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No Daughter By Sandra Cisneros
Always wanted to be accepted by others is part our society. I remember wanting to be accepted that it didn't matter if I dyed my hair, change my
clothes or my personality somehow that was never good enough. But the person that I desperately seek acceptance from was my mother. I had to
become the eldest child in our family, my brother decided he no longer wanted the responsibility he let go of school and along the hope my mother
had for him to have a career. The pressure and expectations amplified for me to be somebody. Sandra Cisneros in her essay "Only Daughter" that
intertwines her story as the outsider, the "only daughter" in a family of six sons who articulates a yearning for her father's acceptance of her as a
daughter and as a writer, both of which delimit her as an individual. Cisneros uses diction, tone, and imagery to convey the message.
This struggle for acceptance is apparent in her diction. Cisneros uses the expression, "only daughter" multiple times in the introduction paragraph
alone. She tries to find the appropriate phrase, "I am the only daughter in a family of six sons . . . I am the only daughter in a Mexican family . . . I am
the only daughter of a Mexican father . . . I am the only daughter of a working–class family . . . I was/am the only daughter and only a daughter." The
writer wants us to comprehend her uneasiness as she fiddles to write this like a kid who moves restlessly in an uncomfortable situation. She is made to
feel uncomfortable by her
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Two Kinds of Interpretations in Amy Tanв
Ђ™s Short Story Two...
Often times mothers can be pushy, annoying, and a bit overbearing but in the long run they always just want what is best for their child. Everyone
wants their child to be the best, most popular and overall number one. In Amy Tan's short story "Two Kinds" we see this type of fame hungry mother.
The short story is about a Chinese family who lost everything. The mother had lost her entire family full of children except for the one in the story. With
the belief "you could be anything you want in America" (Tan 305) in mind the mother set off to find what her child can do. This ultimately will resort
in disappointment for both the mother and child, as they do not share the same goals throughout the short story. My initial personal interpretation of
this piece is that the mother wants to live vicariously through her daughter. This was proven throughout the story time and time again. Through further
thought, different literary techniques, and class discussion I became aware of an alternate interpretation of the story. This is that their are two kinds of
daughters and the way the mother daughter relationship could be. Both interpretations have many examples to support them and the story can truly be
analyzed in more then one way. The mother in the story is sensibly upset about what has happened in the past in China. After losing everything she
wanted the best for her daughter, but could this possibly mean she wanted it for herself as well. It seems the mother might have
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Essay on The Strain of Mother-Daughter Relationships in...
The Strain of Mother–Daughter Relationships in Annie John
Jamaica Kincaid accurately portrays how adolescence can strain mother– daughter
relationships. The mother– daughter relationships are universal but "it is not clear why
we avoid the topic"(Gerd). The father– daughter relationships and the mother– sons
relationships are the issues mostly talked about. In Jamaica Kincaid's novel, Annie John,
she explains and gives insight into mother– daughter relationships. In Annie John, there are events that make people think about their relationship with
their own mother.
Kincaid expresses this relationship through her main character Annie who tries to
find her own identity. The relationship between Annie... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the novel, Annie did many things with her mother and look into the world through her mother.
With all this, Annie wouldn't know what the world would be like with out her mother. Frances A. Nadeau, who wrote an article on the mother–
daughter relationship, said
"Understanding [this] relationship is critical to young adult girls because daughters
bond with their mothers in a complex, interdependent association that often inhibits a daughter from establishing her own identity." Different people
might describe this relationship in different ways but one common theme they have is that the daughter cannot do any thing without the mother and she
also has her mothers' image. In the novel, Annie and her mother were almost the same. They wore dresses cut from the same cloth; they went shopping
together; and they even took bath together. She did many things with her mother and even wears the same cloth. Annie was like a little mirror of her
mother. As the relationship gets to different stage in life it changes. For instance, the relationship you have with your mother when you are a child is
different from the one you have during adolescence and it's also different when you are a mother yourself. But the most difficult stage is during
adolescence.
Adolescence is a difficult stage for both the mothers and daughters. Recent studies
show that "adolescence [is] regarded as a time of "storm and stress", and solely attributed
to the
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The Children's Hour Figurative Language
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem "The Children's Hour" shares a messages that evokes love, passion, and strong emotions. After devastation, the
speaker realizes the importance of family and starts appreciating the special moments with his daughters. Through tone, diction, structure, imagery, and
metaphor. Longfellow demonstrates how important the theme of caring, loving, and spending time with loved ones is. After a long day of work, the
speaker comes home to his family. This is the time that most people long for. Quality time with his daughters is an important part of the speaker's life.
Tone that expresses love, care, and compassion help the poem's theme, which is the importance of family, to be demonstrated. This poem sparks the
sensitive emotions that everyone has deep down in their heart. These emotions demonstrate what is most important in life, and there is nothing more
important than family. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The speaker uses words and phrases associated with fairytale stories, such as "castle" and "dungeon" (lines 20 and 35). References to the story of the
"Bishop of Bingen", further the use of a fairytale story that the father reads to his daughters (line 27). As his daughters "climb into [his] turret," and
"entwine" their arms around him, the father doesn't seize to play with them (lines 21 and 26). At the end of the speaker's busy day, his daughters sneak
up on him and "devour [him] with kisses" (line 25). Through the Longfellow's diction, the emotions about the father and his relationship with his
daughters is demonstrated. Although long in length, this poem is also fluid in structure. "The Children's Hour" follows the rhyme scheme ABCB.
Longfellow's use of rhyme scheme and structure help to utilize the emotions and childhood memories behind fairytale stories. The poem is consistent
and there are no unusual breaks or
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Unequal Cultural Traditions And Generations : The Joy Luck...
Swanson 1
Katie Swanson
Mrs. Reischl
English 1 ACC
1 April 2015
Unequal Cultural Traditions and Generations: The Joy Luck Club
The Joy Luck Club is a collection of many interrelated stories that are centered around the diverse emotional relationships of different mother and
daughter relationships. Most of these mother daughter relationships are fragile and become even more distanced through history and heritage. In China,
these mothers are forced to emigrate from China to America to escape a life full of poverty and war. America differs from this because the mothers
struggle to raise their American born daughters in a completely different environment. The difference is extreme from growing up during the first
quarter of the twentieth century in China, rather than raising their daughters in California. To this day, the mothers of present day China still believe
and encourage their daughters to follow in their footsteps and praise chinese traditions. The mothers, Suyuan Woo, An–Mei Hsu, Lindo Jong, and
Ying–Ying St. Clair and the daughters, Jing–Mei "June" Woo, Rose Hsu Jordan, Waverly Jong, and Lena St. Clair all have dynamic relationships that
are evolving. In the novel, The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, man's relationship with his fellow man is unequal due to cultural traditions and generations.
Elements of Chinese culture include obedience and the idea of marriage. Because the mothers grew up in China and were raised upon tradition, they
base their views on obedience and
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Analysis Of The Article ' Mothers And Mother ' Essay
Review and Analysis of Mothers and Mother–in–laws In the article Mothers and Mother–in–laws, an exploratory case study of relationshionships
between mothers, daughters, and mother–in–laws were evaluated and discussed. All of the participants in the study were asked to personally fill out a
questionnaire that contained questioned pertaining to their relationships with each other. Mothers, daughters, mother–in–laws, and husbands were all
asked to participate in this study. The researchers indicated the independent variables – variables that can be manipulated– as the daughter's parental
status, a comparison across relationships, and a comparison of relationship perspectives. The dependent variables included relational strain,
interpersonal boundaries, and interactive involvement. The focus of the study was to examine how the addition of a grandchild to the relationships
affects how the different dyads interact. Research collected at the end of the study concluded that mothers and daughters become closer with the birth
of a grand child, but mother–in–laws and daughter–in–laws tend to become more at odds with each other. Researchers working on this project were
aware of the different aspects involved in the traditional mother/daughter relationship prior to the beginning of the study. Also, the fact that asymmetry
is present in in different aspects of women's relationships in general, especially involving their kin. Fischer describes this by referencing studies by
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Everyday Use By Alice Walker: A Literary Analysis
Family is important in the lives of every human. There can be good, encouraging families but their can also be ones of the negative type. Despite the
personalities of the family that a child has, they have shaped the child to be the way that they are in the present and will most likely forever impact
them in some way or another. There has always been a special connection with mothers and daughters, whether good or bad. Sometimes, the child feels
that the mother expects too much from them and other times, the mother believes the daughter just does not care enough. I Stand Here Ironing by
Tillie Olsen, Two Kinds by Amy Tan, and Everyday Use by Alice Walker are short stories that argue about the traits that significantly shape human
identity within ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In detail, a mother may raise her daughter in a way that shapes her into something she wishes she could be, or in other words, living through their
child. On the other hand, a daughter may rebel against her mother's, or society's standards, in order to fully express the way that they wish to look
or be by going completely out of the box just to prove something. Mothers set expectations for their daughters from birth, and as we grow, we are
brought from those expectations to the ones of society. Traits that significantly shape human identity are still in effect in today's world as well and
will continue to form the lives of people everywhere. Young and old women still have to deal with the image and expectations that society expects
from them just as small children feel pressured to live up to their parents expectations and mannerisms as they grow in order to condition them for the
future. As daughters grow, their mothers hold wishes for their success in the future. Today, gender roles for young women are still a very prominent
thing in society. In the future, it would be preferable for these gender roles to fade in time so that the young women of the next generation do not feel
pressured to act, look, or be a certain way. Mothers should set realistic expectations for their children so that the pressure of success and achievements
do not
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How To Write A Sample Of A Family Assessment Paper
Identifying Data During this assessment, I interviewed a single–family home with a 32 year old mother, M.S, with a 4 year old daughter, M.S. II, from
Costa Rica. The daughter was in pre–school and the mother had graduated high school and immediately worked with event planning. The family does
not attend church, but practices under the Catholic traditions. I would place this family under the preschool stage of the family life cycle due to the
oldest child is 4 years of age and the mother is adapting to her child's needs in growth–producing ways. M.S and her daughter love spending time
outdoors taking walks and visiting gardens. M.S. sews various items, including lunch boxes and aprons in her free time too.
Environmental Data The family lives in a medium two story 3 bedroom home in the suburbs of Monte Verde, Costa Rica. The house was very warm,
inviting, and had a great view overlooking the mountains of Costa Rica. The streets had minimal lighting, no paved roads, and wild dogs running in the
streets. The area my family lived in was considering extremely safe because everyone knows everyone within their community. They... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
bonds with her daughter on a daily basis by driving her to school, making her lunches, and helping her get ready for preschool. They do things
together as a family and when the daughter gets sick, M.S. takes off work to attend to her. The rules are flexible as her daughter ages, but the rules
are known. M.S. stated a big rule at this time is, "Bed time at 8:30." She allows her daughter to go outside and play with the dogs in addition to play
dates. There is currently no reproductive family planning at this time because her focus is on her daughter. Her daughter is active in a dance group
that holds a parade and M.S. sews all their costumes together while her daughter dances in the parade. Her daughter is also taking English classes
because even though M.S. doesn't speak English very well she, "Wants her daughter to speak it
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Two Kinds Bel 311
Many teenagers nowadays have to put up with parents high standards. They are forced to do many things do not want to just to please their parents.
This type of pressure can lead to very bad behavior from the children causing many fights to happen between them. I believe most parents have these
high standards because they want their child to be extremely successful in life. Also, it could because they want their children to make them look good
to everyone else. In the story "Two Kinds", the author shows us a very extreme love–hate relationship between a mother and daughter. The mother sets
very high standards on the daughter so that she can become a prodigy child. The daughter is always put in many situations where she is overwhelmed
because of the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The mother forces the daughter to learn to play the piano. At this point the daughter reaches her breaking point and confronts her mother. The
daughter says, "Why don't you like me the way I am? I'm not a genius! I can't play the piano..." (Page 311) The mother reacts extremely horrible and
slaps the daughter. Regardless of the daughter's attempt to stand up for herself, she is still forced to attend piano lessons. Even though she didn't
want to take the lessons, the daughter pick up on playing the piano very well. She practiced very hard because she was going to participate in a
recital. Her parents invited many people to attend this recital to show their daughter off. Unfortunately, the daughter played the piano horribly. The
daughter decided to go against her mother's wishes and told her she wasn't going to play the piano anymore. The mother reacted terrible once again
and began to hit her. This causes the daughter to say she wishes she wasn't her mother's daughter.(Page 315) She even reaches the point to where she
says she wish she wasn't born. Once the mother heard this, she began to lower her high expectations of the daughter becoming a prodigy
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Interpersonal Communication Process
The process of Interpersonal Communication is a continuous process involving participants who are different but have overlapping environments and
create meaning and relationship through the exchange of messages. This process is what I relive every day. I work at a Veterinary Hospital where it
is high pace and a fast environment, which is great because I want to eventually become a certify Veterinary Technician. I also work with mymother
she is the head manager over the business her best friend is our boss. I have a love/hate relationship working with my mom because if you spend
every second of every day together you will feel worn out. A relationship between two people can have very different meanings. In some relationships
such as two lovers, they can also be best friends because they share good communication. A relationship between aparent and child has a special bond
because they share love, and affection for each other. However, there are times when a relationship can go bad because there is no understanding,
lack of communication, and a feeling of distance in the relationship. When working together we discovered is that we don't listen to one another
like really listen. She is my boss and the line between our personal life and our job blurs out and we are taking a plunge into the abyss. My mother is
a Selective listener she hears what she wants to hear and not what you want her to hear. This puts up barriers between the two of us she always makes
a small
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Handmaid's Tale Offred Quotes
Is a mother a mother after she lost her child? Offred, a handmaid who is different from the other maids. Offred is in depression, but not showing
any signs of it due to the oppression. In the novel The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood, Offred is a handmaid has not seen her daughter and
Luke. Offred demonstrates that love can lead to depression with flashbacks and point of view of not seeing her husband Luke and her daughter
whom she both utterly loved. Thoughts and memories are the only reasons Offred reminds herself of her daughter. Offred has a daughter, since
she states, '"She fades I can't keep her with me'"(Atwood 64). Offred's flashback remembers she once had a daughter but was not able to be part of
her life. The thought of not being able to be part of her daughter's life leaves her in melancholy. Later she thinks her daughter as a ghost who died
and could not keep. Offred tells herself "[she is] the ghost of a dead girl"(Atwood 64). Offred's flashback is that her daughter died, after the birth of
Gilead. With these emotional distresses, Offred is in despair and in–denial of the existence of her daughter.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Serena joy shows Offred of the picture of her daughter realizing time did not stay still. Proven when Offred states, "Time has not stood still. It has
washed over me, washed me away" (Atwood 228). Offred view is opened now that she realizes that she is the ghost. Later Offred tells herself that it
would have been better to not see the picture for, "[she cannot] bear, to have been erased like that. Better she had brought me nothing" (Atwood 228).
