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A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Analysis
In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, Kincaid explicitly describes the effects and consequences
that imperialism had on Antigua, while implicitly condemning imperialism for the effects and
consequences indigenous people endured through allegory. Examining the results of imperialism in
a cultural aspect provides a deeper connection for the audience to fathom the struggle people of
Antigua experienced. Kincaid illustrates herself as the main protagonist who directly speaks to the
audience as if they are the ignorant tourist. Through the utilization of the second person perspective,
she immerses the reader emotionally, which through the experience proves to be more captivating.
From the start of "A Small Place," the author establishes an unsettling position for the reader by
using second person perspective to give the audience a personal experience, "The thing you have
always suspected about yourself the minute you become a tourist is true: A tourist is an ugly human
being" (Kincaid, 14). The act of being the tourist in respect to Kincaid's statement is being unaware
of the surroundings and people who reside in this country you refer to as a paradise. She pushes the
audience out of their comfort zone to an unsettling acknowledgment of ignorance – if you have
traveled and expressed these behaviors. The author presents the idea that the act of traveling with the
mindset that indigenous people are benefiting is a form of self–justification rather than reality.
Kincaid acknowledges the audience's ignorance of the situation as an institutional one that educated
you to have this mindset. She describes this situation the people of Antigua endured, as something
you were not taught, which exonerates your oblivious demeanor toward your surroundings,
"...those new books about economic history, one of those books explaining how the West(meaning
Europe and North America after its conquest and settlement by Europeans) got rich: the West got
rich not from the free(free–– in this case meaning got–for–nothing) and then undervalued labour, for
generations, of the people like me you see walking around...etc" (Kincaid, 9).
She uses sarcasm to demonstrate the lack of knowledge the audience has, in order to educate them
on both
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Essay On Bad Indians And A Small Place
Paragraphs are lacking flow, I simply just wrote down any ideas that came to my head.
Bad Indians and A Small Place both entail the topic of identity, the telling of their history and
definition of culture. Both take on these themes differently, but especially share the same message.
In A Small Place, by Jamaica Kincaid portrays the fact that tourism is an occupation of place. She
accomplishes this by utilizing second person narration, expressing her disgust of tourists to the
reader. On the other hand, in Bad Indians by Deborah A. Miranda, she exposes and reveals the harsh
realities of colonialism through discussions of inhumane exploitation, abuse, and sexual violence.
Throughout her book, she tells the history of her family and the Indigenous ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Miranda includes to use personal and sentimental works, while Kincaid uses second person
narration that puts the reader in perspective of the colonizer. Identity is a prominent and significant
theme in both works. More so in Bad Indians, while A Small Place entails the theme of identity as a
collective. There is a distinction in terms of identity, where in Bad Indians, the reader learns about
more about the author, while A Small Place is more about the history of Antigua.
Colonization has caused cultures to nearly diminish or dismantle them. Culture is a form of identity,
Miranda definitely demonstrates the implications of culture as a result of colonization. On the other
hand, A Small Place demonstrates that colonization still exists though, not visible to the eye, as she
describes how tourism has negatively affected Antigua in her personal view.
Miranda chooses to use diaries, photographs, poems, newspapers to illustrate not only her personal
life, but her family and her people. Which is a completely different element as compared to A Small
place, whereas Kincaid does not illustrate these things but more so portrays history of Antigua as a
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Compcompare the Ways in Which Larkin and Abse Write About...
Compare the ways in which Larkin and Abse write about place. You must include detailed critical
discussion of at least two poems by Larkin in your response.
In timed conditions
Gemma N
Larkin and Abse both write about places in a very different, very unique style. One the one hand
Larkin talks about the places of his past and how they are no longer accessible; the changing of a
beautiful, unspoilt place to something short of an eyesore; a pace he is in but does not feel he
belongs and even places within his mind. Alternatively Abse talks longingly of the places he once
lived in, and how upsetting it is to find they are no longer the same. Some examples of the copious
amount to choose from include Here, Mr Bleaney and Sunny Prestalyn, ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Moreover, in the first stanza when describing the rural area he repeatedly uses assonance. "Skies and
scarecrows, haystacks, hares and pheasants"– these soft consonant sounds make you slow down as
the repeated "s" sounds become hard to say, slowing you down and not allowing you to rush past
these, in Larkin's case, beautiful little details of the countryside.
Furthermore, Larkin's poem Mr Bleaney refers to a place that the persona does not wish to be in, yet
has ended up having surrendering and suffers the consequences. Mr Bleaney is essentially a poem
about a circumstantial situation that is given as a dramatic monologue, and rather like a drama, tells
a story that is full of lucid mystery. The first half of the poem is slow and deliberate and helps to
create a macabre feel to the poem. A change of pace occurs in the second half of the poem, though is
not immediately apparent. It then seems to be despairingly urgent, as Mr Bleaney subtly moves from
a recollected past to an observed present, through his mediation with the new tenant. In addition
Larkin's use of listing creates a dull and monotonous feel to the place, giving the reader the feel that
no one, unless in a dire situation, would want to suffer living in such an undesirable place. One may
argue the most symbolic thing in the room is the "sixty watt bulb". Light is a commonly used
symbol to portray
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Place Symbolism And Land Politics In Beowulf
Stuart Elden, in his article "Place Symbolism and Land Politics in Beowulf", discusses the usage of
place in Beowulf. He declares, "In this text, site and place are given a range of symbolic, material,
and emotive resonances." There are copious examples in Beowulf where place has significant
meaning. Settings are presented as either good or bad, boundaries are set and crossed, and the
placement of boundaries created conflict and exclusion.
In Beowulf, there are many places that are clearly presented as good and bad, safe and unsafe. In the
text, the reader learns about places that have a somewhat concrete goodness or turmoil present.
Heorot Hall described in the beginning of Beowulf is one of the good places. Of the hall, it is
written, "Soon it stood there, finished and ready, in full view, the hall of halls". The hall is
representative of the community and the identity of the realm, as well as serving as a gathering place
for the people to drink and socialize. Elden describes the hall as a place of great joy and celebration,
as well as a sacred place for various ceremonies and rituals to take place (cite this and make sure
proper paraphrasing). These descriptions create a sense of community and safety in the hall. In
contrast, there are many places, such as Grendel's mere or the dragon's lair, that are presented in a
much darker, evil light creating a bad place. The mere is described with a level of ambiguity that
creates a sense of unsettlement and eeriness in the reader.
