is financially stable. Logan's looks and unromantic ways made
made her think she that she's nothing but a helping hand. Janie states,
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How Does Pip Change Throughout The Novel
Change is a constant presence everyday and everywhere. Time goes by and everything changes to
what it was to what it is. Mountains turn to pebbles. Nature changes to survive. People's'
experiences change them for the better or for the worse. From the beginning of Great Expectations
to its end, all of Pip's experiences and hardships shape him from a little boy naive to the reality of
the world to a man of virtue. In part one of Great Expectations, Pip is shown to be a naive child who
leads a miserable existence, which is evident on the way he acts, the way he thinks, and the way he
views the world around him. Pip uses really negative, bleak and dark words and phrases to describe
the marshes, such as using "long black horizontal line" to describe ... Show more content on
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In the third part of Great Expectations, Pip learns the meaning of loyalty from Magwitch and from
Joe. When Magwitch introduces himself as Pip's benefactor, Pip is horrified, but Magwitch shows
Pip the meaning of loyalty with his full belief that Pip would become a gentleman. It wasn't until
Magwitch died that Pip understood what exactly loyalty was and that understanding made him
realize just how horrible a person he had been to everybody around him, especially Joe and Biddy.
When Pip becomes sick and Joe comes to London to care for him, Pip says, "Oh, Joe, you break my
heart! Look angry at me, Joe. Strike me, Joe. Tell me of my ingratitude. Don't be so good to me!"
(Dickens 493). The quote shows that Pip understands how arrogant and insulting he had been to Joe
and Biddy all those years ago and just how loyal and kind Joe had been to him his entire life.
Despite asking for punishment from Joe, Joe doesn't do anything but hug him out of joy and by
doing so demonstrates his loyalty to Pip even more. Magwitch's and Joe's displays of loyalty to Pip
push him to change one final time and he matures into a hard–working and virtuous
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Janie's Commentary In Their Eyes Were Watching God
Their eyes were watching god
Evidence Commentary
When Janie is returning home the women judge her for wearing overalls and expect her to find a
dress to put on (2 Hurston).
The women's comments on Janie's overalls show how were expected to look pretty and dress a
certain way.
Us lived dere havin' fun till de chillun at school got to teasin' me 'bout livin' in de white folks' back–
yard.
Because Janie lived with white people and was dressed nicely by her caretakers. The white children
did not like to see a black person have any sort of success so they bullied her.
When Janie is looking at a photograph of herself she doesn't recognize herself because she doesn't
realize that she ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This shows how even other women held sexist views for other women and that women were viewed
as helpless beings that could not protect themselves.
"You behind a plow! You ain't got no mo' business wid uh plow than uh hog is got wid uh holiday!
You ain't got no business cuttin' up no seed p'taters neither. A pretty dollbaby lak you is made to sit
on de front porch and rock and fan yo'self and eat p'taters dat other folks plant just special for you."
( Hurston 34)
Unlike Janie's husband Joe doesn't believe that she should be doing manual labor. Joe's beliefs show
that there are several views about what a woman's role in the household should be.This may be
because Joe Starks seems to be wealthier than Logan and may not need a woman to help with labor.
"They was all cheerin' and cryin' and shoutin' for de men dat was ridin' off. Ah couldn't see nothin'
cause yo' mama wasn't but a week old, and Ah was flat uh mah back. But pretty soon he let on he
forgot somethin' and run into mah cabin and made me let down mah hair for de last time (Hurston
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Searching for an Inner-Self in Their Eyes Were Watching...
Searching for an Inner–Self in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston a young girl named Janie
begins her life unknown to herself. She searches for the horizon as it illustrates the distance one
must travel in order to distinguish between illusion and reality, dream and truth, role and self?
(Hemenway 75). She is unaware of life?s two most precious gifts: love and the truth. Janie is raised
by her suppressive grandmother who diminishes her view of life. Janie?s quest for true identity
emerges from her paths in life and ultimatly ends when her mind is freed from mistaken reality.
Failing to recognize herself as the one black child in a photograph, ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
As a child, raised by Nanny, Janie was guided by the unreal allusion of what life is made up of.
When Janie was about sixteen, she spent a spring afternoon under a blossoming tree in Nanny?s
yard. Here she comes to the realization that something is missing in her life? sexual ecstasy. The
blooms, the new leaves and the virgin– like spring came to life all around her. She wondered when
and where she might find such an ecstasy herself. According to Hurston, Nanny finds Janie kissing a
boy named Johnny Taylor and her ?head and face looked like the standing roots of some old tree
that had been torn away by storm? (12) . Nanny can think of no better way to protect Janie than by
marrying her to a middle–aged black farmer whose prosperity makes it unnecessary for him to use
her as a ?mule? (Bush 1036).
Nanny makes Janie believe that marriage makes love and forces her to wed a much older man,
Logan Killicks. Jones believes that Janie?s first efforts at marriage show her as an ?enslaved and
semi–literate? figure restrained to Nanny?s traditional beliefs about money, happiness and love
(372). Unfortunately Janie?s dream of escasty does not involve Killicks. Her first dream is dead.
Janie utters, ?Ah wants things sweet wid mah marriage lak when you sit under a pear tree and think?
(Hurston 23). Logan began to slap Janie for control over
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
"Shoeless" Joseph Jefferson Jackson Essay
Born on July 16, 1887 in Pickens County, South Carolina, "Shoeless" Joseph Jefferson Jackson is
frequently regarded as one of the best baseball players of all time. Joe's career as a baseball player
was punctuated with a (then) all time high batting average of .356 (currently the third highest
batting average on record); "Shoeless Joe's" influence was so substantial that baseball legend Babe
Ruth ""... copied ["Shoeless" Joe] Jackson's style because [he] thought ["Shoeless" Joe] was the
greatest hitter [He] had ever seen...". Though his name was obscured by the "Black Socks" scandal
of 1920, Joe Jackson managed to surmount his inferior circumstances, chief among which were
poverty and illiteracy, to be considered a Baseball Legend. Due to ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
By 1905, his experience playing baseball in the Mills would earn the eighteen year old Joe enough
of a name to be hired by the Green–ville Spinners of the Carolina Association. After a brief stint
with the Spinners, Connie Mack of the Philadelphia Athletics drafted "Shoeless" to play on his
team. It wasn't until 1911 when Joe Jackson signed with the pelicans that he completed his first full
season, setting a record .408 batting average for any other rookie to date. "Shoeless" Joe's need to
support his family with what little money he could scrounge through various means opened a career
opportunity for him to excel in baseball. Shoeless Joe traversed a long way from the vicinity of
poverty, evolving into a famous figure in the field of baseball. Quite clearly, "Shoeless" Joe's
involvement with the Mill Baseball teams allowed him to acquire an interest in baseball in the first
place. However, to pursue both wealth and his interests, Jackson needed to make sacrifices, in this
instance, he sacrificed literacy. Later on in his life, "Shoeless" "...[Reckoned he would] live up [in
the north] all the time" "If all [his] business interests were not down South..."(Shoeless Joe and
Ragtime Baseball, 68). Jackson's illiteracy proved to be a mild inhibition, which "Shoeless" Joe
would attempt to mask by "reading" his menus and ordering based on what other people in the
restaurant ordered. This
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Their Eyes Were Watching God Analysis
Zora Neale Hurston was born in Alabama on January 7, 1891. "In 1937, she published her
masterwork of fiction, Their Eyes Were Watching God (A&E Television Networks 2). Zora was a
very energetic woman, she was so eager to learn even though she didn't finish high school, but she
prepared for college and got accepted to Howard University. She published her book Their Eyes
Were Watching God, the story of a young girl named Janie looking for love and happiness in the
south. "The book was criticized at the time, especially by black male writers, who condemned
Hurston for not taking a political stand and demonstrating the ill effects of racism"(History 3). Zora
was a very talented woman, she was given the scholarship to study anthropology at Barnard
College, she became the school's first known African American graduate in 1928. "Anthropologist
and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston was the most prolific Black woman writer in the USA between
1920 and 1950; the foremother of a generation of African–American women writers, she captured
and celebrated the culture of rural Black America in her novels, stories and essays"(Horsley 1). In
her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, she uses symbolism to demonstrate Janie's self–
discovery.