Offred thoughts tell herself it would be best if she never saw the picture, but accepts her disappearance to her
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Ballad Of Birmingham By Dudley Randall
In the poem "Ballad of Birmingham" by Dudley Randall, the author describes how a daughter wants to go to a march happening in the streets, but her
mother's refuses because of the extreme acts of violence from the police officers when countering the protesters. Her daughter tells her mother that she
is going to be with other infants who also want to attend the protest. However, her mother still insists on not allowing her to go, but instead tells her to
go to church, where her safety is assured. The theme of violence plays a crucial part in the "Ballad of Birmingham." In the poem, the young girl wants
to join in the marches happening in downtown, but her mother can't let her go due to the threat of police retribution against protesters.
When the daughter asks her mother to let her go to the march, her mother's reply is the description of the devices that police officers uses to counter
the protesters. The mother is very reluctant towards her daughter's decision of joining the march happening on the streets of Birmingham. According
to Randall, the mother describes the outcomes of the march as the following, "For the dogs are fierce and wild, / and clubs and hoses, guns and jails
/ Aren't good for a little child" (6–8). These lines are reflecting the fear that African–American women are facing during such events. They are opposed
towards the idea of going to the march because they understand what the outcomes will be, facing the violence from the police officers. Moreover, the
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"Girl" Jamaica Kincaid Response Essay
A Mother's Words A mother's words are the ones that ring loudest in a child's ear, are passed down from generation to generation, and the one's that
hold a special place in a child's memory and heart forever. Expectations and guidelines are set at a young age. Morals and values are learned
throughout the years, and life lessons are taught through the wisdom passed down from a mother to a daughter. Every mother has a wish for their
daughter to be the best they can be. But at what point does instruction and wisdom become simply words that have been said one too many times?
The short story "Girl," written by Jamaica Kincaid is presented to the reader as a list of instructions from a mother to a daughter on how to live life to
the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The mother also teaches her daughter to cook, clean, and wash which traditionally is up to the women in a household to do. Kincaid makes the
reader think and figure out for him, or herself, what point of life the child is in and what gender they are in order to draw them into the story. Life is
a learning process, and the mother in this story does not seem to understand that. The child in this story is young. The child has her whole life ahead
of her to make mistakes and learn lessons, however; her mother seems to want her to learn anything and everything there is to know at this one
moment in time. The daughter speaks twice through the whole story. Both times she speaks she seems confused and uncomfortable with the
conversation because she is too young to understand what her mom is saying. At one point in the story her mother states, "Don't sing benna in
Sunday school," the daughter's response is "but I don't sing benna on Sunday's at all" (200). In the mother's mind she is just reassuring what she has
already taught her daughter, but in the daughters mind is nothing but confusion. She has obviously already been taught to not sing benna and is
confused as to why she is getting lectured on not singing it again. Her mother is so set on making sure her daughter follows the rules she has made
for her, and becomes the woman she wants her to be, that she is willing to make her daughter feel like she is still
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Reba Hart-Montgomery
Mother–daughter relationships are very important in life. Some say they are absolutely essential. Mothers nurture, encourage, and provide the help
needed when it feels like the world is ending. Their presence makes everything better no matter what. Without a mother's love, without a mother's hug,
daughters would all feel a little lost. After all, what are daughters without their mothers? Here are the greatest mother–daughter relationships seen on
television (some make me totally jealous).
Number Five: Reba Hart and Cheyenne Hart–Montgomery (Reba). This mother–daughter relationship isn't any ordinary mother–daughter relationship.
Reba is present for all of her children, she's a great mother to her two daughters and one son, but with Cheyenne it's different. When Cheyenne
becomes pregnant her senior year of high school, Reba becomes a mother, a counselor, a nurse, and a friend. She supports Cheyenne during her
pregnancy. Reba provides Cheyenne with the advice she needs when life gets tough. She encourages Cheyenne when she feels like giving up, and she
nurtures her when she's sick or sad. Reba makes the bad times good, and with Cheyenne by her side, there's normally nothing but laughs. This
mother–daughter relationship melts anyone's heart. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Although this mother–daughter relationship may seem rocky at times, it does have a solid foundation. Beyond the arguing and the tears, this
mother–daughter relationship is one that will never be broken. Kathryn is extremely loving and supportive of Bay, regardless of their disagreements.
When something goes wrong, Bay knows that she can always run to her mother as opposed to her father. Kathryn is there with encouraging words and
warm hugs that stop any tears. Through thick and thin, Kathryn and Bay love each other unconditionally, and that's what makes this relationship so
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Mother-Daughter Relationships
The relationship between parents and their children is one of the most basic human interactions. Mothers and daughters provide both physical and
emotional care for their young sons and daughters. In the process, parents will instill children with family values and goals, while teaching them the
accepted norms and values of society. This is done in hope that parents will one day see their own children become mature adults, with their own goals
and purposes in life.
Mother–daughter relationships can be complex, but also filled with compassion and love. Mothers and daughters often seem farther away from each
other than they really are. Usually when a girl goes through adolescence, the relationship between her and her mother begin ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
#Even Western civilization has a history of unrealistic expectations about mothers. They are held responsible for their children's happiness. Many
people have troubles growing up enough to see their mothers as people. As Mary Pipher writes in her book, Reviving Ophelia, of studies about
adolescent girls, #distant mothers are scorned, but mothers who are to close are accused of smothering and overprotecting. Each chapter of
Reviving Ophelia opens with a different scenario and in her book, Pipher gives equal voices to both mothers and daughters. Maybe the first step
of a daughter towards maintaining a good relationship with her mother, is for her to see her mother as an individual. Growing up requires
adolescent girls to reject the person with whom they are most closely identified. Daughters are socialized to have a tremendous fear of becoming
like their mothers, but maybe if they tried enough to really look at and understand their mothers, this would no longer be a fear to them. I personally
think that many girls do not realize they may have this fear themselves. I know I did not realize I held it within myself, but then I also realized there
was a lot more to my mother that I cared to see. Once I saw past my close–mindedness, I understood that there was nothing wrong with growing up and
acting a little like my mom. In fact, there were some qualities my mother held that I wanted to imitate when I was a mother
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Kristi Belcamino Case Analysis
Kristi Belcamino is a mother of a nine–year–old daughter who had suffered from an eating disorder. The eating disorder that her daughter was
suffering from is called Anorexic. Anorexic is a life–threatening eating disorder that can cause a person to be extremely obsess about their weight, and
what they eat. Kristi Belcamino daughter was showing signs of Anorexic at the beginning of the article. Like for example Kristi Belcamino daughter
bones was sticking out, lost interest in foods she liked, unusual fears and concerns. However, Kristi and her husband did not know that her daughter
was suffering from Anorexic until they went to see a pediatrician. When the pediatrician had scale her daughter weight it was 50 pounds– seven pounds
less than
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Analysis Of To A Daughter Leaving Home By Linda Pastan
The author Linda Pastan, imagines a parent running breathlessly to regain her strength from the ending connection she once shared with her daughter
in her poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home." It's a mother's biggest fear when it comes to their child or children leaving home while going their own
ways when the time is right. This poem is based on childhood, fatherhood, and even motherhood.
Linda Pastan made this poem include various forms of figurative language to hide the literal message that it's trying to portray. Figurative language is
using figures of speech to make the text be more powerful, persuasive, and meaningful. Figures of speech such as, similes and metaphors, go beyond
the literal meanings to give the readers a new way of looking at the text. It can come in multiple ways with different literacy and rhetorical devices
such as: alliteration, imageries, onomatopoeias, and etc. With the usage of the literary devices Pastan has used, it introduced the relationship between the
mother and the daughter. It shows the memories of how the mother helped her daughter grow from a little girl to a young adult getting ready to go her
own way in life.
Linda Pastan's poem, To a Daughter Leaving Home, is represented as a metaphor because it's comparing the bike ride to the relationship between the
mother and daughter. The author describes the mother going along side her eight year old daughter as she rides her bicycle (Pastan 915). The
daughter "wobbled away" (Pastan 915). This happens to be an example of imagery because it gives a visual description of how the daughter was
riding her bike. As she rides the bike further along, the mother gets surprised by the way the daughter seemed to be in control of the bike as she goes
down a "curved path of the park" (Pastan 915).
Besides giving a visual description Linda uses symbolism to symbolize life. The phrase a "curved path" represents life by it being joyous,
unpredictable, and dangerous. Life doesn't go in a straight line, just a curved one. Pastan's use of onomatopoeias in the poem allows the reader to hear
what is going on in the poem. For example, she used the words "thud" and "crash" to make the reader visualize the way the daughter rides the bike
(Pastan
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Jamaica Kincaid Girl
From a young age, our interactions with our parents play an instrumental role in how we perceive ourselves and the world around us. The short story
"Girl" by Jamaica Kincaid exhibits the relationship between an Antiguan mother and her daughter in a patriarchal society where the list of rules and
regulations for women is exhaustive and almost never–ending. By analyzing the unique and often tense dynamic between the mother and daughter,
"Girl" showcases the direct influence mothers have on their children, and how traditional and patriarchal customs can influence that relationship. The
main themes are represented by the subjects the mother spends the most time on as well as the overall tone of the piece and how it relates to the
mother–daughter... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Kincaid's choice to separate pieces of advice by semicolons instead of full–stop periods lends the piece a sense of urgency, almost as if the mother is
trying to impart all of her knowledge to her daughter as quickly as possible. However, this often makes the mother's words come across tersely, and
the their relationship seems strained at best. The daughter is allowed very little input overall; one of her sentences comes across defensively, as
she denies her mother's accusations that she is singing provocative music in Sunday school, and the other is posed as an innocent question which
receives an aggressive answer. The mother's main concern seems to be that her daughter is turning into a "slut", and because of this apparent fear,
she can be argumentative and tense towards her daughter. However, near the end of the piece, some of the advice seems to take a softer turn. The
mother gives her daughter advice about love, and says, "don't feel too bad about giving up" (1), which is much gentler than many previous
sentiments. She even gives advice about "how to spit up in the air if you feel like it" (1) and how to move away; this reads much more like play
than work, and almost gives a sense of playfulness between the mother and daughter, practicing a useless but entertaining trick. However, by the end,
the mood turns again, as the girl's innocent question provokes an angry answer: "you mean to say that after all you are really going to be the kind of
woman who the baker won't let near the bread?" (1). While there may have been some progress in the mother–daughter relationship, it is ultimately
returned to the same frustrated and almost resentful
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Summary Of The Daughter Of Time By Josephine Tey
Napoleon Bonaparte once stated that "history is the version of past events that people have decided to agree upon." As evolution continues we see a
change in not only what the future may bring, but also what the past may have to offer. The history we are taught is based on the teachings and
readings of others, as it is clear that reliable resources are limited because we simply were not around during those specific times. The Daughter of Time
, by Josephine Tey proves this exact notion; that in actuality, what may have been relayed to us historically may not have been the entire truth, but who
are we to claim that or disprove such things?
After an unfortunate accident landing him in the hospital, main character Grant looks for some pastimes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Though at the end of the book, Tey's clear message leads us to believe that Richard in fact was innocent of all the crimes he was claimed to have
committed, how can we be certain?
Authors like Tey pushed for a society to not only question the surroundings of the world, but look deeper into we are being told and taught. What one
may believe, with the right attitude and supporting detail, may be enough to change the minds of many who are easily manipulated.
Each and every time period creates pieces of works that reflect the very time they are living in, this being proven by the works written on Richard
the third. While some were stuck on the notions that Richard did in fact kill his nephews, works portrayed him as a pious and unforgiving man
looking for power, disregarding all costs even his family. On the opposite side of the spectrum we read pieces ofhistory that completely defend Richard
the third and wonder why he had not done more to protect his reputation believing that he did not do what was claimed to have done.
It is also indeed the hope that a nation believes in that affects what is
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Daughter Leaving Home
"To a Daughter Leaving Home" Companion
In Linda Pastan's poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," home is a place of reflection. In this poem, a mother is reflecting upon a time when her
daughter had left home. Although, the home in which she is leaving is not a place. In this family, a home is a feeling. The home in this poem is the
relationship between a mother and a daughter. Pastan's, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," relies on word choice, elapse of time, and sentence structure to
create this family's home.