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A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
Kincaid wrote the book "Small place" to describe her life as a Caribbean. The book mostly focuses
on the personal history of her home located on the island of Antigua. She maintains a bitter and a
sarcastic tone throughout the book. In the introductory section of her work, she compares the Island
with its former outlook before the bad English men took over the region. She presents the
differences between the natives of Antigua and the tourist. It appears that Antigua is a small place
surrounded by a big world. The first section of A Small Place details the destruction of the physical
location of the colonial library. In the second section of the text, Kincaid returns to the old colonial
library prior to its destruction with more detail of
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A Small Place Analysis
Tyrisha Patterson
ENG 203
10/12/17
Fort Payne's Memories
Kincaid wrote A Small Place after she had left the island nineteen years ago. During this period, she
had been a creative writer living permanently in the United States. She had spent much of her time
on the island. Her hostile verbal talk after coming back to the island is an indication of how she is
both a tourist and native as she claims 'every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every
tourist is a native of somewhere'(Kincaid,18). She beautifully describes Antigua and describes it as a
place where the sky and sea meet to exaggerate the island's surrealism. It shows that attachment
place. Her style makes me recall my childhood and teenage experiences of living in Fort Payne that
helped shape my identity. Kincaid's style of writing establishes an intriguing reflection journey for
the reader to undergo. The surrealism of Antigua remains as the same as it was back before Kincaid
relocated elsewhere. In her book, A Small Place, Kincaid illustrates how Antigua holds different
meaning to different people. To the white people, Antigua is a place for people to get away from
their lives as indicated 'a life of overwhelming and crushing banality and boredom' (Kincaid, 18).
Kincaid's description of the island is amazingly beautiful that to some extent it appears unreal.
Despite the fact that the place is beautiful, the depicted poorness of the people appears unreal. It
indicates that the beauty of the area is
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Corruption In A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
Antigua is a possibly one of the most beautiful places to visit in the world, let alone the Caribbean.
In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, she describes Antigua as place of prioritizing the foreigners
and the "white" people. Regrettably, the country has been designed to become a tourist attraction
over the years, causing the author's sense of Antigua to dissipate over time (p.23). Kincaid's
perception of Antigua can be summed up by the unrepaired library, the past social and cultural
interaction of the Antiguans (p. 42 – 43). To the tourist, the ruin library is possibly just another
damage structure; however, to the locals and Kincaid, it has meaning, a place, a locale, and more
importantly, a sense of place. In the story, it references the corruption of the politicians always trying
to benefit themselves ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Despite the disturbance of place and the negative stigma of corruption, this paper argues that
Antigua's single dependent economy (tourism) has caused the government to favor the monetary
benefits over the social and cultural benefits. To explore the cultural and social "demise" Kincaid is
telling through her story, this paper will explore the issues of corruption affecting the local's sense of
place, but ultimately, corruption is not entirely bad for Antigua.
Literature review Before exploring the underlying reasons and critiquing Jamaica Kincaid's "A
Small Place", it is important to establish a mutual understanding of place and how corruption could
affect the Antiguans. According to Cresswell (2009), place refers to important and substantial site
that combines "location, locale, and sense of place" (p.169). Location indicates the exact area of the
site, while locale refers to the "visible and tangible aspects of a place"
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Birdsfoot Trefoil: My Place In The Future
Despite the recent abnormally high temperatures, the vegetation surrounding my area was just as
dead as it had been the last time I documented it. I took the photo two hours later than I had taken
any of the other photographs, but that did not seem to make a difference in the appearance of the
spot. One cool thing I have noticed, however, is that the sun is beginning to rise earlier and earlier
each Sunday morning. I think this will have a big effect on my spot in the future. As the Birdsfoot
Trefoil begins to consume more solar energy, I am excited to see how it develops and begins to grow
again. Recently, it has been very windy, but this did not impact my area in any major way. One of
the topics we have gone over this quarter, is tourism and recreation and the effects they have on a
community. When I think of tourism I often think of places like New York City or the monuments in
South Dakota. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When one has their right to equality, they often have the liberty to do as they wish. This includes
participating in recreational activities and traveling to different communities, despite the negative
impact they may be inflicting upon the environment or the people of the community. Similarly,
when a company needs to expand, they may assert their wealth as to show they are above/more
equal than the actual people living in the community. Through this wealth, they have the social and
economic liberties to build whatever they want, despite what is best for the community and the
environment. To connect this back to my sense of place, the people that walk in the grass are
probably unaware of how their actions impact the ecosystem below them. However, they are
asserting their equality to walk in that area and have the liberty to do so. We often do not treat the
environment as our equal, and therefore it lacks the liberty to choose how it is maintained and
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Jamaica Kincaid's Memoir 'A Small Place'
Jamaica Kincaid's part memoir, part social commentary and historical flashback "A Small Place" is
unique due to the perspective that it gives the reader about Kincaid's home and the people who
inhabit it. Jamaica speaks to the reader in the second person first, citing each part of the text as a
direct message to the reader, making them a part of the story she is trying to tell. This is essential for
Kincaid to put the reader in the right frame of mind to retain the information located in the rest of
the book. Kincaid is direct and uses a scathing tone that forces the reader to confront their actions
and feelings regarding the subject of tourism. Kincaid can safely target any class in most countries
because even those in poor economic situations ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The reason that the personal memoir begins later is because Kincaid has already made us care about
herself and the island as a whole by putting us directly into the story, forcing us to play a role if we
continue to read her words. Kincaid talks about how the cable company is owned by the prime
minister's son, a well–known drug dealer and prostitution ring are both overlooked by the Prime
Minister due to his benefit from their services. She speaks of the hospital being unfit for operation,
with all of the rich people inhabiting Antigua flying abroad to the United States for all of their
medical examinations and procedures. Our nature when reading something true and horrible,
regardless of if we chose to admit it, is what does this have to do with me, or what can I do about it?