Logan Killicks is a symbol of a beginning to Janie's self–discovery. He's an old, wealthy farmer that
becomes a part of Janie's life. She marries him not because she's deeply in love with him, but
because her nanny forces her to. Nanny arranges their wedding not
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Life and Music of Stephen Foster
Stephen Collins Foster was born on July 4, 1826 by the Allegheny River in Lawrenceville, PA.
Stephen was not a big fan of school, instead he preferred to indulge himself in music rather than
other subjects. Stephen was tutored and then went to private academies in Pittsburgh and north–
central Pennsylvania. He eventually became a well educated person for his day. Stephen was also
very literate in music. It is said that he received his formal music training from a German
immigrant, Henry Kleber. Henry Kleber was very accomplished and versatile and would eventually
have a major influence on the musical life of Pittsburgh. As a teen, Stephen hung out with other
teens from some of Pittsburgh's most respectable families. Stephen was also a part of an all–male
secret club called the Knights of the S.T. With his brother Morrison and his close friend, Charles
Shiras. Stephen was their song leader and composer. Stephen published his first song at the age of
18, it was entitled "Open Thy Lattice Love." At the age of 20, Stephen worked at his brother
Dunning's steamship firm in Cincinnati as a bookkeeper. While in Cincinnati Stephen sold some of
his songs and piano pieces to a local publisher. "Oh! Susanna" was his first big hit. He married Jane
Denny MacDowell at the age of 24 and launched his career as a professional songwriter with 12
compositions already in print. Another account of his life says that Stephen composed in a flash of
inspiration, songs that expressed his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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How Does Janie Change In Their Eyes Were Watching God

  • 1. How Does Janie Change In Their Eyes Were Watching God In Chapter 6 of "Their Eyes Were Watching God" Janie's character has shown a significant change in the way her character behaves. Janie has gone from a very independent and self run young women to a submissive wife to Joe Starks. Chapter 5 as well shows the audience how Janie's person has changed from the beginning to Chapter 5 and 6. Janie's responses to Joe's criticism and comments of her and women in general provide additional evidence of Janie's change. For Example, on Page 55 Joe orders Janie to tie up her hair when around the store as seen in the following line, "That night he ordered Janie to tie up her hair around the store." due to him seeing other men admiring her hair and in once instance even touching her hair , but Joe never said ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. The Gem Of The Ocean, Joe Turner 's Come And Gone And The... Myth as a semiological system in August Wilson's Gem of the Ocean, Joe Turner's Come and Gone and The Piano Lesson Abstract Myths are one of the most important elements included in the history of not only African–American lives but also the lives of each and every one of us. Myths are inevitable human resources at times when no other idea justifies our being. As Barthes posits, for it is human history which converts reality into speech, and it alone rules the life and the death of mythical language. Ancient or not, mythology can only have an historical foundation, for myth is a type of speech chosen by history: it cannot possibly evolve from the 'nature ' of things. This study looks into the significance of "Myths" and their determining roles as semiological systems in August Wilson 's dramatic twentieth century cycle plays; Gem of the Ocean, Joe Turner's Come and Gone and The Piano Lesson. In these plays, myths take the forms of individuals, rituals and even ancestral objects. It can be observed that each one of these elements performs the most important role in conveying the significance of the African–American psyche and delicately portrays the eminent influence of ancestral backgrounds in shaping the lives of each character. The works of scholars such as Roland Barthes, Henry Gates, as well as many more, have been employed to better grasp this matter. Key words: Myth, semiological system, African–American psyche, mythical language, ritual Introduction ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Short Essay On The Monster Hunts The house was atop a small old hill. Surrounding the house was a once neatly kept metal fence, now all rusted and covered in overgrown foliage. An old worn gravel pathway lead straight to the door. Weather had taken its toll on the house. The bricks were worn and faded from their original color of red. The door was barely hanging onto its hinges, and the windows were cracked and broken. Jackie and Joe got out of their old black Ford Mustang. Jackie's long blonde hair was tied up in a ponytail. She had on blue jeans, black combat boots,and a brown leather jacket. Jackie immediately ran to the back of their car and opened the trunk. Joe went over to the gate and checked out the place. Joe was wearing his blue jeans, his faded brown leather ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "It smells absolutely awful." " I think that is coming from the basement." Joe replied, also covering his nose with his shirt. "Let's start to make our way down there." Joe said, disgust all over his face. "Joe make sure your weapon is ready, we don't know what will we find down there." Her voice shaking as said it. Chills started to run down her back as she and Joe neared the door to the basement. Joe slowly reached for the door handle. His hand was shaking uncontrollably as he did. Slowly he opened the door as to not alert anything that was down there . The aroma was even stronger. Blood stained the wooden steps leading to basement. The walls had scratches all up and down them. Some even contained what looked like human fingernails sticking out of them.They made their way further down the steps. When they reached the bottom a faint light was coming from a table in the center room. Exposed water pipes lined all the walls. Cobwebs were everywhere. Rats and other small rodents were running around on the blood stained floor. Disappearing and reappearing through little holes in the walls. "This doesn't feel right what so ever." Joe whispered, sweat starting to build up around his forehead. They inched closer to the table. It was draped in a white cloth. A candle was placed in the center of the table. Complete silence filled the room. The only thing able to be heard was Joe and Jackie's faint breathing. Everything else seemed to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Analysis Of The Film ' Sankofa ' Sankofa is an Ankan word which means, "We must go back and reclaim our past in order to move forward ( Diop, 2014)." The film Sankofa was produced in the year 1993 in Ghana directed by Haile Gerima. It is based on the Atlantic slave trade. It is the story slavery from the point of view of Africans. In the film, all characters represent an element of African American culture (Gerima, 1993). It also shows the traditional racial scale with the whites at the top followed by Half–castes in the middle and blacks at the bottom. The film is the story of Mona, who is an African–American woman who is brought back to Africa and finds herself as a slave on the Lafayette sugarcane plantation (Gerima, 1993). In a previous life, she was born on the sugar farm and named Shola. She was caught and sold and transported as a slave in North America. This brings the interplay between the African American identity on one side and the other African identity. The film achieves this through reconstructing the past and history and also through the conception of blackness and race. By looking keenly at the main characters in the movie, one can see the mixed racial architecture that prevailed and that still exists to some extent in the American society. The first character in the film, Shango, is a maroon slave who was brought to the Lafayette sugar plantation from West Indies. He is key figure among the slaves in the plantation and also the leader of the rebellion. Shola, the narrator, is not only ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Their Eyes Were Watching God Book Analysis Their Eyes Were Watching God by Oprah Winfrey alters the novel's story line so much, that Zora Neale Hurston herself is unable to recognize her own story. The novel is a great story about a young woman finding herself, but the movie is made into a love story, which is not what the story was meant to be. The strength in the Characters and their relationships have been changed from the novel, to Oprah Winfrey's movie, which causes heated arguments and characters to do things that they would not do in the novel. Oprah Winfrey purposely took out characters in her movie to remove the black on black racism and placed the typical white man to be racist. Zora Neale Hurston would not understand Oprah Winfrey's movie after reading her book. Their Eyes Were Watching God is a novel Throughout Zora Neale Hurtsons novel, Janie searches to find her inner horizon and the woman that she is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the store Janie is supposed to mess up on cutting the tobacco for a man and Joe has to come and fix it for her, but in the movie Joe was old and shaking and couldn't cut the tobacco so Janie has to go cut it instead."How about cutting me a plug of that fine tobacco you got right there" Joe starts to cut the tobacco, but he starts shaking "I get that for you Sam" (Their Eyes Were Watching God. Harpo Production, 2005). This scene was created to show Janies strength Janie lays with tea Cake after he is in bed with rabies. The doctor tells Janie that he would back in a couple days with the medican that Tea Cake needs in order to help with his sickness, he also while the doctor talks to Tea Cake about him being bit, he tells him to not sleep with Janie. "Just keep Janie out ya bed for a while" (Their Eyes Were Watching God, Harpo Production, 2005). Janie does not listen in the movie like she does in the book, and Tea Cake gets angry and pulls a gun on ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Old Ranger Joe: A Short Story There is an old brown house across the street from mines it is brown, rickety, dilapidated that will fall to pieces with a simple touch of the pinky. Cow webs decorate the house and the windows have been shattered. Some people would say witches, old people, and even fallen celebrities live in that run down house. But no one suspects Old Ranger Joe. Old Ranger Joe a mysterious, quiet man in his mid 50's. He has blue eyes fill with rage and envy; his hard hardy hands could crush a bone with one simple squeeze. His silky golden hair runs with the wind and he has a fairly white complexion. Every night he goes into that house and doesn't come