In this poem, Pastan's word choice plays a key role in understanding what makes their family a home. The poem's title, "To a Daughter Leaving
Home," explicitly tells the reader that the daughter is currently preparing to leave their home. However, we, as the reader, know nothing of the home
her daughter is preparing to leave. The reader does not know if the mother and daughter live in a mansion or a trailer, but that is not what is important
to this story. The mother uses the words, "surprises" (8), "waiting" (11), and "...screaming / with laughter," (19–20) to describe her daughter's bicycle
ride. Looking ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Pastan jumps immediately to the past, the mother, telling the story of her daughter leaving home for the first time. The poem, in its entirety, is in past
tense, "When I taught you / at eight to ride / a bicycle..." (1–3). Taught, being the past tense of teach in this portion of the poem, tells the reader that the
mother is reflecting on the time she taught her daughter to ride her bicycle. The gap in time is ultimately created by the title, "To a Daughter Leaving
Home." The present time is the daughter leaving home again. The gap in time creates a reflection from when the daughter was eight–years–old to the
present time. This flashback, created by Pastan, is guiding the reader to think that as the daughter is preparing to leave, the mother is having similar
feelings as the first time her daughter
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Rhetorical Analysis : Deborah Tannen
Rhetorical Analysis
Deborah Tannen is a professor in linguistics at Georgetown University. She studies the different patterns of language, like talking to people at work,
friends, family, politics, academics, law, and how the ways we talk affect relationships with others. In her essay, "Oh, Mom. Oh, Honey. : Why Do
You Have to Say That? " The author's purpose in this essay is about howmother and daughter relationships are, and what the mother is trying to say to
the daughter, when talking to her. The reason behind the author's purpose, is because her own mother was gradually getting weak. She started
spending more time with her mother and caring for her. When her mom died, it transformed her thinking about mother and daughter relationships. She
uses real life experiences and dialect to convey her intentions to the reader. In the essay, the author uses research and conducted interviews that she
found about mother and daughter relationships, to show the actual meaning to what mothers are saying to their daughters when communicating. The
author's uses dialect to show how mothers and daughters talk to each other. For example, "Do you think you would have accomplished all of this if
you had stayed married?" "Absolutely not," I said. "If I'd stayed married, I wouldn't have gone to grad school to get my PhD." "Well," she replied, "If
you'd stayed married you wouldn't have had to" (pg. 918–919).This shows the communication between most moms and their daughters. Tannen
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ART CRITICISM PAPER
ART CRITICISM PAPER
"The Grafin von Schonfeld with her Daughter" by Elizabeth Louise Vigee–LeBrun
In the University Of Arizona Museum Of Art, the Pfeiffer Gallery is displaying many art pieces of oil on canvas paintings. These paintings are mostly
portraits of people, both famous and not. They are painted by a variety of artists of European decent and American decent between the mid 1700's and
the early 1900's. The painting by Elizabeth Louise Vigee–Lebrun caught my eye and drew me in to look closely at its composition.
"The Grafin von Scholfeld with her Daughter" is oil on canvas art piece painted in 1793. It is a painting of a woman holding her daughter on her lap, the
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The little girl's dress gives the texture of lightness and seems like airy fabric that would be thin and translucent. The time in this piece is very
accurate of the late 1700's and when viewing it, the time seems classic. The emphasis of this piece is mainly the mother and the daughter, however
when looking at them you are drawn into looking at their realistic eyes. The eyes seem like the focal point which draws the viewer in to the picture.
The relationship in the painting between the mother and daughter give it a definite asymmetrical balance and maybe a little radial balance. A radial
balance because of their eyes being the central focus, then the faces, then the holding of each other, then where they are placed on the canvas, and then
the bench and the landscape. The colors used by the painter, also creates balance with in the picture. The wine colored dress of the mother, red sash
of the daughter's dress, ruby lips, and the rosy cheeks give a warm feeling to the central focus of the mother and daughter. The cool color of the sky is
the same as the women's eyes as well as the trees and green on the mother's dress. These balances give unity or a unifying feeling to the painting,
especially between the mother and daughter.
The idea of this piece is to show the connection between mother and daughter being painted. It shows the time and the classic style of the
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Parents' Roles in Development of Eating Disorders: How...
Parents' Roles in Development of Eating Disorders
Introduction
Much of the literature that focuses on the parents' role in the development of eating disorders is focused on the mother and the mother–daughter
relationship. Studies have shown conclusively that a mother's body image and eating habits are, mirrored in her daughter, and that if she is obsessed
with her own body image, it stands likely that her daughter will be the same way both growing up and in her adult life. The father, though, is often
left out of the research except for in the basic family profile. Here, we will examine the active role that the father plays in the development of eating
disorders in their daughters. First, we will explore why the father's ideas and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Men, for the most part, agree with the social norms of beauty. Watching television, reading magazines, or simply walking down the street with their
fathers, girls see the appreciation thin, beautiful women receive from men. In turn, the girls believe that if they were thin and beautiful, they would
have a better relationship with their father. Fathers though, have a difficult time with dealing with the fact that their daughters are beautiful, even if
they are, because of the facts that they do not want their little girls to grow up and also because they cannot relate to what they see as 'premature
sexuality' (Palazzoli). When girls begin to express themselves sexually, then, fathers become more distant from the relationship, often seeing the
situation as one the mother should deal with. If the father does feel the need to play a role in this stage of his daughter's development, it is mostly to
warn her against the evils of boys her age and the threat and consequences of pregnancy and disease. There is rarely a sit down discussion of what it
means to be woman from a man's perspective between fathers and daughters. This indifference leads the daughter to work harder for her father's
approval, and often has disastrous results.
Transformation of Feelings into Symptoms
If a girl has a distant, but not uncaring relationship with her father, due either to unintentional things such as social factors or
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Josephine Tey's The Daughter Of Time
Until I read The Daughter of Time, I liked history. This was fortunate, since the curriculum my mother used to homeschool me and my sisters was
literature based, and as a result, we read a lot of historical fiction. Some I enjoyed more than others, but over the years, as I grew to be quite a
voracious reader, historical fiction remained one of my most commonly read genres. And as my reading comprehension developed, classic literature
and several historical biographies slipped into my reading list. I knew I enjoyed history, but only in a vague, half–conscious manner. The fact that
many of the books I read were award–winning and historically accurate was incidental.
Enter Josephine Tey and Richard III. When I was around fifteen, a friend of my mother's recommended that we try BBC Radio. Accordingly we found
the site; and the book that was currently airing was The Daughter of Time.
The Daughter of Time is a detective novel written in 1951 by Elizabeth MacKintosh, alias Josephine Tey. It features a... Show more content on
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Soon enough, I was wading through articles about hemophilia, breaking my heart over little Alexei Nikolaevich. I was crying over Sassoon, singing
along to Vera Lynn, and loitering in the military history aisle in Barnes and Noble. Akhenaten's Amarna Dynasty intrigued me. I had to explain to my
sister why I emitted a near–squeal of delight when I saw a photo of the Book of Kells' chi rho page.
I had always liked history. Now, thanks to Elizabeth MacKintosh and The Daughter of Time, I love history. This book piqued my curiosity and
through research, opened the way to discover something that ought to have been obvious, but somehow never was: the people who lived before us
lived. They were human beings with thoughts and fears and opinions and troubles. They loved and lied; they died and were (or were not) mourned and
forgotten. But first they
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The Renaissance Era
The Renaissance time was a hard transitioning time that no one today has lived long enough to tell. Today we base the past on the evidence that we
find such as books, art, plays, scripts, and really anything that can be found in those times. Everything is so scarce but very important. Relationships
between parents and children is also something to think about. Have you ever been just a bit curious about how in today's time we may act different
than from those times? In today's modern world it depends on what age you are to determine the relationship with parents and children. What about the
Renaissance times though? The Renaissance era was a time between the Middle Ages and modern times and it lasted from the 14th to the 17th
century. The reason they call it the Renaissance era is because the word "Renaissance" means "rebirth", as in meaning the Middle Ages time is
being reborn into the modern times. A lot of things were lost in the Middle Ages, such as the foundings of Greeks and Romans boosts in sciences,
government, and art, which is also why people today call the Middle Ages the "Dark Ages". The Renaissance era was a new beginning for expanding
the education of art, sciences, government, and music. Overall it was a big movement to being better and to strive to come out of the dark ages (Hinds,
K. Renaissance for Kids). After things got advanced and people regained the education and government systems, that also means that the people
changed with it. People who changed
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Summary : ' Daughters Of Mothers With Multiple Sclerosis '...
Article: Jonzon, Alison and Donna L. Goodwin, "Daughters of Mothers with Multiple Sclerosis: Their Experience of Play", Adapted Physical Activity
Quarterly, July 2012, V. 29, #3, pp. 205–223.
I picked this article because it was more sociological than physically scientific. Also, in my opinion, it would be general applicable to many diseases
and disabilities. Drawbacks of the study was that it was very small (4), only one of whom was currently caregiving. Although, the prior caregivers
may have gained perspective difficult to achieve while caregiving. Two were only children and two were youngest children. Two were in single–parent
families for the entirety of their caregiving and two partially until their mothers remarried (! – ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
205) The emphasis of the study was on the impact on the family system. Three themes emerged: "(a) being a good daughter, (b) blurred relationship
boundaries, and (c) encumbered play". They all gave personal care to their mothers, experiencing worry and guilt. But this experience caused them to
be more mature than their peers. Because of their caregiving, the responsibility of which was often deemed excessive, they had "limited social
networks" and often at least the appearance of role reversal. They usually had at least limited access to some play, which provided much–needed and
appreciated relief, recreation, and escape.
Women have 300% the incidence of MS as do men, usually diagnoses between the ages of 15 and 40. Often, because of fatigue and lack of
functionality, the mothers' physical conditions could degenerate further. What had not occurred to me was that the mothers also became emotionally
inaccessible. Homemaking duties and personal care that they used to do are now done by the daughters, especially in single parent households. Even
when sons were also present, the mothers usually preferred the services of a daughter because of gender expectations and experience, for the intimacy
of the personal care, more perceived capacity for compassion/empathy, emotional closeness, and shared values.
The youngest of these daughters had just barely assumed adulthood themselves, at least at the time of the study; they may at that time already
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Pride And Prejudice By Jane Austen Essay
Pride and Prejudice is a story written by Jane Austen. Jane, born in December of 1775, has written multiple stories, though Pride and Prejudice is the
story she is most remembered by. Jane Austen, during her lifetime, gained little fame. It was not until after her death, when her brother published A
Memoir of Jane Austen, that her books began gaining fame. This story, set in England in the 19th Century, tells the tale of a family known as the
Bennet's. In this family there is Mr. and Mrs. Bennet, along with their daughters Jane, Elizabeth, Mary, Lydia, and Kitty. During this story the reader
will learn about how the daughters have trouble finding love with two men named Mr. Bingley and Mr. Darcy. Two of the main factors that help push
the daughters is the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bennet. Mr. and Mrs. Bennet both love their daughters very much, and they have some similarities, but they
differ in their personalities, their involvement with their daughters, and their involvement in their daughters' relationships. Looking at Mr. Bennet, one
of the first things the viewers should be able to see is his laid–back personality. Such as when the Bennet's have company coming over he does not
freak out like his wife does, he remains calm. He is also very level–headed; he lives with a woman like Mrs. Bennet and is able to maintain his sanity
by basically making fun of her. He is also quite the antisocial, spending most of his time in his study alone. Though his older daughters seem to have
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Authoritative Parenting Analysis
My group members and I discussed how parenting in an authoritative style is key in any scenario presented. Authoritative parenting is shown when
"parents use warmth, firm control, and rational issue–oriented discipline, in which emphasis is placed on the development of self–direction" (Steinberg,
2017). My group members and I decided to focus on scenario one and we believe that an appropriate response to a situation, where a daughter
disobeys her mother's rules of no boys in the house alone, would be using authoritative parenting. An authoritative parent would sit her daughter down,
after the boy has left, and ask her why she broke the rules. The parent would then lecture the daughter and explain to her the reason she believes these
rules need ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This gives the daughter the feeling that she is involved in the rules. The mother isn't disciplining the child harshly, but rather is being warm and firm
with her child. She is explaining to her daughter why these rules are set, making the daughter feel intellectually sufficient in the situation. If the mother
were an authoritarian parent, a parent "who use[s] punitive, absolute, and forceful discipline, and who place[s] a premium on obedience and
conformity" then she would have probably yelled at her daughter (Steinberg, 2017). She would have enforced a more drastic form of punishment, like
taking away her phone and computer for two months and forbidding her from ever seeing the boy again. My group members and I agreed that if the
mother were an indulgent parent, "who [is generally] mainly concerned with the child's happiness," then the mother would be overly understanding
(Steinberg, 2017). She would her daughter it's okay that she broke the rules and not enforce any punishment. She wouldn't enforce the rules and let her
daughter run freely. If the mother were an indifferent parent, "who [is] characterized by low levels of both responsiveness and demandingness," she
would've just walked by her daughter and boyfriend on the couch, without a car in the world (Steinberg, 2017). She might have rules in the house but
never
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Girl By Jamaica Kincaid
Mothers nag us with chores and tell us to straighten up when we mess up, but mothers always know best and do everything out of love for their
children. The short story "Girl" by Jamaica Kincaid demonstrates this in a list of instructions a mother gives to her daughter to help her live a
successful life. Directions that are listed involve food, clothes, social skills, health, and protection of public image. Together these tasks assist in
characterizing the mother and daughter. In "Girl," Jamaica Kincaid employs characterization through the characters' actions, conflict, and dialogue to
reveal the mother's tough love and the daughter's immaturity. At first, Kincaid's story seems to be an arbitrary list of actions a strict mother tells her
daughter, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The first time Kincaid shows this conflict is when the mother says "walk like a lady and not like the slut you are so bent on becoming" Secondly,
when teaching her daughter how to dress, the mother shows how to hem a dress to "prevent yourself from looking like the slut I know you are so bent
on becoming" (Kincaid #). Both times the mother refers to her daughter's desire to become a slut, Kincaid exposes the daughter's immaturity and
misunderstanding of social norms. In the daughter's youth, she does not understand how to dress and act in pubic, so the mother reprimands her by
identifying the bad behavior and provides instruction for the proper way to act. Although the mother's instructions are very clear, the daughter still
becomes a slut. Later, the mother instructs "this is how to behave in the presence of men who don't know you very well, and this way they won't
recognize immediately the slut I have warned you against becoming" revealing the daughter, at this point in the story, has become a slut (Kincaid #).