Well, Kincaid directly puts us all in the story, forcing us to take notice of what is happening around
us, making us tourists also indirectly makes us accomplices. Condoning this type of behavior is
what tourists do when they turn the other way at the poor living conditions of the natives, continuing
to pour cash into the rich and corrupted
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Jamaica Kincaid's Essay 'A Small Place'
In Jamaica Kincaid's essay, "A Small Place", she is acknowledges how the Antiguans hurts
themselves, as they fail to see the pathetic irony that exists within their country. According to
Kincaid, the Antiguans see slavery as a time in which a bunch of ships dropped off slaves, the
ancestors of the Antiguans, to work under brutal conditions for many years. Then, as though it were
magic, all of a sudden the day of "emancipation" arrives, in the eyes of the ignorant Antiguans, and
all the slaves are freed. As Kincaid notes, the Antiguans speak of emancipation "as if it were
yesterday" and as if slavery was a recent occurrence to their peoples, when, in actuality, the slaves
were freed roughly one hundred fifty years ago. However, at the ... Show more content on
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Within the passage in which Kincaid describes the lack of awareness Antiguans have regarding their
relationship with slavery, emancipation, and ignorance, Kincaid uses parallel structure and
repetition. In describing the misconception the current Antiguans have about slavery, which
something none of the current Antiguans have experienced firsthand, Kincaid uses parallel structure
in the form of a triad to show the textbook view that the Antiguans have regarding slavery. Kincaid,
as she states how the Antiguans describe slaves, writes: "they were beaten, they were murdered, they
were sold". (Kincaid 54) Because, within the descriptions, only standard words are used to describe
slavery in bland, three–worded clauses, the existing lack of connection the current Antiguans have
towards slavery is shown, as all emotional connection with slavery is removed. When describing
how commonly Antiguans use the words "emancipation", even though they are detached, the word
is used three times during the course of three sentences, proving how the word has become trite
amongst Antiguans. Because of the clichéd words and phrases Kincaid uses, the ignorance that
Antiguans have towards their serious situation is
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Is Aging in Place Priceless? Essay
The meaning of home to older adults transcends the financial and physical qualities of the brick and
mortar. Gillsjo, Schwartz–Bardot, & Von Post (2011) suggested that "home was experienced as the
place the older adult could not imagine living without, but also as the place one might be forced to
leave" (p. 2). Notwithstanding an American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) survey (2010)
which showed that the "majority of older adults polled preferred to age in place" (p. 1), the dilemma
for many seniors is how to do so when faced with deteriorating housing conditions and "insufficient
resources in retirement" (Neil & Neil, 2009, p. 53). In an effort to supplement inadequate retirement
incomes, some seniors have capitalized on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Assistance is provided to an eligible homeowner in the form of a grant or a low–interest loan by a
local government agency under the provisions of the HOME Investments Partnership Program
(1996). While the overall intent of this program is admirable, the reality is that the objective
measurement used to assess the scope of the proposed rehabilitation project is governed by the
HOME Program, which defers to HUD's Housing Quality Standards (HQS) for compliance,
according to Thombs, (personal communication, March 23, 2011). To that end, HQS (1995) requires
that the proposed rehabilitation must also address such issues as lead–based paint for homes built
before 1978, as cited in 24 C.F.R pt. 982.401, adding thousands of dollars to a repair project,
according to Thombs, (personal communication, March 23, 2011). Simply put, the elderly
homeowner may have applied for assistance to repair a leaky roof, or to replace an inoperable
heating unit, but because federal HOME dollars are being used, the property must adhere to HQS
standards, according to Thombs, (personal communication, March 23, 2011). In addition, the
rehabilitation
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A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid
A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid presents the hypothetical story of a tourist visiting Antigua, the
author's hometown. Kincaid places the reader in the shoes of the tourist, and tells the tourist what
he/she would see through his/her travels on the island. She paints a picturesque scene of the tourist's
view of Antigua, but stains the image with details of issues that most tourists overlook: the bad
roads, the origin of the so–called native food, the inefficiency of the plumbing systems in resorts,
and the glitches in the health care system. Kincaid was an established writer for The New Yorker
when she wrote this book, and it can be safely assumed that majority of her readers had, at some
point in their lives, been tourists. I have been a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Kincaid clearly attacks the tourists for not understanding the value of Antigua and its heritage; they
are "ugly human being(s)" (115) because of their ignorance. The vacant gazers are ugly because
when they have reached the zenith of banality in their own lives, they use the poverty of the natives
of a tourist destination like Antigua to feel better about themselves; the natives' lack of wealth,
opportunities and education all make that pasty–skinned tourist feel superior. The ugliness stems
from the tourist's use of the native's backwardness to propel themselves forward.
Kincaid describes the reactions of the native people as tourists walk by; being a native Antiguan
herself, her description of their behaviour is probably accurate. The justification she provides for
their behaviour is sound. Most areas like Antigua depend on the funds that tourism brings in. While
whatever luxury can be provided is given to the tourists, it is the native people who see the daily
trials and sufferings. Understandably, even though their income comes from the tourists they so
despise, the native population is trapped in the never–ending cycle of poverty. Unable to escape
their own situations, the natives find solace in mocking tourists for their cluelessness or
awkwardness. Kincaid shows this most effectively when she says, "we Antiguans, for I am one,
have a great sense of things, and the more meaningful the thing, the more meaningless we make it"
(113). She immediately
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Relationship Between Place And Music And The Song ' Inglan...
The objective of this paper is to examine the relationship between place and music and analyze the
song "Inglan is a Bitch" by Linton Kwesi Johnson in terms of place. "Inglan is a Bitch" exemplifies
the link between music and place through its lyrics and sound. First I am going to define cultural
geography and discuss how culture is linked to place. Then I will explain local music spaces and
why music has a strong sense of place. Next I will analyze how "Inglan is a Bitch" relates to place.
After, I will finish with an overall conclusion. I will be exploring these topics through the readings
of Knox and Marston, Connell and Gibson and finally, Watson, Holyer and Mager supplemented by
Lecture notes.
According to Knox and Marston, culture produces a shared set of meanings and practices, while
geography is the place in which groups shape those meanings and practices and "in the process form
an identity" (Knox and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural Geography focuses on the way space, place
and landscape shape culture at the same time that culture shapes space, place, and landscape" (Knox
and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural geography examines cultural traits, cultural complexes, and
cultural regions. (Rutherford 2016). It is a way to understand both landscape and human settlement
patterns (Rutherford 2016).
In the reading Sounds and Scenes, authors Connell and Gibson suggest that a local music space is a
specific place that produces a distinct sound (Connell and Gibson 2003, 90). The
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A Narrative Essay About A Place Shimla
The most matchless place to be, is Sirmaur, Shimla. The moving slopes, clean fresh air, and
extensive size all outperform the city life. The recollections and happiness I encounter when I am
there will dependably remain as a cherished memory to me. My home reside in country where it
would snow intensely during winter, and in summer park, playgrounds would be the place where
you want to be.
My home resided in the country. A cow field was my lawn, and I would play find the stowaway with
my companions behind the roughage bundles. From the minute we returned home and put our
backpack down until the minute the pinkish, yellow sun was setting, my friends and I were
dependably in another enterprise. Now and again, the brilliant beams would sparkle and emanate
without a cloud in the sky. The delicate breeze was sufficient only to make it agreeable. The grass
had officially dried from the early morning dew, influencing it to look newly cut and greener than
any time in recent memory. As we would be circled making ... Show more content on
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I generally made new companions, and there was generally such a great amount to do with these
new associates. Exercises comprised of playing ball at the court, playing in the sand, riding bicycles,
and rollerblading on the trail, playing on the wilderness rec center and tire swing, swinging, thus
considerably more! Once my mother and I had our photo gone up against the swings and put in the
Kullu News Sentinel. Once in a while, the congregation assembly would have an excursion for
everybody there, and we would barbecue and appreciate each other's conversation. Indeed, even
family get–togethers have been held there. The general population in Sirmaur are nation individuals,
rational, and substance with the straightforward life. They are not worried about the best and most
recent of things. This made the occasions at the recreation center a great deal more
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A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid
In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, Kincaid criticizes tourists for being heartless and ignorant
to the problems that the people of Antigua had and the sacrifices that had to be made to make
Antigua a tremendous tourist/vacation spot. While Kincaid makes a strong argument, her argument
suggests that she doesn't realize what tourism is for the tourists. In other words, tourism is an escape
for those who are going on vacation and the tourists are well within their rights to be "ignorant",
especially because no one is telling them what is wrong with Antigua.
The biggest aspect of Kincaid's argument that makes it flawed is her anger. That is not to say that
there aren't times where anger is justified. At the same time, the harsh language ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
A tourist is under no obligation to know about the history of an island, city, state or country. It
should be acknowledged that Kincaid displays anger at nearly every entity in Antigua, but at the
same time it is her anger at tourists which seems to be the most misplaced because they are the ones
who have the least power in fixing the problems the people in Antigua have. To the above point, one
of the reasons that Antigua is a destination for tourists is because of its aforementioned aesthetic
beauty. Antigua's beauty belies the reality of the situation that the people have, but it is not
something that tourists should feel any responsibility to change. More to the point, Antigua's beauty
is one of the reasons that tourists should not be challenged. Indeed, tourists have no reason to
believe that the people of Antigua are miserable because of the beauty of the land and the hard work
that the people of Antigua put in to make sure that the tourists have a good time (even if the tourists
acknowledge that the workers may be poor). One example of how Kincaid's argument is flawed is
when she says that tourists appreciate the fact that Antigua has no rain, when the lack of rain
actually leads to droughts which negatively affect the natives in the long–term. Kincaid's discussion
of rain is representative of the difference between her perspective and the perspective of the tourist.