out until everyone has gone to their work or school. As you walk into the house you are greeted with rats ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Religion In August Religion Everyone views religion in their own unique way. Everyone's own unique upbringing and perspective on life help shape their views on religion, and if it's important. In William Faulkner's novel Light in August, the people in the fictional town of Jefferson Mississippi strictly uphold religion and use it to create their social standard. The citizens of Jefferson Mississippi display the stereotypical southern charm, and the various Christian symbols in the novel symbolize how much faith is a part of the life in Jefferson. This feeling of openness and comfort in Jefferson turns superficial when the citizens are forced to appeal to the conventional societal standards. The irony of the situation is the conventional societal standards are contradictory ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... There are many righteous people in religion and a few good–hearted people in the novel, but the hypocrisy in religion is exposed in the chaos and cruelty that the citizens of Jefferson bring upon individuals like Christmas. The harsh and unfair treatment of Christmas corrupts Christmas and limits people in Jefferson from seeing Christmas' intended divinity. The values professed by the religious people of Jefferson, Mississippi do not align with their actions that abandon and separate others in society. The hypocrisy demonstrated by the southern citizens of Jefferson show that the religious standards and expectations that are set are impossible to achieve. The hefty goals, aspirations, and standards that people thought humans could achieve in the romantic era are not able to be achieved today. If humanity can no longer meet religion's standards or recognize a person who represents their savior, what role does religion have in modern life ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. 'Slavery In Ticey's Big Laura' In 1863, previously Ticey, Jane meets a confederate soldier named Mr. Brown and changes her name. This is significant because it is the first time Jane was treated with respect and it symbolizes the first sign of improvement for slaves in America. Also in this year, a group of former slaves, including Jane, leave their plantation and journey northward. Not long after they leave, there is a massacre killing many, along with the group's leader, "Big Laura". The only two survivors, Jane and Laura's child Ned continue in hopes of reaching Ohio, but end up staying on another plantation in Louisiana as indentured servants for Mr. Bone . Jane: 11 Ned: 5 By 1875, Ned and Jane have lived on Bone's plantation for almost 11 years and Ned is a young adult now. He changes his name ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Under lots of pressure to "find religion", she finally gets a vision one day. During her vision, she has to carry a heavy sack across a river. Jane: 54 Around 1925, Robert Samson's two sons, Timmy and Tee Bob are introduced to the reader. Timmy is six years older than Tee Bob, but Timmy has to be behind his brother when they are riding horses because Tee Bob is white and Timmy is black. Tee Bob does not understand this, so he gets extremely upset when Timmy is sent off the plantation to "find his place in the world as a black man". Jane: 73 Come 1934, Tee Bob is in college. However, Jane finds that he is coming home to visit almost every single day to see a teacher on Samson's plantation named Mary Agnes. Mary has black roots, so their love is forbidden. Again, Tee Bob does not understand why it is such a big deal, so he kills himself with a letter opener. Because of this, Jane wants to move. Robert does not want her to leave, so she ends up staying for five years then she moves from the big house down to the quarters. Jane: ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Their Eyes Were Watching God Analysis "The Negro artist works against an undertow of sharp criticism and misunderstanding from his own group and unintentional bribes from the whites". This quote from Langston Hughes' essay "The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain" demonstrates that around the time of the Harlem Renaissance, there were many pressures acting on black artists to present their race in a certain way. Hughes described not only pressures from black people to portray their race as "respectable" and "nice" people, but also conflicting pressures from white people to portray black people as conforming to their longstanding stereotypes of them. Hughes then puts his own pressure on black artists in which he states that "it is the duty of the younger Negro artist... to change ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Finally, Janie realizes that "she hated her grandmother and had hidden it from herself all these years under a cloak of pity. She had been getting ready for a great journey to the horizon in search of people... but she had been whipped like a cur dog, and run off down a back road after things" (89). Janie finally resolves the growing tension between her own ideas and Nanny's ideas by realizing that she "hated" Nanny and her narrow view of the world which had been shaped by slavery. Due to Nanny's experiences in slavery where she did not own anything, Nanny's materialistic goals in life were to obtain "things", instead of "people". Through this realization, Janie finally breaks free of Nanny's slavery–shaped view of the world in which Nanny only dreamed of gaining "things" that she believed could free her from the struggles that came with being a black woman. However, when Janie moves to Eatonville with Joe, the townspeople "murmured hotly about slavery being over, but every man filled his assignment. There was something about Joe Starks that cowed the town. It was not because of physical fear... he had a bow–down command in his face" (47). While Janie believes that she has broken free from Nanny's views of the world in which blackness is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Their Eyes Were Watching God Figurative Language The high chair or stool in Their Eyes Were Watching God serves to symbolize a person being in a position of extensive power or intense authority. Social class is an important topic throughout the course of the novel. Although Janie is a black woman, she, as a result of her marriage to Joe, is a member of a higher socioeconomic class than her fellow black counterparts. Janie, however, does not equate money with power or worth. On the other hand, Joe believes there is a correlation between a person's wealth and the extent of the authority they are capable of exhibiting over others. While Joe wants Janie to reside in "a high chair" to "overlook the world", Janie simply wants to be on the same level as her black counterparts in order to avoid being ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Hurston conveys this tone through words like "wrestled", "heat", and "arched". Hurston utilizes asyndeton and anaphora to describe the sensual setting, as well as to heighten the emotion of the scene. Hurston employs asyndeton through the use of semicolons to make the scene more dramatic by quickening the rhythm of the sentence to align with the harmony experienced between Janie and Tea Cake. The pace of the sentence coincides with the quick movements of their bodies. Furthermore, Hurston employs anaphora when the word "till" is used at the beginning of two successive clauses in order to emphasize Janie's growth as a character. Janie has yet to have a physical connection like the one she has with Tea Cake. Rather than simply stating that the couple is having sex, Hurston vividly describes what their bodies are doing in order to emphasize that the couple is not merely connected on a physical level, but on an emotional one as ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Grandma Persuasive Speech It was a cold October 30 of 2016. Corbin and his friends where walking home from school. Corbin's three friends names where Lizzie, blond hair girl with brown eyes with a pink jacket and black jeans, and was 15 years old. Jon and Joe were brothers, or twins. They both had red hair, with light brown eyes and were both 15 years old. Corbin dark brown hair, blue eyes and was 15 years old. Lizzie had just lost her Mom two days ago in her sleep. Corbin had lost both his parents the same way. Joe and Jon say they lost an uncle the same way to, but they don't really believe them. The four of them had been planning a sleepover for a while now, and finally they were going to have a sleep over now. Corbin stopped by his house to get his stuff, and so did Lizzie. The four of them were sleeping over at Jon and Joe's house. They were planning to watch the new Captain America Civil war movie with a bunch of junk food. When they had got there, John ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Corbin gathered up his friends and told the the plan that he had. " I have a plan to kill that Reeper that is killing adults around the town." As he told them the plan they all started to get the just of the plan. They were using Corbin's grandma as bait to kill the Reaper. We stayed up a lot of the nights until they felt a calmness come upon the house, and a shiver run down each of their backs. The Reaper was here! As they got into position they saw the Reaper come in it was about to get her until Corbin yelled NOW! Lizzie flicked on the lights, Corbin, Jon, and Joe turned on their flashlights, and forced the Reaper into a corner. Corbin's grandma woke up and saw the Reaper and past out. The Reaper was so loud as is started to fade away, and it disappeared into thin air. There was four bright light that shot out of the body, And started to fly away. Jon and Joe ran after the two light's, and Lizzie and Corbin followed the other ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. A Successful Black Man In August Wilson's Radio Golf In the play, Radio Golf, author August Wilson address the idea of the working black man. He contrasts this characterization of working black men with unemployed black men to show their progression. Wilson challenges the idea that to be a successful black man, simply means making as much money as possible. The character, Harmond begins the play by representing the ideal black man. Harmond was highly educated having graduated from an Ivy League school, married, a business owner, wealthy, and involved in local government. From afar, he looked like the ideal representation of what a successful black man should be. Harmond works for himself and readers are meant to view this as honorable. However, as the play progresses, issues arise with Harmond's status as a successful working man. Readers find out that Harmond's success is due in large part to his father's success, thus it seems less like he earned his status and respect by himself. Additionally, it comes to light that not all of his business proceedings are legal. In fact, readers find out that he has possessed houses in an illegal manner. Readers see that Harmond's morals are questionable and are meant question the idea of the successful working black man. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Roosevelt is not portrayed as honorable as Harmond initially was. Roosevelt makes it clear that morals have no place within his business life. His character wants to attain money and success through whatever means necessary. He gains a position at the bank that his boss didn't think he deserved, agreed to be a pawn for a white man so he could make some money, willfully ignores the fact that he and Harmond acquired property illegally, and in the end turns his back on his partner and friend in order to help a white man and earn himself some additional money. In addition to his immoral business life, Roosevelt speaks of wanting to cheat on his wife, leading readers to further question his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. What Is The Impact Of Joe Louis Rematch On American Society What was the Affect of the Joe Louis Versus Max Schmeling Rematch on American Society? Word Count: 2,861 Abstract In the late 1930s Joe Louis and Max Schmeling were two of the world's best boxers. Joe Louis was the American brown bomber and Schmeling was the black man of the Rhine. Joe Louis was the world heavyweight champion in 1938 and Max Schmeling was the man who took away his undefeated record in 1936. When Louis was named the heavyweight champion he felt that he needed to beat Schmeling to prove that he truly was the best boxer in the world. On June 22 1938 the two boxers would fight a rematch. This fight had much greater social and racial meaning to Americans than just a simple boxing match. How did the Joe Louis ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He was almost impossible to dislike even for the staunchest racists. He was famed for his "Personal Ten Commandments", which included rules like never being seen with a white woman and never gloating over a fallen opponent. He was incredibly humble with the press. He was viewed as a self– made boxer coming from a family that lived in a shack; formerly share croppers, to the man that he became. He represented the American dream for most Americans, that anyone can make something of himself or herself. In Germany he was viewed as a dumb black man who did not deserve the title belt. He was hated but not hated with only anger. He was also hated with sheer contempt. He was viewed as inherently inferior simply because of his skin color. In America Max Schmeling was seen as purely a villain. He was seen as compliant with Hitler's Nazi views. He was the stereotypical Aryan race member. America saw his previous match against Joe Louis as a fluke. He was one of Hitler's best friends and therefore the boxing extension of Louis. Hitler had previously said a black man could never beat a German boxer. America hated Hitler and therefore hated ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Comparing Faulkner's Light in August and James' Portrait... Comparing William Faulkner's Light in August and Henry James' Portrait of a Lady Light in August and Portrait of a Lady are two novels which embodies within them, life affirming morals. Authors like William Faulkner and Henry James possess the art of making the reader learn by experiencing for themselves. William Faulkner uses the technique of introspection as well as by showing how characters and their actions can affect one another. Henry James also shows that a character's actions and decisions can greatly affect one's future and happiness. Both authors focus on the power of words that function only to categorize individuals into certain races or social classes. William Faulkner, in Light in August, centers ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Even though Christmas looks white and was raised in a white orphanage, he is treated as black man. Even though Christmas looks white, he cannot escape from the expectations of a black man. Christmas, throughout his relationships with black and white women, always tells them that he is part black. When Joanna Burden asked Joe if he knew for sure that is he part nigger, he answers, "I don't know it...If I'm not, damned if I haven't wasted a lot of time." (p. 188) Christmas could just hide his ethnicity. However, the label taunts him and leaves a lasting impression. The label causes Christmas to experience an identity crisis. He lives his whole life based on his own expectations of black men. Joe Christmas induces pain on himself by fighting with white men and black men. Christmas teases white men into calling him "nigger" and black men into calling him white. He fights, and is sometimes beaten. Christmas hurts himself in order to find out if he belongs in a distinct category. The label of "nigger" affects the way he lives his life. The way he lives his life affects the society around him as he vents his frustration and confusion on others. The racial expectations of Joe Christmas also includes sexual expectations. Black men were expected to be vigorous in bed. They were also expected to be violently passionate. Physically, black men were expected to be more powerful and more developed. When ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Examples Of Sexism In Their Eyes Were Watching God Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston in 1937 was written during the time of the Harlem Renaissance, also known as the New Negro Movement. The New Negro Movement came about as a rejection of the racial segregation between blacks and whites. The black women felt this effect of racism more acutely than the black man. For centuries, Black women have been called the "mule of the world" and had been giving the status of inferior to white and the black man. Their Eyes Were Watching God encloses many elements of both racism and sexism. It is a story set in central and southern Florida. It follows the novels protagonist Janie in her search for self–awareness as she goes through three marriages. Elizabeth A. Meese has argued that one of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When Janie is about sixteen her grandmother finds her in the act of kissing a boy, and afraid for Janie, she arranges for Janie to be married to Logan Killicks, who is an older man with vast property to his name. Nanny, as Janie calls her, is unable to wrap her mind around the idea of marrying for love and mocks Janie saying, "So you don't want to marry off decent like, do yuh? You just wants to hug and kiss and feel around with first one man and then another, huh?" (Their Eyes Are Watching God, 13). Her grandmothers' gift of life is different from the life that Janie wants to live. She tells Janie, "De nigger woman is de mule uh de world so fur as Ah can see.'" (Their Eyes Are Watching God, 11). Nanny doesn't believe that trying to find love and make a better life for you will succeed, she tells Janie that marrying and older man with land to his name will bring security, and she shouldn't want more than that. Because of this Janie agrees and goes along with the plan. She is depicted as very compliant and rarely speaks her mind, even saying "But Ah hates disagreement and confusion, so Ah better not talk. It makes it hard tuh git along" (Their Eyes Were Watching God, 90). Later on after her first marriage has ended we can see that she eventually overcomes her desire to avoid confusion in her second marriage to Joe, after he has humiliated ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. A Short Story : A Stormy-A Narrative Story It was a cold stormy winter's day In England. Joe was sitting by the fireplace with hot chocolate in his hand and a blanket wrapped around him whilst watching t.v. "It's like a snowglobe out there" Joe said. "Sure is sweetie! why don't you go get your snowsuit on and play in the snow with your little sister." Said Joe's mom. "Okay. Just where is my snowsuit? NEVER MIND FOUND IT!" Joe shouted across the room. So Joe went outside to see his sister nowhere to be seen. So Joe started to remember that his sister wanted to see Santa at the mall. So then we was off! "Okay so where is this "Santa thing," umm... OH! there it is!" Joe then found his sister standing in line to go see him. Joe then ran over there to bring his sister back home. "Blake! what were you thinking? you can't just run away from home, and how did you get the money?" Joe said with confusion and anger. "Sorry Joe I really am sorry, also I stole the money from your room." said Blake. "Gah" Joe said. So then Joe and Blake were almost out of the mall doors until some guy called Blake over. So of course Blake went. Joe didn't realize until he got home. "Blake!" Joe screamed as he was in shock. Joe then had to go back to the mall, but of course it snowed even more so he had his mom drive him to the mall which would be extra help for him looking for Blake. Joe then remembered that she wanted to see "Santa" So Joe and his mom ran over there but she was nowhere to be seen. They then called mall security to go help ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. A Story Of A Short Story "Nico!" Joe called out. It was getting pretty close to midnight and the boy was nowhere to be found. "I knew he would get himself lost!" Mari exclaimed. "We should just head back to camp, I'm sure he's not dumb enough to get eaten or something. Plus, my boots are getting dirty." Adrien said as he ran his fingers through his hair. "It's getting really late, Joe. I promise we'll look first thing in the morning if he doesn't come back." Mari said as she glanced at her phone to see if Nico had responded to her spam of texts. "Ok, fine. Whatever." Joe said dejectedly. "I know Nico is your best friend, but let's just go before something happens to us." Adrien retorted. The group started their trek back to camp. A chill went down Joe's spine. He never wanted to come to this forest in the first place. 'It's called Man–Eater Forest for God's sake!' Joe said to his friends the day before. They were only going to spend one night. That was until Nico had gone missing. They were going to leave this afternoon, but Nico never returned from his morning hike. We asked him if we could join, but he said he wanted go alone. Joe looked up at the sky. It was a full moon tonight. Something in the venerate seemed to be following them. Joe's mind drifted off to try to calm himself. He started thinking about his friends. Mari and Adrien. They were a pair, if one of them had gone missing, God knows what the other would have done. Nico and him were the same way. Nico and him were like brothers. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. The Lottery By Shirley Jackson: A Literary Analysis In a span of two hours, in a village no more than about three hundred people, one simple black dot can separate a family. Scratch off tickets in the United States have been around since the 1970s, which everyone wishes to win. Although, in the story, The Lottery, by Shirley Jackson, no one desires to win the lottery. Jackson reveals an idea that the society continues to allow a ritual to dictate their lives. The idea that a tradition dictates a villages life can be recognized through Joe Summers', Old Man Warner's, and Tessie Hutchinson's dialogue throughout the story. Joe Summers, the villager's coal businessman, expresses an idea that continuing the ritual is important, even though multiple aspects of the culture have been forgotten. Preserving the culture allows the village to function as their ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Despite the fact, Tessie Hutchinson embodies the idea that tradition is cruel, "it was not fair, I think we ought to start over" because her husband won the lottery. Today, countless families would be thrilled to win the lottery; however; back in this time, no one desired to win. As despair builds up within the Hutchison's family, everyone in the village relaxes as a result of escaping the tradition for another year. The Hutchinson children beam with happiness after not receiving the black dot on their paper. Although the children did not receive the dot, Mrs. Hutchinson pleads to Mr. Summers "it isn't fair" considering she drew the black dot. Mrs. Hutchinson's dialogue indicates the central idea that tradition can dictate someone's life based on the unpredictable slip of paper. Tessie cannot overlook the simple fact that a black dot decides her destiny. Shirley Jackson expresses the idea of cruelty by continuing the tradition through Tessie Hutchinson's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Sankofa Identity Essay In his 1993 independent film Sankofa, Haile Gerima worked to dispel Hollywood's negative stereotypes and interpretations of the "black experience." Gerima's consciousness of American race divide and prejudice helped him create some of the themes in Sankofa, the biggest being African American's self–identity. Gerima saw that in the United States, a person's place in society was based on the color of his or her skin, thus creating a negative relationship between African American's and their identities. Gerima explores the theme of black self–identity in Sankofa through three characters, Mona, Nunu, and Joe, using each one to show how the different levels of awareness of African culture can affect a person's life. Gerima uses the character ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Nunu is a slave, who unlike Shola, is not born into slavery, but rather taken from Africa and forced into slavery. This gives Nunu a different belief about her identity than Mona. Nunu is a proud African woman who wants to go back to Africa. On the plantation, she is seen as the spiritual center because she is still spiritually connected to her homeland. On the plantation, Nunu tells African stories to Shola and the other slaves, and even says that someday they will "fly in the air and be home." Nunu's character is Gerima's way of showing the importance of knowing and being proud of ones identity. Despite being taken from her home, raped, and forced into slavery, Nunu never forgets who she is and where she comes from, something many Africans, both then and now, forgot. Gerima included Nunu in Sankofa to show to African American viewers, both young and old, the importance of always remembering where their African heritage. Gerima argues that because his "place in American society" is defined by skin color and that Hollywood makes African Americans out to be "the other," Africans not only need to be aware of their heritage, but also embrace and be proud of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Their Eyes Were Watching God: Jealousy Their Eyes Were Watching God written by Zora Neale Hurston is about the life of Janie Crawford, a girl of mixed race, trying to find true love. The novel talks about how she growths emotionally and matures through different marriages. Janie's first marriage is planned by Janie's grandmother AKA Nanny with good intensions to a farmer by the name pf Logan Killicks. Unfortunately, Nanny's arrange marriage doesn't go to well. Janie becomes annoyed with Logan even though he is reliable he has no inspirations. Logan is also abusive, he threatens to kill her when she does not obeying him. Janie divorces Logan for Joe Starks a confident, high class man. Joe moves Janie to Eatonville, Florida, which is America's first all–black city. There she lives a wealthy life as the wife of the mayor. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In their relationship, they both experience their times of jealousy, but by working in the Everglades Janie and Tea Cake find mutual joy. A hurricane comes, Tea Cake is given plenty of warnings and even an opportunity to flee, but instead he chooses to stay. While trying to get away from the storm, Tea Cake saves Janie from a dog but gets himself bitten instead. Tea Cake gets rabies from the bite, and develops an aggressive behavior over Janie. At the end, Janie has shoot Tea Cake to save herself. She's is then accused for murder, but found innocent. After Tea Cake's funeral, Janie returns home to Eatonville. She cannot bear to remain in the Everglades because all the memories that remind her of the love of her life. Once is Eatonville she meets up with an old friend, Pheoby Watson, and tells her the whole story of her life. Thus, the story, which actually spans nearly 40 years of Janie's life, is "framed" by an evening visit between two friends. This frame becomes the first part of the structure of the novel. The rest of the story is told chronologically in order of Janie's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. 14 Year Olds-Personal Narrative One stormy dark night me and 3 of my friends were about to the unthinkable for a bunch of 14 year olds. My friend Dave was wearing a black shirt with a black beanie black pants and a backpack filled with things we were gonna need for what we were about to do. My other friend joe was wearing the same thing as Dave. And my other friend Zane was wearing the same thing as Dave and Joe. we all pretty much wearing the same thing. There was a reason for wearing all black. It's because their was no trespassing on the property so that way if the cops came driving around near the house we could easily hide. We were about to step foot on the most frightful house of all time. We were gonna go into the old fowler house. It was supposedly haunted by one of the old fowler residents. the house was over 100 years old so we had no problem believing that the house was haunted.The house was hidden in the forest behind the dancing trees. As we approached the front door of the house we immediately heard a loud thud coming from inside the house. My friends jumped as we heard the loud noise. I was the brave one out of the group. I turned the doorknob to the front door so we could enter. I could tell my friends were hesitant about going in the house. We heard another thud from upstairs. It almost sounded as if ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... We all darted up the stairs as fast as we could. I had never seen joe run so fast in my life.we tried all the upstairs Windows we even attempted the bathroom window but they were all locked. We looked for a back door but there was none. But I had an idea I always kept a bobby pin cause of an incident I had were my family was on vacation and I was stuck in the bathroom. My idea was to try to pick the lock with the Bobby Pin. We snuck across the creaky floor straight to the front donor.I tried my idea but then I remembered that I'm not very good with picking locks. I've only done it once before. The Bobby pin broke ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Sunset Blvd Analysis From coloring and lighting to music direction and the score, there are many ways for a film's story to be told. Film noir mirrors its detective pulp book predecessors, where a strong narrative character is key and the protagonist walks a fine line between hero and villain. The use of voice over, black and white film, and evocative lighting techniques define the style we know today. Modern films, such as The Artist (2011) and Sin City (2005), attempt to incorporate these creative devices, but unlike their predecessors, these techniques don't support and further thematic developments. In director/screenwriter Billy Wilder's classic features, Double Indemnity (1944) and Sunset Blvd. (1950), use of voice over narrative, as well of the choice to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The ability to color film has been around since the 1920s and in 1939, films like Gone With The Wind (1939) and The Wizard Of Oz (1939) utilized these processes to create a film spectacle. Film noir translates to "dark film" and Sunset Blvd. and Double Indemnity fit that both physically and thematically. The use of black and white film blurs the lines between good and evil. Without the use of color to easily distinguish the villains from the heroes, we are unsure of who we can and cannot trust. The lack of color allows the viewer to focus on content and forces them to concentrate on what is on screen. It is easier to make color look good on film, as it requires less work. It is much harder to make color associate with the story. Black and white film requires the skill of balance between dark and light in a scene. When done correctly, it can become a character of its own, helping breath life into sets such as Norma's immense mansion. Both films exaggerate the use of shadows giving the feel of a horror film. Lighting does more than draw focus on a character. It can be used to showcase the deceitfulness of a character and highlight their sinister deeds. Lighting can hide the truth from the audience and shroud the plot in mystery. In Sunset Blvd., Norma is shown in the shadows while she is in her home. During the famous "We had ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Colored People in Jazz by Toni Morrison Toni Morrison chose the title Jazz of this book because jazz symbolize increasing complex styles and that fits in the title because of the parts that happened throughout the story. It also symbolizes movement because jazz is fast pace music and fast dancing so that is another reason why Toni Morrison picked the title of this book. It was a lot of movement in the book with some of the main characters in the story and their movement was fast just like jazz. I believe she also picked this title because jazz also means honest, benevolent, brilliant, and full of high inspirations and that is what some of the characters showed in the story. The meaning jazz can also tie into the story because some of them showed a control over others affairs. The sitting and genre of this novel takes place in Virginia during the Harlem Renaissance in the early mid 1900's. Basically most of the events in the story took place on a street