The daughter's direct defiance of her mother's instructions shows her lack of respect and immaturity. Even though the daughter has gone against her
mother, the mothers love for her daughter is still apparent by the help she continues to provide. Through the conflict between the mother and daughter,
Kincaid portrays the daughter's defiance and mother's endless
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The Daughter Of Time By Joseph Essay
Josephine Tey's The Daughter of Time is a historical novel that looks at the belief that
Richard III, King of England, murdered his two nephews in order to maintain his power. This novel also supports the belief that the "truth comes out
through time." In the novel the main character, Grant, is concerned with what he believes is a unknown fact of whether or not the long ago King of
England was guilty. Throughout his search for the answer Grant discovers many history books which all tend to view Richard in different ways. It is
from these different views of the same man, that one can draw the conclusion that bias plays a major role in the validity and credibility of documents
and personal accounts. So what is the role and in what ways ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Personal accounts and documents are often overlooked or considered unbelievable because they cannot be considered valid due to the bias opinions
of the writer. As historians many find this discouraging because they have no account of what really happened and only have what can be read from
the writings of others. In the media bias plays a role in the validity of certain things. An example, just one out of the many, where bias plays a role in
the credibility of certain events is the Pocahontas story. With out going into too much detail it is safe to say that the Disney version was very much
altered from the real version. Pocahontas was a nickname for "the naughty one" the girls real name in this legend was Matoaka. [visit http:/
/www.powhatan.org/pocc.html to see what is being referred to]
If bias continues to effect how valid certain past documents are, the documents which help to base our future, than what do we as historians have to go
on?
When one takes The Daughter of Time and looks closely another name for daughter one may come up with istruth. The truth is what eventually evolves
after time. "The truth comes out through time," is a statement which this book The Daughter of Time demonstrated very well. It showed how
Grant found evidence to support his belief that Richard the III was in fact innocent. It took many years for someone to realize this but that is the role of
time in this case. Grant used information from books, which had been
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Josephine Tey's The Daughter Of Time
The creation of a detective fiction novel does not always have to be based on the mystery of a crime or something recent. For an author to shake up
the detective fiction world and do something outside the box is new. The woman bold enough to do this is Josephine Tey and her story The Daughter
of Time.
The daughter of time is based in London with one of Scotland Yard's best detective. Alan Grant is currently in the hospital from him chasing a
criminal and getting his leg caught in a trap door. Grant, a very active man, find himself to be bored laid up in the hospital. He asks one of his old
friends for some entertainment and she didn't do much but pass on old books. He would spend many nights laid up in the hospital staring at the roof
counting ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Lest start off with deciding if the crime presented is significant enough to try and solve. Nobody ever knows the truth behind small parts of history
because off so many different stories and so Grant got this picture of the Middle ages where Richard III facial expression caught his eye. He
Figured out the story behind what had supposedly happened, and it was pretty significant to crack down and investigate further. Grant is very
quick on his feet and observant of his surrounds and the things presented to him, any man who can remember the exact places and times of nurses
is pretty memorable. Even though a detective story has an outstanding opponent in almost every story in this one, his injury and history are his
true enemies. He is not able to be mobile like he wants to and is limited to just being in his bed and receiving material from Marta Hallard. Once he
starts breaking down the facts present by legal documents form the middle ages and the facts of the family involved, you kind of start to wonder
what is really going on. Is there possibly a cover up? Was this an inside Job? A case of Jealousy? With all the facts and pieces of the puzzle pulled
together by Grant he discovers that Richard III was not the murderous Uncle but more like the Unfortunate Uncle. Henry IV had more to gain from his
lies and false
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The Miller's Play 'Rumpelstiltskin'
Fairy Tale Play: Character List: Create a table below listing your characters and brief physical and emotional descriptions. There should be AT LEAST
4 characters. King Daughter Rumplestiltskin Miller Setting Description: In 15–30 words, describe the setting of the piece. The setting is represented at
the castle which is where the Miller speaks to the King and Makin asked for the child. Title:Rumpelstiltskin Run Time: 5 minutes Below write the
dialogue for your play. Please make sure that the story is easily followed. Miller is at the castle with the King Miller: I have a daughter who can spin
straw into gold. King: That pleases me well, if your daughter is clever as you say, bring her to me to–morrow. As the miller walks out. The Miller's
daughter... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Locks herself in a room by herself looking confused. Begin to weep. Strange person in the shadows Makin: Good evening why are you crying so.
Daughter: Alas, I have such trouble for the deed I must do. Makin: What must you do. Daughter: I must spin straw into gold, and I don't know how. I
only have to–night to finish or I must die. Makin: What will you give me if I do it for you. Daughter: I don't have much, but I shall give you my
necklace. Makin takes necklace from daughter, and he sits on the wheel and starts to spin, morning. Sraw turns to gold. King enters and is waiting for
the relevance of the gold. Looks surprised that it actually worked King: Wow it actually worked? You shall make me more! Daughter: But... King: No
buts you shall make me more by to–morrow! Night is upon, and Makin comes in Makin: What shall you give me if I spin the straw to gold again.
Daughter: I have nothing left to give you, but I promise to give you my first child. Makin: Thats a deal. Makin makes the straw into gold again.King
walks in and asked the daughter to be queen. Daughter says yes. 1 year
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Comparing The Pomegranate And The Bistro Styx
In the poems "The Pomegranate" by Eavan Boland and "The Bistro Styx" by Rita Dove, the poets make allusions to the myth of Persephone. This myth
is about the anguish felt by Persephone's mother, Demeter, when she loses her. In the poems, both writers are witnessing their daughters grow apart
from them, but they have different viewpoints on this process. Boland in "The Pomegranate" understands that this drifting apart is certain and yearns
to make the most out of the time she has with her daughter before this emotional detachment. Conversely, Dove in "The Bistro Styx" is spiteful of her
daughter's increasingly evident detachment from her. Boland and Dove use the myth of Persephone in order to to describe the relationship struggles
endured by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Her daughter is involved in a romantic relationship with an artist of whom Dove does not approve. Dove's discontent towards her daughter's
boyfriend and their lifestyle is seen when her daughter says, "The tourists love us. The Parisians, of course...are amused, though not without a certain
admiration," and she replies, "Admiration for what?" Further discontent is seen when Dove thinks about her daughter, "Are you content to conduct
your life as a clichГ© and, what's worse, an anachronism, the brooding artist's demimonde." Dove ties in the myth of Persephone when her daughter
consumes countless items of food in the restaurant. In the myth of Persephone, Persephone becomes eternally separated from her mother because
she eats a pomegranate in the underworld which bound her to stay forever. Dove's daughter's seemingly unsatisfiable hunger in the restaurant
symbolizes the decision to distance herself from her mother forever. Dove writes, "Nothing seemed to fill her," and later when she asks her
daughter if she is happy, her daughter does not directly answer the question and, instead, responds by biting into a fig and proclaiming, "one really
should try the fruit here." In the final line of the poem, Dove thinks, "I've lost her." Because her daughter symbolically ate all of this food while in an
underworld, there is no chance of Dove ever being able to rescue her or win her
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Being A Daughter By John Chineser
Being a daughter means that you belong to womanhood which brings something distinct and special to the world, it fills a void and plays an
important role that no man can. John Sinor once said "It is admirable for a man to take his son fishing, but there is a special place in heaven for the
father who takes his daughter shopping"(Source A).
The bond which a mother and daughter share and develop over the years is a very special one. Every step a daughter takes towards growing into a
beautiful woman will touch her mother's heart. From her first princess dress to her wedding dress. Every mothers dream is to see her daughter cherish
and blossom into a beautiful young lady. Daughters always want to be just like their mommies, with make–up, heels ... Show more content on
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No son will ever be "Daddy's little princess" where as a daughter will forever remain "Daddy's little princess" no matter how old she is, how fast she
grows up or when her dad hands her over to her husband to be. Every daughter sees her daddy as her superhero, always knowing that he has her
back. Fathers are one of the most influential figures in a child's life, they influence how their daughters should view themselves(Source D). "A big
dad can easily become smaller for his beloved daughter"(Source E) as daughters can instantly change their fathers to see the better side of life. A
father needs to be a man in order to raise his son, however he needs to be a superhero in order to raise his daughter.
Moreover the relationship between siblings is one that will never fail, knowing that you will always have someone to lean back on in tough times.
One of the best support systems can come from an older sister, one who is willing to stand by you through thick and thin and knowing that you will
always be protected. With older sisters one could have more of an open relationship compared to that of older brothers as girls are more patient and
understanding than that of
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Essay on Parent Interview of a Special Needs Child
The mother reports having a normal pregnancy with no complications, and that her pregnancy was easy. This was the second child for the mother,
who has another child who was five years old at the time. The mother also disclosed that at the time of the pregnancy she was in the process of
separating from the child's father and that this caused a moderate level of stress. At the time of the pregnancy the mother was also working full time
as waitress in a local restaurant, the mother reports that her job required she be on her feet for a long period of times, but that she was able to work
until around a week before her child was born. The mother reports that the child was born around two weeks early but that labor was easy and the
child was... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The mother reports that the child responded well to different people and family members and friends reported the child was easy to care for. The
mother however reported that being a single mother was stressful.
At the time the child was a year and half old, the mother placed in family daycare center that was in a provider's apartment. The provider also cared
for four other children between the ages of one and three. The child was in the providers care from the age of one and half until she was three years
when she started to attend a full day preschool program. The mother reported no concerns during this period of the time and stated that her daughter
was an easy child who listened. She also reported that her child was curious and liked to explore many different things and that she especially liked
playing with puzzles and books. The mother reports potty training also being easy and that her daughter learned quickly and was full potty trained
within in a week.
At the age of three the child was in full day preschool program. The mother reported her daughter having an easy transition into the program and was
excited to go to school and she was "a big girl now".
The mother reports that it was the preschool teacher who first mentioned to her that could possibly be an issue with her daughter's speech. The mother
reports the teacher telling her that although her daughter
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Analysis Of The Book ' Daughter Of Time '
Josephine Tey's Daughter of Time is a story that gives the reader a role in being a detective, filling in Sherlock Holmes 's shoes but with a twist.
Within the first few chapters we meet Alan Grant, a famous inspector from England 's Scotland Yard. He is confined in a hospital after sustaining
an injury, leaving him immensely bored during his recovery there. Where he would trace and map out ceiling cracks for hours; after awhile he
became acquainted with the nurses that would come in and out of his room. His actress friend Marta brings printed materials for Grant to read but
he would reject them, the reason is not known. His antsy behavior shows that he craves a mental challenge. Grant eventually got what he wanted;
Marta suggested that he should try solving an old mystery that no one has managed to solve. She brings him pictures, portraits of faces from
different historical eras. During his recovery, he spends time analyzing the collection that Marta provides him. It's clear that Grant adopts Carr's and
Elton's methodology into solving this case and without either of them it wouldn't be possible. He came across a picture of Richard III, who had
accusations of killing his two nephews; his Brother Edward IV 's sons. It is evident that Grant takes pride in his skills as an inspector and speculates
that Edward III is not the perpetrator of the murders. From that point he undertakes the task of learning British history. Finding clues and piecing them
together, disregarding
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Home As A Place Of Reflection
In Linda Pastan's poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," Pastan depicts home as a place of reflection. The whole poem is based on a mother's
reflection of a time when her daughter had left home. However, the home that the mother describes is not a psychical place, but a feeling. The home is
the relationship between the mother and her daughter. Pastan's, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," relies on a single speaker, word choice, flashbacks,
and sentence structure to depict the mother's sorrowful reflection, in order to create a home that is defined by this family's relationship.
The poem is spoken entirely by the mother, leaving the daughter's voice absent. At eight–years–old, the daughter does not realize what it means to have
successfully ridden a bicycle. To the daughter, it is just an innocent bicycle ride. "The hair flapping / behind you like a / handkerchief waving
/ goodbye" (21–24). For the mother, this is a milestone. Her daughter has done something without her help. The daughter is getting older and is ready
to go off on her own. The mother is not ready for her daughter to grow up yet, "I / sprinted to catch up, / while you grew / smaller..." (13–16). Pastan is
playing with the idea that mother's do not want their children to grow up. Therefore, when a child reaches a milestone, such as riding a bicycle, it
creates a sense of sadness for a parent, that a child doesn't quite understand.
Pastan's word choice emphasizes that the important elements of a home are not the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Two Kinds by Amy Tan Essay
In the short story, "Two Kinds" by Amy Tan, a Chinese mother and daughter are at odds with each other. The mother pushes her daughter to become a
prodigy, while the daughter (like most children with immigrant parents) seeks to find herself in a world that demands her Americanization. This is the
theme of the story, conflicting values. In a society that values individuality, the daughter sought to be an individual, while her mother demanded she do
what was suggested. This is a conflict within itself. The daughter must deal with an internal and external conflict. Internally, she struggles to find
herself. Externally, she struggles with the burden of failing to meet her mother's expectations. Being a first–generation Asian American,... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
At first, the daughter was to become a Chinese version of Shirley Temple. When that didn't work, her mother told her that she would be attending piano
lessons.
The daughter did not like the idea of playing the piano. "Why don't you like me the way I am? . . . I am not a genius! I can't play the piano. And even
if I could, I wouldn't go on TV if you paid me a million dollars!" (492–493). Here, Tan is conveying the fact that parents and children have
disagreements on what the child should do, and who the child is to become. For example, parents may have an idea where they want their child to
attend their college education. The child, on the other hand, may want to go to a different college as suggested. Ultimately, it is the decision of the
child. We cannot live how others want us to live. It is the path of our own making that truly makes us happy.