The tourist has no stake in Antigua beyond how it profiles as a vacation
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Analysis Of A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
Antigua is a small island that was discovered in 1493, by Christopher Columbus. The natives that
lived there were made slaves by the British and the economy thrived on producing sugar. In 1834
the British abolished slavery giving Antigua its independence. The sugar industry was failing so the
economy relied on tourism. A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid is about Antigua. Kincaid narrates
her novel in second person, blaming the tourists for ruining the culture of Antigua. Kincaid explains
that the British were cruel to the Antiguan people but she forgives them for it. Kincaid also talked
about how the Government is currently corrupt and how beautiful Antigua's land is. Kincaids novel
is broken up into four parts that address all of these issues in Antigua.The way A Small Place by
Jamaica Kincaid was written is effective in the way that it tries to persuade and inform the readers.
In part one of A Small Place, Kincaid tries to persuade the readers, she does this by talking directly
to them. Kincaid says that the tourists ruin the culture and that they are not justified in coming to
Antigua for a vacation. Kincaid thinks that tourism is ugly, "an ugly thing, that is what you are when
you become a tourist"(Kincaid 17). Kincaid is trying to persuade the reader instead of informing
them with a fact or observation. This direct use of second person is successful to persuade the
reader. It is successful because the reader might feel guilty for traveling and might change his or her
perspective on traveling.
In part four of A Small Place, Kincaid tries to persuade the reader. Kincaid tries to make the reader
think that Antiguas beauty is unreal. Kincaid also instead of informing you with facts or
observations talks about how the British should be punished for enslaving Antiguans and says in her
opinion why they did it. Kincaid wants the reader to feel that Europeans are truly unhappy, "to
satisfy their desire for wealth and power, to feel better about their own miserable existence, so that
they could be less lonely and empty– a European disease"(Kincaid 80). This use of persuasion
successfully makes you think about human nature. It makes the reader think of why people would
enslave others for money and power.
In part
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Review: A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
Substitute Assignment
In the novel A Small Place written by Jamaica Kincaid, the following quote is further developed,
"That the native does not like the tourist is not hard to explain. For every native of every place is a
potential tourist, and every tourist is a native of somewhere" (Kincaid, 18). After a novel full of
rants on how the tourists are completely awful, this quote is quite controversial. Jamaica Kincaid is
telling the readers that although tourists and locals do not get along, at some point in everyone's life
they are a tourist. Whether they are traveling to a completely different place or just discovering new
aspects of their home. This may be what Jamaica Kincaid meant generally and in a more literal way,
but there also seems ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"They are too poor to escape the reality of their lives; and they are too poor to live properly in the
place where they live, which is the very place you, the tourist, they envy you, they envy your ability
to leave your own banality and boredom, they envy your ability to turn their own banality and
boredom into a source of pleasure for yourself" (Kincaid, 18–19). The locals are completely envious
of the tourists because they are able to turn the home of the locals, which the locals feel so bitterly
about, into a perfect spot for themselves. The tourists get the chance to escape their homes and
boring lives, whereas the locals of Antigua feel they do not get the chance. Of course they dislike the
visitors, they wish they could be them and they wish they could have what the tourists have. Yet, the
tourists feel the same way; they wish they were 'lucky' enough to live on the island of Antigua. Just
as the locals in the novel come from Antigua, these visitors are also locals of some place, some place
the Antiguans wish they could go. It just plays an endless cycle of each local wishing to be a tourist,
and each tourist wishing to be a local. This is what Jamaica Kincaid meant by that
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Irony In A Small Place
This story " A Small Place" has a voice of anger because the author uses irony and points out crime
that the colonists did to her hometown. The author uses the expectations of the tourists when they
visited Antigua to tell us about the reality of Antigua. She uses sarcasm to tell the truth of the island
throughout the story. When she calls the tourist " the ugly human being" or when she calls out all the
things that the colonist did are crimes, these things show the audiences that the author was really
angry about the past of Antigua and the effect of the past until now. Her emotions is just a response
to the circumstance, so we cannot blame her because of her intense words in the story. Her writing
style is really unique to make the audiences
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Explore How Perceptions of Belonging or Not Belonging Are...
A connection to a physical location may present us with the perception that we either belong or not
belong however, it is the connections that we form with people in places, memories of previous
places and ones response to experiences within places that heightens ones sense of belonging or
alienation. The concept of belonging through connections with people, experiences and memories in
certain places is explored in the texts Romulus my Father a memoir by Raimond Gaita and Oranges
and Sunshine directed by Jim Loach.
It is not a connection with the physical landscape that allows us to experience a sense of inclusion
but rather connections built with people or communities that either heighten ones sense of affiliation
or estrangement. This ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Raimond also justifies his mother's affair with Mitru when he describes his mother as "a troubled
girl from central Europe who could not settle in the dilapidated landscape that heightened her
isolation". The complexity of the bond is developed through Anna's first attempt at suicide, which is
more of a desperate cry for help; "In words that were barely comprehensible she said that she loved
me and wanted to say goodbye, that she would fall asleep and then die". This vivid memory of his
mother saying goodbye leads to a very complex bond between the pair. Perhaps the most intense
memory of his mother that Gaita has is the memory of his mother returning from hospital after this
suicide attempt, "alone, small, frail, walking with an uncertain gait and a distracted air. In the vast
landscape with only crude wire fences and a rough track to mark an human impression on it she
appeared forsaken. She looked at me as though she had returned from the dead, unsure about the
value of her achievement". The memory is bittersweet, although she is alive after a failed suicide
attempt; she conveys a vivid impression of someone who does not belong in the place they are in
and does not seem to belong in that life. Raymond's memories of experiences at Frogmore,
especially experiences with regards to his mother, has shaped and built his connection with
Frogmore allowing him to experience
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My Favorite Place
One of my favorite places in the world that has affected my life the most is my childhood town and
my home in Mobile, Alabama. I grew up in a beige, two story house that sits on a long yard backed
up to Dog River. My house is about ten minutes outside of downtown Mobile, AL and is very close
to Mobile Bay. Spending time near the water and growing up in the area that I did greatly influenced
the way that I think about things and the way that I live my life. My family has lived in them same
area for generations and not many have moved away. In Jamaica Kincaid's A Small Place, Kincaid
talks about how when multiple generations grow up in the same area, they tend to become more
invested and involved with the area that they are in, growing in their appreciation for the place that
they grew up. The place that I grew up in has greatly affected the person that I have become in ways
such as where my ancestors are from, how I view social issues, and my own personal identity.