called Lenox Ave. I can tell that this street of Virginia has a lot of excitement and is always busy. Everybody knows everyone business. The people in Virginia very friendly too during this time period. One of the main characters have a lot of friends that she can go to for information about people around the neighborhood. Just like any other television show or movie from the early 1900s in the black neighborhoods every female can always go to the beauty shop to get the latest dirt on people in town. My idea about the first main character ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Keith Dubois Double Consciousness Essay Before Du Bois brought the term "double consciousness" to light, there was no way to describe such an unspoken phenomenon. In W.E.B. Du Bois' The Souls of Black Folk (1903) he introduces and describes how African Americans and their history have been shaped by the state of living in and wanting to overcome double consciousness. Du Bois perfectly describes double consciousness in African Americans as living behind a veil. The veil is bittersweet and produces a "second–sight" in America. From one perspective, the veil is a curse. On the contrast, it is what has made African Americans what they are today. In Du Bois' own words, double consciousness is a "sense of always looking at one 's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one 's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His impromptu face and demeanor are now permanent, and his only option to be slightly comfortable around ignorant white coworkers. Himes gives the idea that everything a colored man does revolves around have a double conscious. Keith Richards is married to twenty–three year old Clara. Clara and Richards are deeply in love but the relationship is already hanging by a thread. Himes comments "If I really loved, baby, I would blow out your brains. Right now! Because all you can ever look forward to, baby, is never having anything you ever dream about." (Himes, 26) This is how detrimental the psychological effects are in Richards. At this point in the story Richards can almost be labeled as a pessimist with such an amount of stunning and depressing statements. Himes ends this short–story with an optimistic thought of his pride being priceless with him working for the Army. The value of his pride, and being prepared to do anything to keep it is what brought Keith Richards thus far. Dick, a nicknamed he'd have for years, in "Headwaiter" is exactly that. This restaurant Dick works in, is inside of a high scale hotel that houses mainly upper class white families. In comparison to Keith Richards, Dick has more of an understanding in his struggles with having a double conscious. He knew discrimination, he took it in, and understood it. He knew he had a double conscious and used it for his own gain. That was one side of Dicks' veil, being able to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Gender Stereotypes In The Film Philadelphia Question #3 In the movie Philadelphia, Andy's dismissal from the law firm was primarily based on fear. The members of the firm held several assumptions, the first being that all homosexual men are attracted to every man they come into contact with. The members of the firm realized in retrospect that they spent a lot of personal time with Andy, including moments in the steam room, in which members even exchanged homophobic jokes. This issue was aggressively addressed during Andy's trial. His lawyer, Joe Miller, confronted the jurors and defendants assumptions about gay men by asking about their sexual preference. Other stereotypes portrayed in the movie that attributed to Andy's dismissal were in regards to HIV/AIDS. As discussed in class, the movie was indicative of the early years after AIDS was discovered. Inconsistencies with how the disease was spread, and who most susceptible, generated a distrustful and guarded population. After Andy's fellow firm members recognized his lesions, he was promptly distanced physically (as seen in the board room firing). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He was also very uncomfortable around gay men, and openly admitted to his homophobia. His discomfort was visible during the first several meetings with Andy. I believe that he chose to accept Andy's case because, as a small time black lawyer, he must have felt compelled to rise up against injustice by this powerful firm comprised of all white men. His decision to support Andy's case was initially based on principle of wrong doing, that is, dismissal due to discrimination, which he no doubt was subject to in his personal life and career. While it was difficult for him to embrace this case, knowing that it may be an unpopular decision, Joe eventually learned that Andy is a person, just like anyone else. Despite Andy's ailments, and lifestyle, Joe got acquainted to his personality, jokes, good nature, humor, and his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Hall Of Justice Analysis During the conversation between Joe and Louis in Act II, Scene 7, Joe explains that the day before, he accidentally showed up for work at the Hall of Justice on a Sunday. Due to the fact that the Hall is closed on Sundays, Joe arrived to discover a deserted courthouse and panicked, thinking, "The whole Hall of Justice, it's empty, it's deserted, it's gone out of business. Forever" (Kushner 78). Although it was deserted simply due to the fact that it was Sunday, the empty Hall of Justice symbolizes freedom. Specifically, this can be seen when Joe states, "It would be...heartless terror. Yes. Terrible, and...Very great. To shed your skin, every old skin, one by one and then walk away, unencumbered, into the morning" (Kushner 78–79). This shows that an empty Hall of Justice would ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In turn, individuals would then have the freedom to determine their own beliefs regarding justice. This can be seen when Joe states, "I just wondered what a thing it would be...if overnight everything you owe anything to, justice, or love, had really gone away. Free" (Kushner 78), which again shows that an empty Hall of Justice symbolizes freedom from both the Hall and the idea of justice itself. Aside from this point in the play, the subject of justice had been brought up twice before. Immediately preceding Joe's description of an empty Hall of Justice, in Act II, Scene 6, Joe had struggled with the concepts of justice and ethics when contemplating accepting the job offer Roy had provided him with. Specifically, Roy obtained the opportunity to join the Justice Department in Washington, D.C. in order to help prevent Roy from becoming disbarred. Upon realizing this, Joe proclaims, "Even if I said yes to the job, it would be illegal to interfere. With the hearings. It's unethical. No. I can't" (Kushner 73), realizing that accepting the job opportunity would make him obligated to act unjustly according to the law and ethics. In response, Roy argues, "I must have eyes in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. We Will Pay You Langston Hughes Analysis Langston Hughes, a writer during the Harlem Renaissance, argued that "the Negro artist works against an undertow of sharp criticism and misunderstanding from his own group and unintentional bribes from the whites. 'Oh, be respectable, write about nice people, show how good we are,' say the Negroes. 'Be stereotyped, don't go too far, don't shatter our illusions about you, don't amuse us too seriously. We will pay you,' say the whites." Hughes then writes in response to these pressures that "... it is the duty of the younger Negro artist ... to change through the force of his art that old whispering 'I want to be white,' hidden in the aspirations of his people, to 'Why should I want to be white? I am a Negro––and beautiful.'" Both black and white ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, Hurston's writing also creates a positive perspective on black culture. Hurston describes the town in the Everglades through the eyes of Janie, writing that "no matter how rough [joking and teasing] was, people seldom got mad, because everything was done for a laugh", and "everybody loved to hear Ed Dockery, Bootyny, and Sop–de–Bottom in a skin game" (134). Rather than showing the town's lack of seriousness in a negative way, Hurston depicts the town as full of "laughter," "love," and lighthearted games. The characters of Ed Dockery, Bootyny, and Sop–de– Bottom live in the Everglades with Janie and Tea Cake and are a central part of the community. Even though the Everglades town is stereotypically black, Hurston presents this town and its blackness in a positive light. In addition, Janie is accepted quickly by the town; she can "listen and laugh and even talk some if she wanted to" and can "tell big stories herself from listening to the rest" (134). In Eatonville, whose African–American residents act less stereotypically "black" and pretentiously try to emulate white people, Janie is unable to assimilate in such a community. However, the more stereotypically black town in the Everglades is much more accepting towards Janie. By presenting the culture of the Everglades in a favorable way from Janie's point of view, Hurston shows pride for conventional black culture. The town in the Everglades is also illustrated as lively and jubilant; specifically, nights in the town have "pianos living three lifetimes in one", "blues made and used right on the spot", "dancing, fighting, singing, crying, laughing, winning and losing love every hour". The town's residents "work all day for money, fight all night for love", and "the rich black earth cling[s] to bodies and bit[es] ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. What Is Janie Wrong Throughout the whole book Janie was with black people that treated her wrong and did her bad. They always had Janie doing what they wanted her to do she could never do what she wanted she might have thought she was but she wasn't doing it. Everyone she was with all had a special reason for her to be around. All of them always thought they knew what was best for her. They never once stopped and tried letting her decide the things she wanted to do. The whites are not the ones holding the black folks back us holding our own selves back. It actually all started when Janie was little and she went to the black elementary school all the other black kids envy her because she came to school with nice clothes. Also the little kids would pick on her and tease her because her hair would always be done with pretty little bows in her head. Janie didn't do anything to the kids for them to treat her like that. Janie wasn't going around acting better than the rest of the kids they just envy her because she had better things then the rest. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kellicks because "Nanny" felt that it was only best for Janie. She wanted Janie to marry him for protection and for all the nice things the old man had. Janie was miserable being married to this man. She thought she was going to fall in love with him because they were married but that didn't happen. She didn't like the way he skin was she talked about how his fat neck would be all over her when he try to lay up on Janie. She eventually ran off leaving him heartbroken. All this could've have been eliminated if Nanny had of never forced that marriage. That's one black person that done caused two blacks to be held back they could've been moved on with their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Slavery and White Slave Master Sankofa, according to Africa folklore was the protector of the African American people. He used his drums to combat the evil spirits present among the world. The movie Sankofa portrays slavery in Lafayette with some of the most gruesome and shocking moments I have ever laid eyes on. During this movie there are many other subplots that occur but the ultimate goal for the slaves in Lafayette is a better life. A life not directed by a White Slave–owner. They sought and enacted ways that they could achieve one goal: freedom. Sankofa starts of with Shola, the main character of the movie working under a number of slave–owners. She has a mutual friend by the name of Shongo who is the verbal leader of the slaves but also Shola's foundation of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This was almost a turning point in Ali's view of how the white man viewed the blacks. They were nothing but "Niggers". Eventually Nunu's promise she made was fulfilled as she couldn't be bought from the white slave owner. She was deemed too old to be sold or bought any more. The story now focuses on Joe who was taught to believe that blacks were inherently evil. Joe always went to a preacher, albeit a corrupt one, to confess his sins and the preacher would constantly remind him that his own mother was evil and he should not associate with her. Joe was at a crossroads mentally, he felt more privileged than the other slaves because he was half white. He believed that the white man saw him as being better as the pure breed blacks. He had been corrupted by the white community and church. All these feelings and angst came to a head when a woman who was madly in love with Joe gave him a love potion of sorts. Joe then started to gag and choke. He had always believed that his fellow brethren were plotting to poison him. Joe then went to a river in an attempt to stop the gagging and choking. His mother then comes to save her child and successfully accomplishes this feat. Then something comes over Joe, it seems like he is possessed for a five minute span. He tells Nunu with a passionate tone that she is evil that she wants him to die. Nunu responds telling Joe that she could have let him die in the river but, as her son, she did ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Toxic Traditions In The Lottery Toxic Traditions Tradition is not always the best thing, despite what most people might think. In the story 'The Lottery' we have an example of a toxic tradition. A toxic tradition would be something that has been passed on from generation to generation, and the meaning of this tradition is then lost over the years. 'The Lottery' explores the topics of tradition, rebelling against the system, and mob mentality. The way the story is written is meant to shock the reader when they realize what it means to win the lottery. The reader is an outsider to the town and can see what's wrong about the whole tradition, despite the blindness of the townspeople. In 'The Lottery,' we see a small town that follows tradition a little too closely. The tradition ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, when she is introduced, it's almost as if she's being set apart from the other citizens. She arrives late, and is more lighthearted than the others, joking with Joe Summers. His response is almost foreshadowing the ending, saying "Thought we were going to have to get on without you, Tessie." (par. 9) The opposition to the lottery in the play is quite obvious compared to the silent resignation of Tessie in the short story. In the play, the stage directions help to show how uncomfortable Tessie truly is with the lottery. "Tessie: (with forced pleasantness) Wouldn't have me leave my dishes in the sink, would you Joe?" (page 111) This line shows that Tessie does not want any part in the lottery. The play also shows Bill Hutchison taking Tessie aside and confronting her about hiding Dave. This action shows how seriously he, and probably many of the other people in town, take the lottery compared to Tessie's passive rebellion. In the play there is also the character Belva Summers, who outright opposes the lottery. She calls the lottery a "heathen custom" (page 108) Joe and Belva blame each other for their brother leaving town. Belva blames Joe for it, because he organizes the lottery, and Joe blames Belva for it, because she's the one who turned their brother around and made him oppose the lottery. They do not seem to have a very good relationship because of this conflict. Belva seems to believe ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Zora Neale Hurston Spunk Essay Throughout history, everyone in the world has had to stick up for themselves at one point, no matter the situation. "Spunk" by Zora Neale Hurston was written and published in 1925, this story exemplifies the importance of sticking up for yourself. It was only the third short story Hurston wrote, but it prospered. Zora Neale is best known for her works, Their Eyes Were Watching God and Dust Tracks on a Road, both published in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was an African American activist during the Harlem Renaissance who often focused on the African American culture and experiences. Zora Neale Hurston was born in a small town, Eatonville, Florida, which was one of the first all–black unified communities, her hometown influenced many of her works. Hurston enjoys writing about anthropology, particularly, African American culture. The short story is about a woman named Lena who is cheating on her husband, Joe ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She does not care about her husband's feelings" ("Spunk"). Lena is a selfish woman who could care less about her husband Joe. Everyone in town knows that Lena is having an affair, but nobody does anything about it, including her husband; because they are all afraid of Spunk Banks. "A giant of a brown–skinned man sauntered up the one street of the Village and out into the palmetto thickets with a small pretty woman clinging lovingly to his arm" (Hurston). This expression conveys feelings of intimacy because they are in public, but are not afraid to show affection towards one another although Lena is married. The couple walks around the village with one another because they do not care what others think of them. This topic builds the gossip in the small village, where everyone is talking about this affair going on between Spunk and Lena. The idea of ignorance repeats when Lena is unmindful to her husband Joe's feelings as she walks around with another ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Analysis Of Joe Turner 's Come And Gone Nothing takes away the dignity and self–respect of individuals like stripping them of their human characteristics and viewing them as property instead of people. The quickest way to make someone lose his or her direction in life is to destroy the identity he or she worked hard to forge. Through his use of symbolism and indirect characterization, August Wilson establishes his theme that finding and maintaining one's identity is important in life. The title Joe Turner's Come and Gone refers to Joe Turney, the brother of former Tennessee Governor Peter Turney. In the late 19th Century, Joe Turney was responsible for transporting black prisoners from Memphis to the Tennessee State Penitentiary, located in Nashville. However, he would often ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 'Cause you forgot how to sing your song" (II, ii, 68). According to Bynum, an individual's song is synonymous with his or her identity. This is seen on a historical level, when one considers the detrimental impact Joe Turner's chain gangs had on individuals: he broke each member until they had all forgotten who they were. The loss of individual identity may allude to the fact that members of a chain gang had to work together because they were chained together; they were no longer viewed as individuals but were considered a unit. When viewed as a symbol for oppression, Joe Turner exceeds chain gangs and is found in every level of the lives of African–Americans; he is the reason men like Seth are unable to further their businesses, he is the reason police officers abuse their power and arrest innocent black men like Jeremy, and he is the reason families like the Loomis' fall apart. On a metaphorical level, the loss of identity could refer to the loss of one's self in the sense of the values one holds dear. Regardless of the dimension in which the loss of individuality is viewed, the central message remains the same: Joe Turner (oppression and the historical figure) preys on the identity of African–Americans and works hard to destroy it. Besides symbolism, Wilson uses indirect characterization to describe the different generations that are present in the play and show how each generation struggles to find and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Their Eyes Were Watching God Marriage In the beginning of Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, Janie, the main character, struggles to find what the true meaning the word "love" is until her last marriage. Janie marries three times throughout the novel. With three different men at three different ages, she encounters three new perspectives. Janie suffered two unhappy marriages before she could find her true love. The day Nanny catches Janie kissing a boy, she demands her to marry immediately due to her personal experiences as a slave. Nanny arranges the marriage to be with Logan Killicks, an old, ugly man, for security and because he is financially stable. Logan's looks and unromantic ways made made her think she that she's nothing but a helping hand. Janie states, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. How Does Pip Change Throughout The Novel Change is a constant presence everyday and everywhere. Time goes by and everything changes to what it was to what it is. Mountains turn to pebbles. Nature changes to survive. People's' experiences change them for the better or for the worse. From the beginning of Great Expectations to its end, all of Pip's experiences and hardships shape him from a little boy naive to the reality of the world to a man of virtue. In part one of Great Expectations, Pip is shown to be a naive child who leads a miserable existence, which is evident on the way he acts, the way he thinks, and