Some may see the mother trying to live her life through her daughter. She invests time trying to make her daughter a prodigy because she was her last
hope. The mother lost two children in China and moves to a new country. Coming to America, she felt that immigrants have to prove that they are as
talented as or more talented than Americans. This belief is supposed to be the basis for the determination, that the mother has, for Jing–mei to become a
prodigy.
The mother in the story tries everything in her power to make Jing–mei famous in some way. Yet Jing–mei was content to being herself.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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No Daughter By Sandra Cisneros

  • 1. No Daughter By Sandra Cisneros Always wanted to be accepted by others is part our society. I remember wanting to be accepted that it didn't matter if I dyed my hair, change my clothes or my personality somehow that was never good enough. But the person that I desperately seek acceptance from was my mother. I had to become the eldest child in our family, my brother decided he no longer wanted the responsibility he let go of school and along the hope my mother had for him to have a career. The pressure and expectations amplified for me to be somebody. Sandra Cisneros in her essay "Only Daughter" that intertwines her story as the outsider, the "only daughter" in a family of six sons who articulates a yearning for her father's acceptance of her as a daughter and as a writer, both of which delimit her as an individual. Cisneros uses diction, tone, and imagery to convey the message. This struggle for acceptance is apparent in her diction. Cisneros uses the expression, "only daughter" multiple times in the introduction paragraph alone. She tries to find the appropriate phrase, "I am the only daughter in a family of six sons . . . I am the only daughter in a Mexican family . . . I am the only daughter of a Mexican father . . . I am the only daughter of a working–class family . . . I was/am the only daughter and only a daughter." The writer wants us to comprehend her uneasiness as she fiddles to write this like a kid who moves restlessly in an uncomfortable situation. She is made to feel uncomfortable by her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Two Kinds of Interpretations in Amy Tanв Ђ™s Short Story Two... Often times mothers can be pushy, annoying, and a bit overbearing but in the long run they always just want what is best for their child. Everyone wants their child to be the best, most popular and overall number one. In Amy Tan's short story "Two Kinds" we see this type of fame hungry mother. The short story is about a Chinese family who lost everything. The mother had lost her entire family full of children except for the one in the story. With the belief "you could be anything you want in America" (Tan 305) in mind the mother set off to find what her child can do. This ultimately will resort in disappointment for both the mother and child, as they do not share the same goals throughout the short story. My initial personal interpretation of this piece is that the mother wants to live vicariously through her daughter. This was proven throughout the story time and time again. Through further thought, different literary techniques, and class discussion I became aware of an alternate interpretation of the story. This is that their are two kinds of daughters and the way the mother daughter relationship could be. Both interpretations have many examples to support them and the story can truly be analyzed in more then one way. The mother in the story is sensibly upset about what has happened in the past in China. After losing everything she wanted the best for her daughter, but could this possibly mean she wanted it for herself as well. It seems the mother might have ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Essay on The Strain of Mother-Daughter Relationships in... The Strain of Mother–Daughter Relationships in Annie John Jamaica Kincaid accurately portrays how adolescence can strain mother– daughter relationships. The mother– daughter relationships are universal but "it is not clear why we avoid the topic"(Gerd). The father– daughter relationships and the mother– sons relationships are the issues mostly talked about. In Jamaica Kincaid's novel, Annie John, she explains and gives insight into mother– daughter relationships. In Annie John, there are events that make people think about their relationship with their own mother. Kincaid expresses this relationship through her main character Annie who tries to find her own identity. The relationship between Annie... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the novel, Annie did many things with her mother and look into the world through her mother. With all this, Annie wouldn't know what the world would be like with out her mother. Frances A. Nadeau, who wrote an article on the mother– daughter relationship, said "Understanding [this] relationship is critical to young adult girls because daughters bond with their mothers in a complex, interdependent association that often inhibits a daughter from establishing her own identity." Different people might describe this relationship in different ways but one common theme they have is that the daughter cannot do any thing without the mother and she also has her mothers' image. In the novel, Annie and her mother were almost the same. They wore dresses cut from the same cloth; they went shopping together; and they even took bath together. She did many things with her mother and even wears the same cloth. Annie was like a little mirror of her mother. As the relationship gets to different stage in life it changes. For instance, the relationship you have with your mother when you are a child is different from the one you have during adolescence and it's also different when you are a mother yourself. But the most difficult stage is during
  • 4. adolescence. Adolescence is a difficult stage for both the mothers and daughters. Recent studies show that "adolescence [is] regarded as a time of "storm and stress", and solely attributed to the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. The Children's Hour Figurative Language Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem "The Children's Hour" shares a messages that evokes love, passion, and strong emotions. After devastation, the speaker realizes the importance of family and starts appreciating the special moments with his daughters. Through tone, diction, structure, imagery, and metaphor. Longfellow demonstrates how important the theme of caring, loving, and spending time with loved ones is. After a long day of work, the speaker comes home to his family. This is the time that most people long for. Quality time with his daughters is an important part of the speaker's life. Tone that expresses love, care, and compassion help the poem's theme, which is the importance of family, to be demonstrated. This poem sparks the sensitive emotions that everyone has deep down in their heart. These emotions demonstrate what is most important in life, and there is nothing more important than family. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The speaker uses words and phrases associated with fairytale stories, such as "castle" and "dungeon" (lines 20 and 35). References to the story of the "Bishop of Bingen", further the use of a fairytale story that the father reads to his daughters (line 27). As his daughters "climb into [his] turret," and "entwine" their arms around him, the father doesn't seize to play with them (lines 21 and 26). At the end of the speaker's busy day, his daughters sneak up on him and "devour [him] with kisses" (line 25). Through the Longfellow's diction, the emotions about the father and his relationship with his daughters is demonstrated. Although long in length, this poem is also fluid in structure. "The Children's Hour" follows the rhyme scheme ABCB. Longfellow's use of rhyme scheme and structure help to utilize the emotions and childhood memories behind fairytale stories. The poem is consistent and there are no unusual breaks or ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Unequal Cultural Traditions And Generations : The Joy Luck... Swanson 1 Katie Swanson Mrs. Reischl English 1 ACC 1 April 2015 Unequal Cultural Traditions and Generations: The Joy Luck Club The Joy Luck Club is a collection of many interrelated stories that are centered around the diverse emotional relationships of different mother and daughter relationships. Most of these mother daughter relationships are fragile and become even more distanced through history and heritage. In China, these mothers are forced to emigrate from China to America to escape a life full of poverty and war. America differs from this because the mothers struggle to raise their American born daughters in a completely different environment. The difference is extreme from growing up during the first quarter of the twentieth century in China, rather than raising their daughters in California. To this day, the mothers of present day China still believe and encourage their daughters to follow in their footsteps and praise chinese traditions. The mothers, Suyuan Woo, An–Mei Hsu, Lindo Jong, and Ying–Ying St. Clair and the daughters, Jing–Mei "June" Woo, Rose Hsu Jordan, Waverly Jong, and Lena St. Clair all have dynamic relationships that are evolving. In the novel, The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, man's relationship with his fellow man is unequal due to cultural traditions and generations. Elements of Chinese culture include obedience and the idea of marriage. Because the mothers grew up in China and were raised upon tradition, they base their views on obedience and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Analysis Of The Article ' Mothers And Mother ' Essay Review and Analysis of Mothers and Mother–in–laws In the article Mothers and Mother–in–laws, an exploratory case study of relationshionships between mothers, daughters, and mother–in–laws were evaluated and discussed. All of the participants in the study were asked to personally fill out a questionnaire that contained questioned pertaining to their relationships with each other. Mothers, daughters, mother–in–laws, and husbands were all asked to participate in this study. The researchers indicated the independent variables – variables that can be manipulated– as the daughter's parental status, a comparison across relationships, and a comparison of relationship perspectives. The dependent variables included relational strain, interpersonal boundaries, and interactive involvement. The focus of the study was to examine how the addition of a grandchild to the relationships affects how the different dyads interact. Research collected at the end of the study concluded that mothers and daughters become closer with the birth of a grand child, but mother–in–laws and daughter–in–laws tend to become more at odds with each other. Researchers working on this project were aware of the different aspects involved in the traditional mother/daughter relationship prior to the beginning of the study. Also, the fact that asymmetry is present in in different aspects of women's relationships in general, especially involving their kin. Fischer describes this by referencing studies by ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Everyday Use By Alice Walker: A Literary Analysis Family is important in the lives of every human. There can be good, encouraging families but their can also be ones of the negative type. Despite the personalities of the family that a child has, they have shaped the child to be the way that they are in the present and will most likely forever impact them in some way or another. There has always been a special connection with mothers and daughters, whether good or bad. Sometimes, the child feels that the mother expects too much from them and other times, the mother believes the daughter just does not care enough. I Stand Here Ironing by Tillie Olsen, Two Kinds by Amy Tan, and Everyday Use by Alice Walker are short stories that argue about the traits that significantly shape human identity within ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In detail, a mother may raise her daughter in a way that shapes her into something she wishes she could be, or in other words, living through their child. On the other hand, a daughter may rebel against her mother's, or society's standards, in order to fully express the way that they wish to look or be by going completely out of the box just to prove something. Mothers set expectations for their daughters from birth, and as we grow, we are brought from those expectations to the ones of society. Traits that significantly shape human identity are still in effect in today's world as well and will continue to form the lives of people everywhere. Young and old women still have to deal with the image and expectations that society expects from them just as small children feel pressured to live up to their parents expectations and mannerisms as they grow in order to condition them for the future. As daughters grow, their mothers hold wishes for their success in the future. Today, gender roles for young women are still a very prominent thing in society. In the future, it would be preferable for these gender roles to fade in time so that the young women of the next generation do not feel pressured to act, look, or be a certain way. Mothers should set realistic expectations for their children so that the pressure of success and achievements do not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. How To Write A Sample Of A Family Assessment Paper Identifying Data During this assessment, I interviewed a single–family home with a 32 year old mother, M.S, with a 4 year old daughter, M.S. II, from Costa Rica. The daughter was in pre–school and the mother had graduated high school and immediately worked with event planning. The family does not attend church, but practices under the Catholic traditions. I would place this family under the preschool stage of the family life cycle due to the oldest child is 4 years of age and the mother is adapting to her child's needs in growth–producing ways. M.S and her daughter love spending time outdoors taking walks and visiting gardens. M.S. sews various items, including lunch boxes and aprons in her free time too. Environmental Data The family lives in a medium two story 3 bedroom home in the suburbs of Monte Verde, Costa Rica. The house was very warm, inviting, and had a great view overlooking the mountains of Costa Rica. The streets had minimal lighting, no paved roads, and wild dogs running in the streets. The area my family lived in was considering extremely safe because everyone knows everyone within their community. They... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... bonds with her daughter on a daily basis by driving her to school, making her lunches, and helping her get ready for preschool. They do things together as a family and when the daughter gets sick, M.S. takes off work to attend to her. The rules are flexible as her daughter ages, but the rules are known. M.S. stated a big rule at this time is, "Bed time at 8:30." She allows her daughter to go outside and play with the dogs in addition to play dates. There is currently no reproductive family planning at this time because her focus is on her daughter. Her daughter is active in a dance group that holds a parade and M.S. sews all their costumes together while her daughter dances in the parade. Her daughter is also taking English classes because even though M.S. doesn't speak English very well she, "Wants her daughter to speak it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Two Kinds Bel 311 Many teenagers nowadays have to put up with parents high standards. They are forced to do many things do not want to just to please their parents. This type of pressure can lead to very bad behavior from the children causing many fights to happen between them. I believe most parents have these high standards because they want their child to be extremely successful in life. Also, it could because they want their children to make them look good to everyone else. In the story "Two Kinds", the author shows us a very extreme love–hate relationship between a mother and daughter. The mother sets very high standards on the daughter so that she can become a prodigy child. The daughter is always put in many situations where she is overwhelmed because of the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The mother forces the daughter to learn to play the piano. At this point the daughter reaches her breaking point and confronts her mother. The daughter says, "Why don't you like me the way I am? I'm not a genius! I can't play the piano..." (Page 311) The mother reacts extremely horrible and slaps the daughter. Regardless of the daughter's attempt to stand up for herself, she is still forced to attend piano lessons. Even though she didn't want to take the lessons, the daughter pick up on playing the piano very well. She practiced very hard because she was going to participate in a recital. Her parents invited many people to attend this recital to show their daughter off. Unfortunately, the daughter played the piano horribly. The daughter decided to go against her mother's wishes and told her she wasn't going to play the piano anymore. The mother reacted terrible once again and began to hit her. This causes the daughter to say she wishes she wasn't her mother's daughter.