My mother's family lived on the same river about a mile away, and my father's family had lived in
the city for generations. The area I grew up in was the same area that my parents and grandparents
grew up in, so it is safe to say that I was greatly influenced by the area. Since I have such a deep
connection to the area I grew up in, I have developed a fondness for the river and the wildlife in it.
My whole life I have loved to go fishing and skiing on the water, or just sitting on the bank of the
river to relax.
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The Giver Places
The Giver is set in a futuristic era in which Jones lives in. There are multiple places within this small
utopian community. The place is close to a river which will be important for a plot later on. The
places are the nursery, childcare center, school, the Department of Justice, amongst others. One of
the most important places in the book is a place called "elsewhere" which is what the people call
everywhere else outside the community. At the end of the story, Jonas goes outside the community
so find this so called "elsewhere". The surroundings of the community were perfect since it was like
living in a bubble for them to be shielded from the "cruelty" of the world. The weather was always
glorious and people hardly got hurt thanks to all the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His personality was curious, kind, anxious, and brave, Jonas was an average twelve year old with
brown hair, light brown eyes, an averagely good looking face and he was a little tall. One of Jonas's
good traits was that he was loyal to his loved ones and this is shown especially in how he looks after
the baby Gabriel, how much he cares for and loves his. Jonas's weakness was his kindness because it
changed his judgement involving the plan he and The Giver had and it also nearly got him and
Gabriel killed when Jonas took the baby with him. This book is about a boy named Jonas who lives
in place and time different than ours. The story follows Jonas as he takes one of the most important
steps in everyone in the community's life, becoming a twelve and getting assigned to a job; not only
does he take that step but he is assigned to the most honored job of them all, The Receiver. Jonas's
goal was, at first, just to train with The Giver so that he could then take his place and do his job but
after learning about the truth about his community and its lack of memories, color etc. he decides to
let everyone know. He was trying to accomplish this goal because as he kept receiving all those
memories he liked so much he wanted everyone to experience them. The community was against
Jonas because they didn't understand what he was trying to do. The climax of the book is when
Jonas starts to realize the lies to the community and that
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A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
Jamaica Kincaid, an essayist, explains the idea that history of the Caribbean (specifically Antigua),
helps shape identity through her book, "A Small Place". In regards the history, Kincaid also
discloses how capitalism and colonialism are used as a foundation in shaping our epistemological
ways of knowing the self and the world around us. In this essay, Kincaid uses tourism as a way of
viewing the effects of capitalism and colonialism. She disliked tourist and through her accounts,
there is tension between the tourist and the natives of the receiving countries. Kincaid believes
tourist as so blind to the "true" Caribbean and in a way believes they act superior. Throughout the
book Kincaid explains how she begins to view herself and how ... Show more content on
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Kincaid explains, "The government allowed meat known to be contaminated by radiation to be
distributed in Antigua" (Kincaid, p. 61). She also discloses how government officials are involved in
drug trafficking which is known to the public but not mentioned as much.
One of the genres that can be used to depict Kincaid's concept is romance. The main characters
would include of a native of the Antigua island named Violetta Ambrose as well as a foreigner from
the United Kingdom named Alexander Davies. Violetta works at the Mill Reef Club as a waitress at
the bar and Alexander was a member of the club through association by his dad. His father was a
member therefore making him a member. He comes from a wealthy background and attends one of
the best universities in the U.K. Both come from different worlds, different perspective of their
worlds and Antigua, as well as what it means to be part of the Caribbean.
The two main characters will encounter each other. Violette would be serving him and his friends
rum. Alexander is seen talking with other member's son when he and Violetta lock eyes. He was
talking with his friends about the beauty of Antigua. How the beach is bright and sunny, water cool
and fresh and the fact that Antigua is "culture rich". Violette hears their conversation as she is
pouring rum into their glass. Violetta doesn't
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Analysis Of The Reader ' A Small Place '
Maddie Wiersma
Dr. Nicole Sheets
EL–347: Creative Nonfiction
11 November 2015
The Reader as "You"
Jamaica Kincaid immerses the reader into her essay "A Small Place" through the use of second–
person point of view, continually referring to the reader as "you." She characterizes the reader as a
tourist from a privileged Western nation and narrates the experiences and thoughts of the reader
while visiting Antigua for the first time. By portraying the reader as the tourist through second–
person narrative, Kincaid criticizes the ignorance of Eurocentric assumptions, as well as the total
superficiality of Western tourism. Ultimately, this technique allows her to capture her disdain for
Eurocentrism, alienating the reader from Antiguan culture.
In the first sentence of the essay, Kincaid promptly employs second–person narrative by addressing
the reader, "If you go to Antigua as a tourist, this is what you will see" (257). Immediately, Kincaid
invites the reader into the essay, provoking the audience to imagine themselves as tourists. The
reader can relate to the tourist and can identify with the excitement of traveling to a place where "the
sun always shines and the climate is deliciously hot and dry for the four to ten days you are going to
be staying there..." (257). However, Kincaid then confronts the reader with the problems inherent in
this egocentric way of thinking. She proceeds to call out the reader's ignorance about the climate:
"since you are a tourist, the thought of what
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People and Places in the Service Industries
1005HSL People and Places in the Service Industries
Portfolio Assignment Brief
Having completed your quiz, you now need to produce work for your portfolio. The portfolio will
be marked out of 100 and forms 50% of the total assessment for the course.
There are 3 main parts consisting of 6 sub–sections to the portfolio (1a,1b, 1c, 2a, 2b, & 3)
each focussing on the lectures from Weeks 2 to 8.
The first step in building this portfolio is to choose a tourism place. This could be a city, hotel,
restaurant, theme park, or an event.
You will complete 3 main activities: 1. An investigation into the tourism place you have chosen. (40
marks) a) Provide a description of the tourism place you have chosen, including its sense of ... Show
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This promotional material can be in any form but must be attached to your portfolio, and justified in
words. If your promotional material is a video clip or web–based, hyperlink the material to your
portfolio. (20 marks)
Word guide: 600 words
3. A reflection and anticipation of how this tourism place might change in the future. (10 marks)
Anticipate how this tourism place might change, providing support for your opinion. Your support
should cover some of the key concepts discusses in weeks seven and eight on changing landscapes
and renewal and urban precincts. * Word limit: 300 words
In preparing your portfolio for submission, familiarise yourself with the content on this site
http://www.griffith.edu.au/academic–integrity/information–for–students
Other required elements (10 marks) Format: Include word count. Use font size of 12, Times New
Roman, double–spaced. Include a Table of Contents, with appropriate lists of figures, artefacts,
appendices or copies of any web pages you include in the portfolio. You may create links and
hyperlinks from your word document to webpages.
Referencing: Anything obtained from another source must be referenced properly. You should have
at least 5 references. If it is the work of someone else, it must be referenced completely and
properly. We follow the APA 6 referencing style. For information about this style, go to L@G and
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Summary Of A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
Antigua is a possibly one of the most beautiful places to visit in the world, let alone the Caribbean.
In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, she describes Antigua as a place of prioritizing the
foreigners and the "white" people. Regrettably, the country has been designed to become a tourist
attraction over the years, causing the author's sense of Antigua to dissipate over time (pp.23).