the way he views the world around him. Pip uses really negative, bleak and dark words and phrases to describe the marshes, such as using "long black horizontal line" to describe ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the third part of Great Expectations, Pip learns the meaning of loyalty from Magwitch and from Joe. When Magwitch introduces himself as Pip's benefactor, Pip is horrified, but Magwitch shows Pip the meaning of loyalty with his full belief that Pip would become a gentleman. It wasn't until Magwitch died that Pip understood what exactly loyalty was and that understanding made him realize just how horrible a person he had been to everybody around him, especially Joe and Biddy. When Pip becomes sick and Joe comes to London to care for him, Pip says, "Oh, Joe, you break my heart! Look angry at me, Joe. Strike me, Joe. Tell me of my ingratitude. Don't be so good to me!" (Dickens 493). The quote shows that Pip understands how arrogant and insulting he had been to Joe and Biddy all those years ago and just how loyal and kind Joe had been to him his entire life. Despite asking for punishment from Joe, Joe doesn't do anything but hug him out of joy and by doing so demonstrates his loyalty to Pip even more. Magwitch's and Joe's displays of loyalty to Pip push him to change one final time and he matures into a hard–working and virtuous ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Janie's Commentary In Their Eyes Were Watching God Their eyes were watching god Evidence Commentary When Janie is returning home the women judge her for wearing overalls and expect her to find a dress to put on (2 Hurston). The women's comments on Janie's overalls show how were expected to look pretty and dress a certain way. Us lived dere havin' fun till de chillun at school got to teasin' me 'bout livin' in de white folks' back– yard. Because Janie lived with white people and was dressed nicely by her caretakers. The white children did not like to see a black person have any sort of success so they bullied her. When Janie is looking at a photograph of herself she doesn't recognize herself because she doesn't realize that she ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This shows how even other women held sexist views for other women and that women were viewed as helpless beings that could not protect themselves. "You behind a plow! You ain't got no mo' business wid uh plow than uh hog is got wid uh holiday! You ain't got no business cuttin' up no seed p'taters neither. A pretty dollbaby lak you is made to sit on de front porch and rock and fan yo'self and eat p'taters dat other folks plant just special for you." ( Hurston 34) Unlike Janie's husband Joe doesn't believe that she should be doing manual labor. Joe's beliefs show that there are several views about what a woman's role in the household should be.This may be because Joe Starks seems to be wealthier than Logan and may not need a woman to help with labor. "They was all cheerin' and cryin' and shoutin' for de men dat was ridin' off. Ah couldn't see nothin' cause yo' mama wasn't but a week old, and Ah was flat uh mah back. But pretty soon he let on he forgot somethin' and run into mah cabin and made me let down mah hair for de last time (Hurston ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Searching for an Inner-Self in Their Eyes Were Watching... Searching for an Inner–Self in Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston a young girl named Janie begins her life unknown to herself. She searches for the horizon as it illustrates the distance one must travel in order to distinguish between illusion and reality, dream and truth, role and self? (Hemenway 75). She is unaware of life?s two most precious gifts: love and the truth. Janie is raised by her suppressive grandmother who diminishes her view of life. Janie?s quest for true identity emerges from her paths in life and ultimatly ends when her mind is freed from mistaken reality. Failing to recognize herself as the one black child in a photograph, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As a child, raised by Nanny, Janie was guided by the unreal allusion of what life is made up of. When Janie was about sixteen, she spent a spring afternoon under a blossoming tree in Nanny?s yard. Here she comes to the realization that something is missing in her life? sexual ecstasy. The blooms, the new leaves and the virgin– like spring came to life all around her. She wondered when and where she might find such an ecstasy herself. According to Hurston, Nanny finds Janie kissing a boy named Johnny Taylor and her ?head and face looked like the standing roots of some old tree that had been torn away by storm? (12) . Nanny can think of no better way to protect Janie than by marrying her to a middle–aged black farmer whose prosperity makes it unnecessary for him to use her as a ?mule? (Bush 1036). Nanny makes Janie believe that marriage makes love and forces her to wed a much older man, Logan Killicks. Jones believes that Janie?s first efforts at marriage show her as an ?enslaved and semi–literate? figure restrained to Nanny?s traditional beliefs about money, happiness and love (372). Unfortunately Janie?s dream of escasty does not involve Killicks. Her first dream is dead. Janie utters, ?Ah wants things sweet wid mah marriage lak when you sit under a pear tree and think? (Hurston 23). Logan began to slap Janie for control over ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. "Shoeless" Joseph Jefferson Jackson Essay Born on July 16, 1887 in Pickens County, South Carolina, "Shoeless" Joseph Jefferson Jackson is frequently regarded as one of the best baseball players of all time. Joe's career as a baseball player was punctuated with a (then) all time high batting average of .356 (currently the third highest batting average on record); "Shoeless Joe's" influence was so substantial that baseball legend Babe Ruth ""... copied ["Shoeless" Joe] Jackson's style because [he] thought ["Shoeless" Joe] was the greatest hitter [He] had ever seen...". Though his name was obscured by the "Black Socks" scandal of 1920, Joe Jackson managed to surmount his inferior circumstances, chief among which were poverty and illiteracy, to be considered a Baseball Legend. Due to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... By 1905, his experience playing baseball in the Mills would earn the eighteen year old Joe enough of a name to be hired by the Green–ville Spinners of the Carolina Association. After a brief stint with the Spinners, Connie Mack of the Philadelphia Athletics drafted "Shoeless" to play on his team. It wasn't until 1911 when Joe Jackson signed with the pelicans that he completed his first full season, setting a record .408 batting average for any other rookie to date. "Shoeless" Joe's need to support his family with what little money he could scrounge through various means opened a career opportunity for him to excel in baseball. Shoeless Joe traversed a long way from the vicinity of poverty, evolving into a famous figure in the field of baseball. Quite clearly, "Shoeless" Joe's involvement with the Mill Baseball teams allowed him to acquire an interest in baseball in the first place. However, to pursue both wealth and his interests, Jackson needed to make sacrifices, in this instance, he sacrificed literacy. Later on in his life, "Shoeless" "...[Reckoned he would] live up [in the north] all the time" "If all [his] business interests were not down South..."(Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball, 68). Jackson's illiteracy proved to be a mild inhibition, which "Shoeless" Joe would attempt to mask by "reading" his menus and ordering based on what other people in the restaurant ordered. This ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Their Eyes Were Watching God Analysis Zora Neale Hurston was born in Alabama on January 7, 1891. "In 1937, she published her masterwork of fiction, Their Eyes Were Watching God (A&E Television Networks 2). Zora was a very energetic woman, she was so eager to learn even though she didn't finish high school, but she prepared for college and got accepted to Howard University. She published her book Their Eyes Were Watching God, the story of a young girl named Janie looking for love and happiness in the south. "The book was criticized at the time, especially by black male writers, who condemned Hurston for not taking a political stand and demonstrating the ill effects of racism"(History 3). Zora was a very talented woman, she was given the scholarship to study anthropology at Barnard College, she became the school's first known African American graduate in 1928. "Anthropologist and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston was the most prolific Black woman writer in the USA between 1920 and 1950; the foremother of a generation of African–American women writers, she captured and celebrated the culture of rural Black America in her novels, stories and essays"(Horsley 1). In her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, she uses symbolism to demonstrate Janie's self– discovery. Logan Killicks is a symbol of a beginning to Janie's self–discovery. He's an old, wealthy farmer that becomes a part of Janie's life. She marries him not because she's deeply in love with him, but because her nanny forces her to. Nanny arranges their wedding not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Life and Music of Stephen Foster Stephen Collins Foster was born on July 4, 1826 by the Allegheny River in Lawrenceville, PA. Stephen was not a big fan of school, instead he preferred to indulge himself in music rather than other subjects. Stephen was tutored and then went to private academies in Pittsburgh and north– central Pennsylvania. He eventually became a well educated person for his day. Stephen was also very literate in music. It is said that he received his formal music training from a German immigrant, Henry Kleber. Henry Kleber was very accomplished and versatile and would eventually have a major influence on the musical life of Pittsburgh. As a teen, Stephen hung out with other teens from some of Pittsburgh's most respectable families. Stephen was also a part of an all–male secret club called the Knights of the S.T. With his brother Morrison and his close friend, Charles Shiras. Stephen was their song leader and composer. Stephen published his first song at the age of 18, it was entitled "Open Thy Lattice Love." At the age of 20, Stephen worked at his brother Dunning's steamship firm in Cincinnati as a bookkeeper. While in Cincinnati Stephen sold some of his songs and piano pieces to a local publisher. "Oh! Susanna" was his first big hit. He married Jane Denny MacDowell at the age of 24 and launched his career as a professional songwriter with 12 compositions already in print. Another account of his life says that Stephen composed in a flash of inspiration, songs that expressed his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...