(Page 315) She even reaches the point to where she says she wish she wasn't born. Once the mother heard this, she began to lower her high expectations of the daughter becoming a prodigy ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Interpersonal Communication Process The process of Interpersonal Communication is a continuous process involving participants who are different but have overlapping environments and create meaning and relationship through the exchange of messages. This process is what I relive every day. I work at a Veterinary Hospital where it is high pace and a fast environment, which is great because I want to eventually become a certify Veterinary Technician. I also work with mymother she is the head manager over the business her best friend is our boss. I have a love/hate relationship working with my mom because if you spend every second of every day together you will feel worn out. A relationship between two people can have very different meanings. In some relationships such as two lovers, they can also be best friends because they share good communication. A relationship between aparent and child has a special bond because they share love, and affection for each other. However, there are times when a relationship can go bad because there is no understanding, lack of communication, and a feeling of distance in the relationship. When working together we discovered is that we don't listen to one another like really listen. She is my boss and the line between our personal life and our job blurs out and we are taking a plunge into the abyss. My mother is a Selective listener she hears what she wants to hear and not what you want her to hear. This puts up barriers between the two of us she always makes a small ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Handmaid's Tale Offred Quotes Is a mother a mother after she lost her child? Offred, a handmaid who is different from the other maids. Offred is in depression, but not showing any signs of it due to the oppression. In the novel The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood, Offred is a handmaid has not seen her daughter and Luke. Offred demonstrates that love can lead to depression with flashbacks and point of view of not seeing her husband Luke and her daughter whom she both utterly loved. Thoughts and memories are the only reasons Offred reminds herself of her daughter. Offred has a daughter, since she states, '"She fades I can't keep her with me'"(Atwood 64). Offred's flashback remembers she once had a daughter but was not able to be part of her life. The thought of not being able to be part of her daughter's life leaves her in melancholy. Later she thinks her daughter as a ghost who died and could not keep. Offred tells herself "[she is] the ghost of a dead girl"(Atwood 64). Offred's flashback is that her daughter died, after the birth of Gilead. With these emotional distresses, Offred is in despair and in–denial of the existence of her daughter.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Serena joy shows Offred of the picture of her daughter realizing time did not stay still. Proven when Offred states, "Time has not stood still. It has washed over me, washed me away" (Atwood 228). Offred view is opened now that she realizes that she is the ghost. Later Offred tells herself that it would have been better to not see the picture for, "[she cannot] bear, to have been erased like that. Better she had brought me nothing" (Atwood 228). Offred thoughts tell herself it would be best if she never saw the picture, but accepts her disappearance to her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Ballad Of Birmingham By Dudley Randall In the poem "Ballad of Birmingham" by Dudley Randall, the author describes how a daughter wants to go to a march happening in the streets, but her mother's refuses because of the extreme acts of violence from the police officers when countering the protesters. Her daughter tells her mother that she is going to be with other infants who also want to attend the protest. However, her mother still insists on not allowing her to go, but instead tells her to go to church, where her safety is assured. The theme of violence plays a crucial part in the "Ballad of Birmingham." In the poem, the young girl wants to join in the marches happening in downtown, but her mother can't let her go due to the threat of police retribution against protesters. When the daughter asks her mother to let her go to the march, her mother's reply is the description of the devices that police officers uses to counter the protesters. The mother is very reluctant towards her daughter's decision of joining the march happening on the streets of Birmingham. According to Randall, the mother describes the outcomes of the march as the following, "For the dogs are fierce and wild, / and clubs and hoses, guns and jails / Aren't good for a little child" (6–8). These lines are reflecting the fear that African–American women are facing during such events. They are opposed towards the idea of going to the march because they understand what the outcomes will be, facing the violence from the police officers. Moreover, the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. "Girl" Jamaica Kincaid Response Essay A Mother's Words A mother's words are the ones that ring loudest in a child's ear, are passed down from generation to generation, and the one's that hold a special place in a child's memory and heart forever. Expectations and guidelines are set at a young age. Morals and values are learned throughout the years, and life lessons are taught through the wisdom passed down from a mother to a daughter. Every mother has a wish for their daughter to be the best they can be. But at what point does instruction and wisdom become simply words that have been said one too many times? The short story "Girl," written by Jamaica Kincaid is presented to the reader as a list of instructions from a mother to a daughter on how to live life to the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The mother also teaches her daughter to cook, clean, and wash which traditionally is up to the women in a household to do. Kincaid makes the reader think and figure out for him, or herself, what point of life the child is in and what gender they are in order to draw them into the story. Life is a learning process, and the mother in this story does not seem to understand that. The child in this story is young. The child has her whole life ahead of her to make mistakes and learn lessons, however; her mother seems to want her to learn anything and everything there is to know at this one moment in time. The daughter speaks twice through the whole story. Both times she speaks she seems confused and uncomfortable with the conversation because she is too young to understand what her mom is saying. At one point in the story her mother states, "Don't sing benna in Sunday school," the daughter's response is "but I don't sing benna on Sunday's at all" (200). In the mother's mind she is just reassuring what she has already taught her daughter, but in the daughters mind is nothing but confusion. She has obviously already been taught to not sing benna and is confused as to why she is getting lectured on not singing it again. Her mother is so set on making sure her daughter follows the rules she has made for her, and becomes the woman she wants her to be, that she is willing to make her daughter feel like she is still ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Reba Hart-Montgomery Mother–daughter relationships are very important in life. Some say they are absolutely essential. Mothers nurture, encourage, and provide the help needed when it feels like the world is ending. Their presence makes everything better no matter what. Without a mother's love, without a mother's hug, daughters would all feel a little lost. After all, what are daughters without their mothers? Here are the greatest mother–daughter relationships seen on television (some make me totally jealous). Number Five: Reba Hart and Cheyenne Hart–Montgomery (Reba). This mother–daughter relationship isn't any ordinary mother–daughter relationship. Reba is present for all of her children, she's a great mother to her two daughters and one son, but with Cheyenne it's different. When Cheyenne becomes pregnant her senior year of high school, Reba becomes a mother, a counselor, a nurse, and a friend. She supports Cheyenne during her pregnancy. Reba provides Cheyenne with the advice she needs when life gets tough. She encourages Cheyenne when she feels like giving up, and she nurtures her when she's sick or sad. Reba makes the bad times good, and with Cheyenne by her side, there's normally nothing but laughs. This mother–daughter relationship melts anyone's heart. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Although this mother–daughter relationship may seem rocky at times, it does have a solid foundation. Beyond the arguing and the tears, this mother–daughter relationship is one that will never be broken. Kathryn is extremely loving and supportive of Bay, regardless of their disagreements. When something goes wrong, Bay knows that she can always run to her mother as opposed to her father. Kathryn is there with encouraging words and warm hugs that stop any tears. Through thick and thin, Kathryn and Bay love each other unconditionally, and that's what makes this relationship so ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Mother-Daughter Relationships The relationship between parents and their children is one of the most basic human interactions. Mothers and daughters provide both physical and emotional care for their young sons and daughters. In the process, parents will instill children with family values and goals, while teaching them the accepted norms and values of society. This is done in hope that parents will one day see their own children become mature adults, with their own goals and purposes in life. Mother–daughter relationships can be complex, but also filled with compassion and love. Mothers and daughters often seem farther away from each other than they really are. Usually when a girl goes through adolescence, the relationship between her and her mother begin ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... #Even Western civilization has a history of unrealistic expectations about mothers. They are held responsible for their children's happiness. Many people have troubles growing up enough to see their mothers as people. As Mary Pipher writes in her book, Reviving Ophelia, of studies about adolescent girls, #distant mothers are scorned, but mothers who are to close are accused of smothering and overprotecting. Each chapter of Reviving Ophelia opens with a different scenario and in her book, Pipher gives equal voices to both mothers and daughters. Maybe the first step of a daughter towards maintaining a good relationship with her mother, is for her to see her mother as an individual. Growing up requires adolescent girls to reject the person with whom they are most closely identified. Daughters are socialized to have a tremendous fear of becoming like their mothers, but maybe if they tried enough to really look at and understand their mothers, this would no longer be a fear to them. I personally think that many girls do not realize they may have this fear themselves. I know I did not realize I held it within myself, but then I also realized there was a lot more to my mother that I cared to see. Once I saw past my close–mindedness, I understood that there was nothing wrong with growing up and acting a little like my mom. In fact, there were some qualities my mother held that I wanted to imitate when I was a mother ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Kristi Belcamino Case Analysis Kristi Belcamino is a mother of a nine–year–old daughter who had suffered from an eating disorder. The eating disorder that her daughter was suffering from is called Anorexic. Anorexic is a life–threatening eating disorder that can cause a person to be extremely obsess about their weight, and what they eat. Kristi Belcamino daughter was showing signs of Anorexic at the beginning of the article. Like for example Kristi Belcamino daughter bones was sticking out, lost interest in foods she liked, unusual fears and concerns. However, Kristi and her husband did not know that her daughter was suffering from Anorexic until they went to see a pediatrician. When the pediatrician had scale her daughter weight it was 50 pounds– seven pounds less than ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Analysis Of To A Daughter Leaving Home By Linda Pastan The author Linda Pastan, imagines a parent running breathlessly to regain her strength from the ending connection she once shared with her daughter in her poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home." It's a mother's biggest fear when it comes to their child or children leaving home while going their own ways when the time is right. This poem is based on childhood, fatherhood, and even motherhood. Linda Pastan made this poem include various forms of figurative language to hide the literal message that it's trying to portray. Figurative language is using figures of speech to make the text be more powerful, persuasive, and meaningful. Figures of speech such as, similes and metaphors, go beyond the literal meanings to give the readers a new way of looking at the text. It can come in multiple ways with different literacy and rhetorical devices such as: alliteration, imageries, onomatopoeias, and etc. With the usage of the literary devices Pastan has used, it introduced the relationship between the mother and the daughter. It shows the memories of how the mother helped her daughter grow from a little girl to a young adult getting ready to go her own way in life. Linda Pastan's poem, To a Daughter Leaving Home, is represented as a metaphor because it's comparing the bike ride to the relationship between the mother and daughter. The author describes the mother going along side her eight year old daughter as she rides her bicycle (Pastan 915). The daughter "wobbled away" (Pastan 915). This happens to be an example of imagery because it gives a visual description of how the daughter was riding her bike. As she rides the bike further along, the mother gets surprised by the way the daughter seemed to be in control of the bike as she goes down a "curved path of the park" (Pastan 915). Besides giving a visual description Linda uses symbolism to symbolize life. The phrase a "curved path" represents life by it being joyous, unpredictable, and dangerous. Life doesn't go in a straight line, just a curved one. Pastan's use of onomatopoeias in the poem allows the reader to hear what is going on in the poem. For example, she used the words "thud" and "crash" to make the reader visualize the way the daughter rides the bike (Pastan ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Jamaica Kincaid Girl From a young age, our interactions with our parents play an instrumental role in how we perceive ourselves and the world around us. The short story "Girl" by Jamaica Kincaid exhibits the relationship between an Antiguan mother and her daughter in a patriarchal society where the list of rules and regulations for women is exhaustive and almost never–ending. By analyzing the unique and often tense dynamic between the mother and daughter, "Girl" showcases the direct influence mothers have on their children, and how traditional and patriarchal customs can influence that relationship. The main themes are represented by the subjects the mother spends the most time on as well as the overall tone of the piece and how it relates to the mother–daughter... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kincaid's choice to separate pieces of advice by semicolons instead of full–stop periods lends the piece a sense of urgency, almost as if the mother is trying to impart all of her knowledge to her daughter as quickly as possible. However, this often makes the mother's words come across tersely, and the their relationship seems strained at best. The daughter is allowed very little input overall; one of her sentences comes across defensively, as she denies her mother's accusations that she is singing provocative music in Sunday school, and the other is posed as an innocent question which receives an aggressive answer. The mother's main concern seems to be that her daughter is turning into a "slut", and because of this apparent fear, she can be argumentative and tense towards her daughter. However, near the end of the piece, some of the advice seems to take a softer turn. The mother gives her daughter advice about love, and says, "don't feel too bad about giving up" (1), which is much gentler than many previous sentiments. She even gives advice about "how to spit up in the air if you feel like it" (1) and how to move away; this reads much more like play than work, and almost gives a sense of playfulness between the mother and daughter, practicing a useless but entertaining trick. However, by the end, the mood turns again, as the girl's innocent question provokes an angry answer: "you mean to say that after all you are really going to be the kind of woman who the baker won't let near the bread?" (1). While there may have been some progress in the mother–daughter relationship, it is ultimately returned to the same frustrated and almost resentful ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Summary Of The Daughter Of Time By Josephine Tey Napoleon Bonaparte once stated that "history is the version of past events that people have decided to agree upon." As evolution continues we see a change in not only what the future may bring, but also what the past may have to offer. The history we are taught is based on the teachings and readings of others, as it is clear that reliable resources are limited because we simply were not around during those specific times. The Daughter of Time , by Josephine Tey proves this exact notion; that in actuality, what may have been relayed to us historically may not have been the entire truth, but who are we to claim that or disprove such things? After an unfortunate accident landing him in the hospital, main character Grant looks for some pastimes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Though at the end of the book, Tey's clear message leads us to believe that Richard in fact was innocent of all the crimes he was claimed to have committed, how can we be certain? Authors like Tey pushed for a society to not only question the surroundings of the world, but look deeper into we are being told and taught. What one may believe, with the right attitude and supporting detail, may be enough to change the minds of many who are easily manipulated. Each and every time period creates pieces of works that reflect the very time they are living in, this being proven by the works written on Richard the third. While some were stuck on the notions that Richard did in fact kill his nephews, works portrayed him as a pious and unforgiving man looking for power, disregarding all costs even his family. On the opposite side of the spectrum we read pieces ofhistory that completely defend Richard the third and wonder why he had not done more to protect his reputation believing that he did not do what was claimed to have done. It is also indeed the hope that a nation believes in that affects what is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Daughter Leaving Home "To a Daughter Leaving Home" Companion In Linda Pastan's poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," home is a place of reflection. In this poem, a mother is reflecting upon a time when her daughter had left home. Although, the home in which she is leaving is not a place. In this family, a home is a feeling. The home in this poem is the relationship between a mother and a daughter. Pastan's, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," relies on word choice, elapse of time, and sentence structure to create this family's home. In this poem, Pastan's word choice plays a key role in understanding what makes their family a home. The poem's title, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," explicitly tells the reader that the daughter is currently preparing to leave their home. However, we, as the reader, know nothing