Kincaid's perception of Antigua can be summed up by the unrepaired library, the past social and
cultural interaction of the Antiguans (pp. 42 – 43). To the tourist, the ruin library is possibly just
another damage structure; however, to the locals and Kincaid, it has meaning, a place, a locale, and
more importantly, a sense of place. In the story, it references ... Show more content on
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In Africa, corruption is a major concern in hindering the country's development. As d'Agostino,
Dunne & Pieroni (2016) states that combating corruption can improve aggregate economic
performances and improve the "indirect effects that come through the interaction between
[government] corruption[s]" (pp.84). However, Mckoy (2012) argues the lack of information and
understanding in the Commonwealth Caribbean causes many management practitioners to use
information from other countries and regions, like the continent of Africa. As such, he defines
Caribbean analysis on corruption are based upon opinions, anecdote and cross–country correlations
(Mckoy, 2012, pp.10). In Antigua, the economy is dependent on the service sector with 77.5% of the
GDP (CIA, 2017) and the employment rate is 82% (CIA, 1982). Within the service sector, travel and
tourism accumulates 60.4% of the GDP and 54.3% of employment, with a forecast of growth of
over 10% in 2017 (World Travel & Tourism Council, 2016, pp.1&3). If a country's economy is so
heavily dependent on travel and tourism that continues to build more hotels and increase the cruise
industry, it is understandable that the government focuses heavily on it. According to figure 1, the
GDP continues to rise, with an exception in 2008 where the economic recession occurred. The
government of Antigua possibly solely focused on enhancing the economy via
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Are Haunted Houses Are Not The Place?
The number of haunted houses, both professional and ameture, has reached well into the thousands
as of 2016. That means you have many to choose from this coming holiday. The average big house,
a professional house with a substantial run time, draws in at least 300 patrons a night. Yet, with the
millions of participants every year, I would confidently say that less than half, if even that, are really
getting the most out of the experience. Worry not, for i have prepared all that you need to know
about having the best experience that you can. The first step to really enjoying a haunt, is to make
sure you choose the right one. If you've never been to a haunted house, you should look up the ones
in your area online. Each big house should have it's own website, complete with both videos and
reviews. Look through these to help yourself get a feeling as to how the haunt operates. You also
have to know yourself. Haunted houses are not the place for foolish lies and false bravado. If you
are deathly afraid of spiders, don 't buy tickets to Phobia Haunt, which has a sub walkthrough called
Arachnophobia, just because some girl you like wants to go. Not only will this make you never want
to go to another haunt, but she won't agree to another date if you peed yourself in front of her
because you tried to act macho. Now that you've chosen the haunt that you want, it 's time to get
ready to go. The season usually begins around September 16, and wraps up November the third,
which means
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How The Environment Affects A Person And Many Places
Places have a lot of significance tied to them depending on what they mean to people. The place that
I am going to talk about in this paper reminds me of a peaceful place, because it has provided me
with comfort and has allowed me to grow within this calm place. Oxford Dictionary defines place as
"A building or area used for a specified purpose or activity: 'the town has many excellent eating
places'. Specific memories link with certain places that individuals go to, and have had them shape
them into who they are, or have guided them into having a better understanding with what brings
them peace. It has been shown that places actually do bring a certain emotion or feeling onto a
person, almost like an extra sense. "Modern science is confirming that people's thoughts, feelings
and actions are indeed shaped not by just their genes and neurochemistry, history and relationships
but also by their surroundings. How the environment affects a person and several places that are
considered by some cultures to be sacred and discussed." (Gallagher, 1993, p. 62)
A place that has an importance to me is the park behind Parkwood hospital. It has a field with
beautiful flowers that you can admire all day long, and there are also walkways with a tiny waterfall
followed with a couple of benches to be able to sit down and admire the scenery. On the other side
of it, there are picnic tables and areas for families to come together and spend time with each other
while admiring the outdoors and
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Jamaica Kincaid A Small Place
"A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid is a critical representation of a hypothetical story outlining the
adventures of a tourist visiting Antigua which is the hometown of the author. Kincaid in her writing
tries to place the reader in the shoes of the tourist telling more of what the tourist would see through
his or her travels on the island, Antigua. In this context, Kincaid attempts to paint picturesque
scenery of according to the tourist's view of the Antigua Island. On the other hand, she as well stains
the images therein with some critical details of some issues which the tourist would in many ways
overlook such as the bad roads, the inefficient plumbing systems, the problems facing the health
care system and even the origins of the native ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She, unlike most writers, does not dictate an individual on the things they should be doing or their
views. She essentially addresses one on what they are and what they think. Further, her plight is not
on the tourists but she tries to highlight and express the real lives of the natives in Antigua. The lives
of the natives are always unclear to an outsider or for this case a tourist. She holds on the
assumption that natives inherently provide the staging and they are the elements which make it a
small place. The visiting of the tourists on the other hand according to Kincaid is a selfish individual
who is assumed obnoxious as long as they are carrying along their demands to the small place
devoid of the concerns therein. In this manner, Kincaid tries to bring out the real meaning of the
small things in the small place. In one way or the other, the tourist is pleased that his or her trip is
not ruined by rains but on the other hand, they do not understand that their demands are not
corresponding well with the native due to the constant insufficiency of
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Describe A Place Analysis
I. Introduction
If you sit and look at all of the things around you that are considered to be geographical; for
example, schools, houses, restaurants, landscapes, and even the streets that we walk on every day
they all have a story to tell. Some of these things have been here for years and some only for
months. The people that lived here before us and the people that will live here after us will all have
their story to live and tell. Each place has a special meaning to that one person that maybe no one
knows. There is a special place that will always be with me; it is not extravagant, but it is a place
that means a lot to many people, not just me. It is a small restaurant, in the small town of Nocona,
Texas, called Dairy Queen; a little place that reminds me of home. Let us take a closer look at this
wonderful place that is one of the main attractions of the city of Nocona, using the five themes of
geography: region, location, place, movement, and human–environmental interaction.
II. General Overview
Recently, we went home to see family. Home might not necessarily be where you live, but where
you feel the love of your family. Home might be where you feel comfortable or at ease in the sense
that you can just take that one big deep breath and let everything out and relax. When I think of that
place I think of the smells, the people ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Most of the roads around this building are dirt roads, but, the highways are pavement. The parking
lot of the Dairy Queen in Nocona is gravel. So, when you drive in to park you can almost guarantee
that rocks will be slung around. There are stop lights on every corner of where the Dairy Queen sits.
Although, these stop lights are not like in the big city, there hung by wire. This little town is not as
wealthy so they do not have lightning posts like the ones you see in the big cities. That is okay
though. These lights get the job
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Literary Devices In A Small Place
Gentle waves, lush greenery, and sun–soaked beaches, Antigua embodies your ideal holiday
destination. But Jamaica Kincaid turns your paradise upside down in her new memoir A Small
Place. Using her pen as a sword, Kincaid slashes Antigua's façade of perfection into shreds and
presses the blade against the throats of tourism, colonialism and corruption. Many denounce
Kincaid's latest book as an over attack, her gaze too penetrating and intimidating. The tone of voice
continuously shifts throughout the memoir, starting from sardonic, manifesting into anger, to slowly
conclude in melancholy. Though particular accusations, such as when the narrator cruelly rejects
"you" as "an ugly thing", may upset the readers, Kincaid purposely provokes reactions of
defensiveness and guilt to challenge us ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The autobiographical–novel maintains its poetic form through repetition, alliteration, and rhythm.