of the home her daughter is preparing to leave. The reader does not know if the mother and daughter live in a mansion or a trailer, but that is not what is important to this story. The mother uses the words, "surprises" (8), "waiting" (11), and "...screaming / with laughter," (19–20) to describe her daughter's bicycle ride. Looking ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Pastan jumps immediately to the past, the mother, telling the story of her daughter leaving home for the first time. The poem, in its entirety, is in past tense, "When I taught you / at eight to ride / a bicycle..." (1–3). Taught, being the past tense of teach in this portion of the poem, tells the reader that the mother is reflecting on the time she taught her daughter to ride her bicycle. The gap in time is ultimately created by the title, "To a Daughter Leaving Home." The present time is the daughter leaving home again. The gap in time creates a reflection from when the daughter was eight–years–old to the present time. This flashback, created by Pastan, is guiding the reader to think that as the daughter is preparing to leave, the mother is having similar feelings as the first time her daughter ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Rhetorical Analysis : Deborah Tannen Rhetorical Analysis Deborah Tannen is a professor in linguistics at Georgetown University. She studies the different patterns of language, like talking to people at work, friends, family, politics, academics, law, and how the ways we talk affect relationships with others. In her essay, "Oh, Mom. Oh, Honey. : Why Do You Have to Say That? " The author's purpose in this essay is about howmother and daughter relationships are, and what the mother is trying to say to the daughter, when talking to her. The reason behind the author's purpose, is because her own mother was gradually getting weak. She started spending more time with her mother and caring for her. When her mom died, it transformed her thinking about mother and daughter relationships. She uses real life experiences and dialect to convey her intentions to the reader. In the essay, the author uses research and conducted interviews that she found about mother and daughter relationships, to show the actual meaning to what mothers are saying to their daughters when communicating. The author's uses dialect to show how mothers and daughters talk to each other. For example, "Do you think you would have accomplished all of this if you had stayed married?" "Absolutely not," I said. "If I'd stayed married, I wouldn't have gone to grad school to get my PhD." "Well," she replied, "If you'd stayed married you wouldn't have had to" (pg. 918–919).This shows the communication between most moms and their daughters. Tannen ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. ART CRITICISM PAPER ART CRITICISM PAPER "The Grafin von Schonfeld with her Daughter" by Elizabeth Louise Vigee–LeBrun In the University Of Arizona Museum Of Art, the Pfeiffer Gallery is displaying many art pieces of oil on canvas paintings. These paintings are mostly portraits of people, both famous and not. They are painted by a variety of artists of European decent and American decent between the mid 1700's and the early 1900's. The painting by Elizabeth Louise Vigee–Lebrun caught my eye and drew me in to look closely at its composition. "The Grafin von Scholfeld with her Daughter" is oil on canvas art piece painted in 1793. It is a painting of a woman holding her daughter on her lap, the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The little girl's dress gives the texture of lightness and seems like airy fabric that would be thin and translucent. The time in this piece is very accurate of the late 1700's and when viewing it, the time seems classic. The emphasis of this piece is mainly the mother and the daughter, however when looking at them you are drawn into looking at their realistic eyes. The eyes seem like the focal point which draws the viewer in to the picture. The relationship in the painting between the mother and daughter give it a definite asymmetrical balance and maybe a little radial balance. A radial balance because of their eyes being the central focus, then the faces, then the holding of each other, then where they are placed on the canvas, and then the bench and the landscape. The colors used by the painter, also creates balance with in the picture. The wine colored dress of the mother, red sash of the daughter's dress, ruby lips, and the rosy cheeks give a warm feeling to the central focus of the mother and daughter. The cool color of the sky is the same as the women's eyes as well as the trees and green on the mother's dress. These balances give unity or a unifying feeling to the painting, especially between the mother and daughter. The idea of this piece is to show the connection between mother and daughter being painted. It shows the time and the classic style of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Parents' Roles in Development of Eating Disorders: How... Parents' Roles in Development of Eating Disorders Introduction Much of the literature that focuses on the parents' role in the development of eating disorders is focused on the mother and the mother–daughter relationship. Studies have shown conclusively that a mother's body image and eating habits are, mirrored in her daughter, and that if she is obsessed with her own body image, it stands likely that her daughter will be the same way both growing up and in her adult life. The father, though, is often left out of the research except for in the basic family profile. Here, we will examine the active role that the father plays in the development of eating disorders in their daughters. First, we will explore why the father's ideas and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Men, for the most part, agree with the social norms of beauty. Watching television, reading magazines, or simply walking down the street with their fathers, girls see the appreciation thin, beautiful women receive from men. In turn, the girls believe that if they were thin and beautiful, they would have a better relationship with their father. Fathers though, have a difficult time with dealing with the fact that their daughters are beautiful, even if they are, because of the facts that they do not want their little girls to grow up and also because they cannot relate to what they see as 'premature sexuality' (Palazzoli). When girls begin to express themselves sexually, then, fathers become more distant from the relationship, often seeing the situation as one the mother should deal with. If the father does feel the need to play a role in this stage of his daughter's development, it is mostly to warn her against the evils of boys her age and the threat and consequences of pregnancy and disease. There is rarely a sit down discussion of what it means to be woman from a man's perspective between fathers and daughters. This indifference leads the daughter to work harder for her father's approval, and often has disastrous results. Transformation of Feelings into Symptoms If a girl has a distant, but not uncaring relationship with her father, due either to unintentional things such as social factors or ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Josephine Tey's The Daughter Of Time Until I read The Daughter of Time, I liked history. This was fortunate, since the curriculum my mother used to homeschool me and my sisters was literature based, and as a result, we read a lot of historical fiction. Some I enjoyed more than others, but over the years, as I grew to be quite a voracious reader, historical fiction remained one of my most commonly read genres. And as my reading comprehension developed, classic literature and several historical biographies slipped into my reading list. I knew I enjoyed history, but only in a vague, half–conscious manner. The fact that many of the books I read were award–winning and historically accurate was incidental. Enter Josephine Tey and Richard III. When I was around fifteen, a friend of my mother's recommended that we try BBC Radio. Accordingly we found the site; and the book that was currently airing was The Daughter of Time. The Daughter of Time is a detective novel written in 1951 by Elizabeth MacKintosh, alias Josephine Tey. It features a... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Soon enough, I was wading through articles about hemophilia, breaking my heart over little Alexei Nikolaevich. I was crying over Sassoon, singing along to Vera Lynn, and loitering in the military history aisle in Barnes and Noble. Akhenaten's Amarna Dynasty intrigued me. I had to explain to my sister why I emitted a near–squeal of delight when I saw a photo of the Book of Kells' chi rho page. I had always liked history. Now, thanks to Elizabeth MacKintosh and The Daughter of Time, I love history. This book piqued my curiosity and through research, opened the way to discover something that ought to have been obvious, but somehow never was: the people who lived before us lived. They were human beings with thoughts and fears and opinions and troubles. They loved and lied; they died and were (or were not) mourned and forgotten. But first they ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. The Renaissance Era The Renaissance time was a hard transitioning time that no one today has lived long enough to tell. Today we base the past on the evidence that we find such as books, art, plays, scripts, and really anything that can be found in those times. Everything is so scarce but very important. Relationships between parents and children is also something to think about. Have you ever been just a bit curious about how in today's time we may act different than from those times? In today's modern world it depends on what age you are to determine the relationship with parents and children. What about the Renaissance times though? The Renaissance era was a time between the Middle Ages and modern times and it lasted from the 14th to the 17th century. The reason they call it the Renaissance era is because the word "Renaissance" means "rebirth", as in meaning the Middle Ages time is being reborn into the modern times. A lot of things were lost in the Middle Ages, such as the foundings of Greeks and Romans boosts in sciences, government, and art, which is also why people today call the Middle Ages the "Dark Ages". The Renaissance era was a new beginning for expanding the education of art, sciences, government, and music. Overall it was a big movement to being better and to strive to come out of the dark ages (Hinds, K. Renaissance for Kids). After things got advanced and people regained the education and government systems, that also means that the people changed with it. People who changed ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Summary : ' Daughters Of Mothers With Multiple Sclerosis '... Article: Jonzon, Alison and Donna L. Goodwin, "Daughters of Mothers with Multiple Sclerosis: Their Experience of Play", Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly, July 2012, V. 29, #3, pp. 205–223. I picked this article because it was more sociological than physically scientific. Also, in my opinion, it would be general applicable to many diseases and disabilities. Drawbacks of the study was that it was very small (4), only one of whom was currently caregiving. Although, the prior caregivers may have gained perspective difficult to achieve while caregiving. Two were only children and two were youngest children. Two were in single–parent families for the entirety of their caregiving and two partially until their mothers remarried (! – ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 205) The emphasis of the study was on the impact on the family system. Three themes emerged: "(a) being a good daughter, (b) blurred relationship boundaries, and (c) encumbered play". They all gave personal care to their mothers, experiencing worry and guilt. But this experience caused them to be more mature than their peers. Because of their caregiving, the responsibility of which was often deemed excessive, they had "limited social networks" and often at least the appearance of role reversal. They usually had at least limited access to some play, which provided much–needed and appreciated relief, recreation, and escape. Women have 300% the incidence of MS as do men, usually diagnoses between the ages of 15 and 40. Often, because of fatigue and lack of functionality, the mothers' physical conditions could degenerate further. What had not occurred to me was that the mothers also became emotionally inaccessible. Homemaking duties and personal care that they used to do are now done by the daughters, especially in single parent households. Even when sons were also present, the mothers usually preferred the services of a daughter because of gender expectations and experience, for the intimacy of the personal care, more perceived capacity for compassion/empathy, emotional closeness, and shared values. The youngest of these daughters had just barely assumed adulthood themselves, at least at the time of the study; they may at that time already ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Pride And Prejudice By Jane Austen Essay Pride and Prejudice is a story written by Jane Austen. Jane, born in December of 1775, has written multiple stories, though Pride and Prejudice is the story she is most remembered by. Jane Austen, during her lifetime, gained little fame. It was not until after her death, when her brother published A Memoir of Jane Austen, that her books began gaining fame. This story, set in England in the 19th Century, tells the tale of a family known as the Bennet's. In this family there is Mr. and Mrs. Bennet, along with their daughters Jane, Elizabeth, Mary, Lydia, and Kitty. During this story the reader will learn about how the daughters have trouble finding love with two men named Mr. Bingley and Mr. Darcy. Two of the main factors that help push the daughters is the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bennet. Mr. and Mrs. Bennet both love their daughters very much, and they have some similarities, but they differ in their personalities, their involvement with their daughters, and their involvement in their daughters' relationships. Looking at Mr. Bennet, one of the first things the viewers should be able to see is his laid–back personality. Such as when the Bennet's have company coming over he does not freak out like his wife does, he remains calm. He is also very level–headed; he lives with a woman like Mrs. Bennet and is able to maintain his sanity by basically making fun of her. He is also quite the antisocial, spending most of his time in his study alone. Though his older daughters seem to have ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Authoritative Parenting Analysis My group members and I discussed how parenting in an authoritative style is key in any scenario presented. Authoritative parenting is shown when "parents use warmth, firm control, and rational issue–oriented discipline, in which emphasis is placed on the development of self–direction" (Steinberg, 2017). My group members and I decided to focus on scenario one and we believe that an appropriate response to a situation, where a daughter disobeys her mother's rules of no boys in the house alone, would be using authoritative parenting. An authoritative parent would sit her daughter down, after the boy has left, and ask her why she broke the rules. The parent would then lecture the daughter and explain to her the reason she believes these rules need ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This gives the daughter the feeling that she is involved in the rules. The mother isn't disciplining the child harshly, but rather is being warm and firm with her child. She is explaining to her daughter why these rules are set, making the daughter feel intellectually sufficient in the situation. If the mother were an authoritarian parent, a parent "who use[s] punitive, absolute, and forceful discipline, and who place[s] a premium on obedience and conformity" then she would have probably yelled at her daughter (Steinberg, 2017). She would have enforced a more drastic form of punishment, like taking away her phone and computer for two months and forbidding her from ever seeing the boy again. My group members and I agreed that if the mother were an indulgent parent, "who [is generally] mainly concerned with the child's happiness," then the mother would be overly understanding (Steinberg, 2017). She would her daughter it's okay that she broke the rules and not enforce any punishment. She wouldn't enforce the rules and let her daughter run freely. If the mother were an indifferent parent, "who [is] characterized by low levels of both responsiveness and demandingness," she would've just walked by her daughter and boyfriend on the couch, without a car in the world (Steinberg, 2017). She might have rules in the house but never ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Girl By Jamaica Kincaid Mothers nag us with chores and tell us to straighten up when we mess up, but mothers always know best and do everything out of love for their children. The short story "Girl" by Jamaica Kincaid demonstrates this in a list of instructions a mother gives to her daughter to help her live a successful life. Directions that are listed involve food, clothes, social skills, health, and protection of public image. Together these tasks assist in characterizing the mother and daughter. In "Girl," Jamaica Kincaid employs characterization through the characters' actions, conflict, and dialogue to reveal the mother's tough love and the daughter's immaturity. At first, Kincaid's story seems to be an arbitrary list of actions a strict mother tells her daughter, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first time Kincaid shows this conflict is when the mother says "walk like a lady and not like the slut you are so bent on becoming" Secondly, when teaching her daughter how to dress, the mother shows how to hem a dress to "prevent yourself from looking like the slut I know you are so bent on becoming" (Kincaid #). Both times the mother refers to her daughter's desire to become a slut, Kincaid exposes the daughter's immaturity and misunderstanding of social norms. In the daughter's youth, she does not understand how to dress and act in pubic, so the mother reprimands her by identifying the bad behavior and provides instruction for the proper way to act. Although the mother's instructions are very clear, the daughter still becomes a slut. Later, the mother instructs "this is how to behave in the presence of men who don't know you very well, and this way they won't recognize immediately the slut I have warned you against becoming" revealing the daughter, at this point in the story, has become a slut (Kincaid #). The daughter's direct defiance of her mother's instructions shows her lack of respect and immaturity. Even though the daughter has gone against her mother, the mothers love for her daughter is still apparent by the help she continues to provide. Through the conflict between the mother and daughter, Kincaid portrays the daughter's defiance and mother's endless ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. The Daughter Of Time By Joseph Essay Josephine Tey's The Daughter of Time is a historical novel that looks at the belief that Richard III, King of England, murdered his two nephews in order to maintain his power. This novel also supports the belief that the "truth comes out through time." In the novel the main character, Grant, is concerned with what he believes is a unknown fact of whether or not the long ago King of England was guilty. Throughout his search for the answer Grant discovers many history books which all tend to view Richard in different ways. It is from these different views of the same man, that one can draw the conclusion that bias plays a major role in the validity and credibility of documents and personal accounts. So what is the role and in what ways ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Personal accounts and documents are often overlooked or considered unbelievable because they cannot be considered valid due to the bias opinions of the writer. As historians many find this discouraging because they have no account of what really happened and only have what can be read from the writings of others. In the media bias plays a role in the validity of certain things. An example, just one out of the many, where bias plays a role in the credibility of certain events is the Pocahontas story. With out going into too much detail it is safe to say that the Disney version was very much altered from the real version. Pocahontas was a nickname for "the naughty one" the girls real name in this legend was Matoaka. [visit http:/ /www.powhatan.org/pocc.html to see what is being referred to] If bias continues to effect how valid certain past documents are, the documents which help to base our future, than what do we as historians have to go on? When one takes The Daughter of Time and looks closely another name for daughter one may come up with istruth. The truth is what eventually evolves after time. "The truth comes out through time," is a statement which this book The Daughter of Time demonstrated very well. It showed how Grant found evidence to support his belief that Richard the III was in fact innocent. It took many years for someone to realize this but that is the role of time in this case. Grant used information from books, which had been ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Josephine Tey's The Daughter Of Time The creation of a detective fiction novel does not always have to be based on the mystery of a crime or something recent. For an author to shake up the detective fiction world and do something outside the box is new. The woman bold enough to do this is Josephine Tey and her story The Daughter of Time. The daughter of time is based in London with one of Scotland Yard's best detective. Alan Grant is currently in the hospital from him chasing a criminal and getting his leg caught in a trap door. Grant, a very active man, find himself to be bored laid up in the hospital. He asks one of his old friends for some entertainment and she didn't do much but pass on old books. He would spend many nights laid up in the hospital staring at the roof counting ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Lest start off with deciding if the crime presented is significant enough to try and solve. Nobody ever knows the truth behind small parts of history because off so many different stories and so Grant got this picture of the Middle ages where Richard III facial expression caught his eye. He Figured out the story behind what had supposedly happened, and it was pretty significant to crack down and investigate further. Grant is very quick on his feet and observant of his surrounds and the things presented to him, any man who can remember the exact places and times of nurses is pretty memorable. Even though a detective story has an outstanding opponent in almost every story in this one, his injury and history are his true enemies. He is not able to be mobile like he wants to and is limited to just being in his bed and receiving material from Marta Hallard. Once he starts breaking down the facts present by legal documents form the middle ages and the facts of the family involved, you kind of start to wonder what is really going on. Is there possibly a cover up? Was this an inside Job? A case of Jealousy? With all the facts and pieces of the puzzle pulled together by Grant he discovers that Richard III was not the murderous Uncle but more like the Unfortunate Uncle. Henry IV had more to gain from his lies and false ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. The Miller's Play 'Rumpelstiltskin' Fairy Tale Play: Character List: Create a table below listing your characters and brief physical and emotional descriptions. There should be AT LEAST 4 characters. King Daughter Rumplestiltskin Miller Setting Description: In 15–30 words, describe the setting of the piece. The setting is represented at the castle which is where the Miller speaks to the King and Makin asked for the child. Title:Rumpelstiltskin Run Time: 5 minutes Below write the dialogue for your play. Please make sure that the story is easily followed. Miller is at the castle with the King Miller: I have a daughter who can spin straw into gold. King: That pleases me well, if your daughter is clever as you say, bring her to me to–morrow. As the miller walks out. The Miller's daughter... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Locks herself in a room by herself looking confused. Begin to weep. Strange person in the shadows Makin: Good evening why are you crying so. Daughter: Alas, I have such trouble for the deed I must do. Makin: What must you do. Daughter: I must spin straw into gold, and I don't know how. I only have to–night to finish or I must die. Makin: What will you give me if I do it for you. Daughter: I don't have much, but I shall give you my necklace. Makin takes necklace from daughter, and he sits on the wheel and starts to spin, morning. Sraw turns to gold. King enters and is waiting for the relevance of the gold. Looks surprised that it actually worked King: Wow it actually worked? You shall make me more! Daughter: But... King: No buts you shall make me more by to–morrow! Night is upon, and Makin comes in Makin: What shall you give me if I spin the straw to gold again. Daughter: I have nothing left to give you, but I promise to give you my first child. Makin: Thats a deal. Makin makes the straw into gold again.King walks in and asked the daughter to be queen. Daughter says yes. 1 year ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Comparing The Pomegranate And The Bistro Styx In the poems "The Pomegranate" by Eavan Boland and "The Bistro Styx" by Rita Dove, the poets make allusions to the myth of Persephone. This myth is about the anguish felt by Persephone's mother, Demeter, when she loses her. In the poems, both writers are witnessing their daughters grow apart from them, but they have different viewpoints on this process. Boland in "The Pomegranate" understands that this drifting apart is certain and yearns to make the most out of the time she has with her daughter before this emotional detachment. Conversely, Dove in "The Bistro Styx" is spiteful of her daughter's increasingly evident detachment from her. Boland and Dove use the myth of Persephone in order to to describe the relationship struggles endured by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Her daughter is involved in a romantic relationship with an artist of whom Dove does not approve. Dove's discontent towards her daughter's boyfriend and their lifestyle is seen when her daughter says, "The tourists love us. The Parisians, of course...are amused, though not without a certain admiration," and she replies, "Admiration for what?" Further discontent is seen when Dove thinks about her daughter, "Are you content to conduct your life as a clichГ© and, what's worse, an anachronism, the brooding artist's demimonde." Dove ties in the myth of Persephone when her daughter consumes countless items of food in the restaurant. In the myth of Persephone, Persephone becomes eternally separated from her mother because she eats a pomegranate in the underworld which bound her to stay forever. Dove's daughter's seemingly unsatisfiable hunger in the restaurant symbolizes the decision to distance herself from her mother forever. Dove writes, "Nothing seemed to fill her," and later when she asks her daughter if she is happy, her daughter does not directly answer the question and, instead, responds by biting into a fig and proclaiming, "one really should try the fruit here." In the final line of the poem, Dove thinks, "I've lost her." Because her daughter symbolically ate all of this food while in an underworld, there is no chance of Dove ever being able to rescue her or win her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Being A Daughter By John Chineser Being a daughter means that you belong to womanhood which brings something distinct and special to the world, it fills a void and plays an important role that no man can. John Sinor once said "It is admirable for a man to take his son fishing, but there is a special place in heaven for the father who takes his daughter shopping"(Source A). The bond which a mother and daughter share and develop over the years is a very special one. Every step a daughter takes towards growing into a beautiful woman will touch her mother's heart. From her first princess dress to her wedding dress. Every mothers dream is to see her daughter cherish and blossom into a beautiful young lady. Daughters always want to be just like their mommies, with make–up, heels ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... No son will ever be "Daddy's little princess" where as a daughter will forever remain "Daddy's little princess" no matter how old she is, how fast she grows up or when her dad hands her over to her husband to be. Every daughter sees her daddy as her superhero, always knowing that he has her back. Fathers are one of the most influential figures in a child's life, they influence how their daughters should view themselves(Source D). "A big dad can easily become smaller for his beloved daughter"(Source E) as daughters can instantly change their fathers to see the better side of life. A father needs to be a man in order to raise his son, however he needs to be a superhero in order to raise his daughter. Moreover the relationship between siblings is one that will never fail, knowing that you will always have someone to lean back on in tough times. One of the best support systems can come from an older sister, one who is willing to stand by you through thick and thin and knowing that you will always be protected. With older sisters one could have more of an open relationship compared to that of older brothers as girls are more patient and understanding than that of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Essay on Parent Interview of a Special Needs Child The mother reports having a normal pregnancy with no complications, and that her pregnancy was easy. This was the second child for the mother, who has another child who was five years old at the time. The mother also disclosed that at the time of the pregnancy she was in the process of separating from the child's father and that this caused a moderate level of stress. At the time of the pregnancy the mother was also working full time as waitress in a local restaurant, the mother reports that her job required she be on her feet for a long period of times, but that she was able to work until around a week before her child was born. The mother reports that the child was born around two weeks early but that labor was easy and the child was... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The mother reports that the child responded well to different people and family members and friends reported the child was easy to care for. The mother however reported that being a single mother was stressful. At the time the child was a year and half old, the mother placed in family daycare center that was in a provider's apartment. The provider also cared for four other children between the ages of one and three. The child was in the providers care from the age of one and half until she was three years when she started to attend a full day preschool program. The mother reported no concerns during this period of the time and stated that her daughter was an easy child who listened. She also reported that her child was curious and liked to explore many different things and that she especially liked playing with puzzles and books. The mother reports potty training also being easy and that her daughter learned quickly and was full potty trained within in a week. At the age of three the child was in full day preschool program. The mother reported her daughter having an easy transition into the program and was excited to go to school and she was "a big girl now". The mother reports that it was the preschool teacher who first mentioned to her that could possibly be an issue with her daughter's speech. The mother reports the teacher telling her that although her daughter ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Analysis Of The Book ' Daughter Of Time ' Josephine Tey's Daughter of Time is a story that gives the reader a role in being a detective, filling in Sherlock Holmes 's shoes but with a twist. Within the first few chapters we meet Alan Grant, a famous inspector from England 's Scotland Yard. He is confined in a hospital after sustaining an injury, leaving him immensely bored during his recovery there. Where he would trace and map out ceiling cracks for hours; after awhile he became acquainted with the nurses that would come in and out of his room. His actress friend Marta brings printed materials for Grant to read but he would reject them, the reason is not known. His antsy behavior shows that he craves a mental challenge. Grant eventually got what he wanted; Marta suggested that he should try solving an old mystery that no one has managed to solve. She brings him pictures, portraits of faces from different historical eras. During his recovery, he spends time analyzing the collection that Marta provides him. It's clear that Grant adopts Carr's and Elton's methodology into solving this case and without either of them it wouldn't be possible. He came across a picture of Richard III, who had accusations of killing his two nephews; his Brother Edward IV 's sons. It is evident that Grant takes pride in his skills as an inspector and speculates that Edward III is not the perpetrator of the murders. From that point he undertakes the task of learning British history. Finding clues and piecing them together, disregarding ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Home As A Place Of Reflection In Linda Pastan's poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," Pastan depicts home as a place of reflection. The whole poem is based on a mother's reflection of a time when her daughter had left home. However, the home that the mother describes is not a psychical place, but a feeling. The home is the relationship between the mother and her daughter. Pastan's, "To a Daughter Leaving Home," relies on a single speaker, word choice, flashbacks, and sentence structure to depict the mother's sorrowful reflection, in order to create a home that is defined by this family's relationship. The poem is spoken entirely by the mother, leaving the daughter's voice absent. At eight–years–old, the daughter does not realize what it means to have successfully ridden a bicycle. To the daughter, it is just an innocent bicycle ride. "The hair flapping / behind you like a / handkerchief waving / goodbye" (21–24). For the mother, this is a milestone. Her daughter has done something without her help. The daughter is getting older and is ready to go off on her own. The mother is not ready for her daughter to grow up yet, "I / sprinted to catch up, / while you grew / smaller..." (13–16). Pastan is playing with the idea that mother's do not want their children to grow up. Therefore, when a child reaches a milestone, such as riding a bicycle, it creates a sense of sadness for a parent, that a child doesn't quite understand. Pastan's word choice emphasizes that the important elements of a home are not the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Two Kinds by Amy Tan Essay In the short story, "Two Kinds" by Amy Tan, a Chinese mother and daughter are at odds with each other. The mother pushes her daughter to become a prodigy, while the daughter (like most children with immigrant parents) seeks to find herself in a world that demands her Americanization. This is the theme of the story, conflicting values. In a society that values individuality, the daughter sought to be an individual, while her mother demanded she do what was suggested. This is a conflict within itself. The daughter must deal with an internal and external conflict. Internally, she struggles to find herself. Externally, she struggles with the burden of failing to meet her mother's expectations. Being a first–generation Asian American,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... At first, the daughter was to become a Chinese version of Shirley Temple. When that didn't work, her mother told her that she would be attending piano lessons. The daughter did not like the idea of playing the piano. "Why don't you like me the way I am? . . . I am not a genius! I can't play the piano. And even if I could, I wouldn't go on TV if you paid me a million dollars!" (492–493). Here, Tan is conveying the fact that parents and children have disagreements on what the child should do, and who the child is to become. For example, parents may have an idea where they want their child to attend their college education. The child, on the other hand, may want to go to a different college as suggested. Ultimately, it is the decision of the child. We cannot live how others want us to live. It is the path of our own making that truly makes us happy. Some may see the mother trying to live her life through her daughter. She invests time trying to make her daughter a prodigy because she was her last hope. The mother lost two children in China and moves to a new country. Coming to America, she felt that immigrants have to prove that they are as talented as or more talented than Americans. This belief is supposed to be the basis for the determination, that the mother has, for Jing–mei to become a prodigy. The mother in the story tries everything in her power to make Jing–mei famous in some way. Yet Jing–mei was content to being herself. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...