As Kincaid writes, "...for no real sunset could look like that; no real seawater could strike that many
shades of blue at once; no real sky could be that shade of blue..." This charm lulls and immobilizes
the reader, such that Kincaid's narration graduates from the victim of such transformative power to a
practitioner in her own right. The mystical form powerfully mixes with historical content, opening
up new possibilities for discussions that extend the political argument beyond the metaphysical.
Indeed, the deceptive simplicity of diction and the finely controlled syntax examine Antigua's
clouded process of existence with incisive clarity. An emotionally truthful, intimate, and poignant
piece, A Small Place demonstrates the author's conflicting attitudes of love and disappointment
towards her birthplace. As Covi praises, "Reading A Small Place is like looking at the sea: the
message is carried by the tide, but it is impossible to say upon which particular
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Examples Of Colonialism In A Small Place
Why does an author write about his/her feelings? Or maybe even why do they express their ideas?
Jamaica Kincaid, the author of A Small Place talks about the struggles she experienced through her
life. The key concept of her essay was various dealings she had during the British ruling in Antigua.
Understanding her point of view may be difficult, but one may get an idea of her thoughts by
looking through a Marxist, Postcolonial, and a Psychological lens. Throughout the essay Jamaica
Kincaid expresses her idea of the severe power imbalances that existed in Antigua. This is viewed
through a Marxist lens, which enables to analyze how the power is distributed and imposed. Kincaid
evidently reveals that the government is fully in control and ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
She feels that the Britishers showed their power everywhere and did not do anything that benefitted
the Antiguans. For example, a library which was very near and dear to the author was not well–
maintained by colonialists. She mentions in her book that there is a sign that says, "REPAIRS ARE
PENDING" (Kincaid 9), and how there has been nothing done to repair the building. As the
government was very corrupt, they were caring for themselves. Kincaid also mentions that due to
racial segregation, she was very stressed and mentally weak. She describes how the natives should
be treated equally without any racial discrimination and desires to be a tourist. She mentions, "Every
native would like to find a way out... every native would like a tour"(Kincaid 18). This quote
explains on how the natives will never get the feeling of being free, how they will never sense the
feeling of luxury, and how they will always be in poverty. Jamaica Kincaid reveals that she lacks an
actual culture to live up to. She always says that the English ruined it for her. As Hirsh and
Schweitzer wrote, "Kincaid lacks a real homeland". Kincaid also writes about the reason she
changed her name, was wanting to express her cultural identity. In an interview with Hirsh and
Schweitzer, she said that she renamed herself "Jamaica Kincaid", because it suggested her West
Indian
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A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
A Small Place, by Jamaica Kincaid, tells the history of a small postcolonial island called Antigua,
which is located in the Caribbean. In this nonfictional text, published in 1988, Kincaid examines the
challenges that Antiguans were left to deal with after the English left and in her writing Kincaid
reveals how European colonization left Antigua with injustice, corruption, and poverty. The book is
sectioned off into four parts. The first part focuses on tourism, the second part studies the colonial
legacy of the island, part three talks about the political situation of the island, and part four
expresses some hope for the future. Throughout the book, Jamaica Kincaid makes it very clear that
she does not approve of tourists by saying things such as, "An ugly thing, that is what you are when
you become a tourist, an ugly, empty thing, a stupid thing, a piece of rubbish pausing here and there
to gaze at this and taste that..." ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Kincaid depicts the impact of imperialism and colonialism over a nation and the way it can ruin a
nation's future.
In "A Small Place," by Jamaica Kincaid colonialism is theme that is strongly depicted. England is
portrayed as a colonialist power. England is the source of all problems in the Caribbean although it
is also the place that provided education to Antiguans during colonialism. However, I found it
interesting the way Kincaid also incorporated the complicated role that the United States played by
portraying the U.S. both in a positive and negative light. Mostly in section one and three Kincaid
analyzes the influence America has on Antigua. Kincaid speaks about the social influence of North
America in Antigua in terms of the racial division they
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Aging In Place: A Case Study
in place is long term care delivery system for older community adults designed to keep them in the
environment of their choice as long as possible. This care system includes physicians, nurses and
other professionals' to support older adults' medical functioning, functional wellbeing and social
support to maintain them in their homes (Popejoy, Galambos, Stetzer, Popescu, Hicks, Khalilia,
Rantz & Marek, 2015). Aging in place have two folds of benefits: from the perspective of older
adults and the policy maker. Most adults want to grow old in their own homes i.e. age in place.
Aging in place offers a sense of autonomy; maintain the identity and social relationship, being in
home older adults is not compelled to change their lifestyle and daily routine. Older adults with low
economic status do not feel the economic burden in comparison to being in nursing homes. On the
other hand policy maker also think that institutional care is much more expensive than aging in
place (Iecovich, 2014).
There are many challenges that older adults who want to age in place come upon. To overcome
those challenges, new and advanced technologies are required that will help maintain independence,
dignity and home care. Assisted living technologies (ALTs) play an important role. There are two
types of ALTs: Home and Environmental Modifications and Telemedicine and Telecare (Graybill,
McMeekin & Wildman, 2014).
Telecare is an enhanced delivery of health and social services to people esp. older
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Jamaica Kincaid's A Small Place
Jamaica Kincaid published the nonfiction book, A Small Place, in 1988. A Small Place presents the
theoretical story of a traveler going to Antigua, which is Kincaid's residence. Kincaid places the
audience in the shoes of the tourists and tells the tourists what they would see through their
movements on the island. In this book, Kincaid uses identity factors to represent the tourists. She
uses socioeconomic background, which is a coalition of one's income and social background. She
also uses culture. Culture is how someone was raised. It represents their attitudes, language, and
belief that has been brought from one generation to the next. In A Small Place, Jamaica Kincaid
demonstrates that Antigua's natives take on different meanings for different ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
In A Small Place, Antigua has negatives and positives. It is viewed as a negative place to the natives
because they see the island as sad and oppressive due to the slaves it held at one time. However, the
tourists do not view the island as oppressive because they look at the island's beauty and not the
history. In the United States, it is opposite. The South has a positive side for freedom of space,
hunting wildlife, and farming. However, the North would view the South as backwards, inferior, old,
and racists. When comparing the US to Jamaica Kincaid's ideas in A Small Place, the tourism's view
is opposite. Antigua's tourists view the island as a beautiful place. The South's tourists do not view
the South as a beautiful place. The socioeconomic background affects the way the natives and the
tourists view Antigua. The Natives are aware of the brutal history of owning slaves. Therefore, they
view Antigua as a terrible place. Antigua's tourists are unaware of the island's past and only look at
the present. They view Antigua as a beautiful place. Antigua's tourist also view Antigua as beautiful
because they have money and therefore do not have the same financial
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The Bennett Place Farmhouse And Discovered The History
American History never seemed interesting to me, especially when I was asked to choose an
informative historic sighting. Many sites did not call my attention nor appeared to suit my interest,
that is until I researched the The Bennett Place Farmhouse and discovered the history that hides
behind this simple farmhouse. Fascinated by my trip, my perspective opened up to a variety of
views and ideas about the battles and surrenders that resulted from the Civil War. The history of the
site, the valuables and sighting, and my reflection towards the Bennett Place Historic Site all
contributed to my understanding of the many surrenders that occurred during the great Civil War .
The Bennett Place farmhouse, at the time of 1846, was occupied by the ... Show more content on
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Johnston disobeyed orders and met Sherman again at the Bennett farm on April 26 which resulted in
another meeting. On the final meeting, the Confederate forces became completely disbanded. The
military surrender which ended the war in the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida, and involved 89,270
soldier. Of all the meetings and compromises between General Joseph E. Johnston and General
William T. Sherman, each contributed to largest surrender of Confederate soldiers that terminated
the American Civil War, on April 26, 1865.
The history hidden behind the Bennett Place Historic site reveals itself once you set foot on the
grass and enter the room of history treasures and valuables Once I arrived to the sighting there was a
visual representation of General Joseph E. Johnston and General William T. Sherman portrayed
beside the big bolded words that marked "Bennett Place Visitor Center Entrance". My family and I
walked in and noticed the tour began with souvenirs from a small store. One side of the store having
souvenirs of the Union and the other side having souvenirs of the Confederates. Books, american
flags, confederate and unions hats, and shirts were all displayed in a arciach way. As if the store
wanted us to not only see history but feel the history and feel as if everyone were in that time era. As
we walked along there was a slightly dark room, this is where the fun began. What first
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A Small Place Analysis
Jamaica Kincaid's novel A Small Place is a fictional novel about her life growing up on an island
that has been imperialised by the British. Jamaica Kincaid shows acrimony to the colonization of her
country, towards the corrupt government that has stunted the growth of her country, towards the
white people that took Antigua in their hands and molded it into something embryonic. The
dictionary defines third world as "the underdeveloped nations of the world, especially those with
widespread poverty," with this description, Antigua will be classified as a third world country after
achieving their independence from the British. A Small Place reveals that post–colonial Antigua is
still pinned by a form of slavery through the nation's poor economy, government corruption, and the
impoverished Antiguans. The poor economy and corrupt government are hand in hand to help create
the impoverished Antiguans.
The corrupt government of Antigua restricts their citizens ability to buy specific goods, like cars, in
order to benefit the people working in the government, "banks are encouraged by the government to
make loans available for cars, but loans for houses not so easily available; and if you ask again why,
you will be told that the two main car dealerships in Antigua are owned in part or outright by
ministers in government" (Kincaid 7). The government forces the banks to make it easier for the
purchase of cars that are partly owned by the ministers of the Antiguan government so they
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid
Jamaica kincaid has a new and interesting point of view to bring to us through her poetic writing
style. She talks about postcolonialism and how her life was affected by it throughout all of the book
she wrote, A Small Place. Often times Jamaica Kincaid talk about a woman's perspective and how
postcolonialism is a period where men make the decisions this is a great example of where the
readers can take time and analize her writings of Antigua through a feminists point of view and can
help us to better understand what Jamaica Kincaid is trying to say. Jamaica Kincaid also talks about
how here home country Antigua is a old, poor, rundown country that used to be farms that slaves
maned for the English, she also says that the english do not want
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What It Means To Have A Sense Of Place
What does it mean to have a sense of place? Some would say that is a trick question, simply because
there is no clear–cut definition of what a sense of place is. Every individual's sense of place is
unique to them and it is based off of one's own experiences, beliefs, and emotions. As J. Anderson,
the author of Understanding Cultural Geography, stated "Place is one of the trickiest words in the
English language, a suitcase so overfilled that one can never shut the lid" (Anderson 37). A sense of
place is much more than an area of space, it is "the way in which places are experienced
subjectively, and how they are created off of a basis crammed with emotions, feelings, and a sense
of attachment that one has" (Cresswell 424). From the works of ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Cresswell, states, "sense of place describes a complicated set of emotions and feelings that are
evoked by a particular place." (Cresswell 424). Throughout his article, Cresswell illustrates multiple
different aspects of his idea of sense of place, and he also explains a multitude of different ways
with which one can form an impression of place in a particular environment. Although in the latter
part of the article, Cresswell begins to depict a world where "globalization has led to a reduction in
the variety of senses of place and that in fact, places are becoming more or less the same as each
other" (Cresswell 425). Due to globalization, people all around the world are more connected than
they have ever been, and with that being said more and more places are becoming similar. Cresswell
refers to these similar environments as "nonplaces," and affirms that these "nonplaces, which are
areas such as airports, shopping malls, fast food outlets, tourist sites, and transit areas" (Cresswell
425) are spreading like wildfire. Cresswell gives an example of this when he states, "A business
traveler now can go to a Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam and have a meeting, stay in a Sheraton
Hotel that is much like any other Sheraton Hotel, eat a pizza or Thai curry that is like and other
pizza or Thai curry, and then return home without ever experiencing anything particularly Dutch or
unique to Amsterdam" (Cresswell 425). This aspect of "placelessness" is emerging and spreading
more and more throughout our world each and every day. It is vital for our countries, states, cities
and towns to depart from creating more placeless spaces, and begin to foster more unique and
homely
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Jamaica Kincaid's A Small Place
Jamaica Kincaid's novel "A Small Place" is a novel made up of a series essays that dives into the
daily life of the island of Antigua. Antigua is a small beautiful, nine miles wide by 12 miles long,
island. Tourism is an industry that makes huge amounts of money. Hotels, beaches, and fun in the
sun all come at a price, but where is the money really going? Antigua with its many resort hotels and
tourist attractions, seems rich in wealth but what about the native descendants of the island. Are the
natives actually benefiting from tourism? Kincaid who grew up in the once colonized island
explains the islands' history during colonialism. She also, gives insight on the island after
colonialism. In "A Small Place" Jamaica Kincaid uses critics tourism ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Kincaid gives an example of this in the novel," you make a leap from being that nice blob just
sitting like a boob in your amniotic sac of the modern experience to being a person visiting heaps of
death and ruin and feeling alive and inspired at the sight of it..." (Kincaid 16). The quote basically is
suggesting that when people become tourist they do not consider the poverty or infrastructure of the
place they are going to. Kincaid implies that when they tourist see the poverty, and the dilapidated
infrastructure they feel good about themselves. The tourist feels like they have it better than the
people living on the island of Antigua. This quote relates to tourism being a new form of colonialism
because it relates to how the colonizers felt that the natives were beneath them. During colonialism
and slavery, the natives lived in dilapidated housing, they had the minimum resources to survive.
Tourism also exploits the native culture in m any other ways
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Analysis

  • 1. A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Analysis In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, Kincaid explicitly describes the effects and consequences that imperialism had on Antigua, while implicitly condemning imperialism for the effects and consequences indigenous people endured through allegory. Examining the results of imperialism in a cultural aspect provides a deeper connection for the audience to fathom the struggle people of Antigua experienced. Kincaid illustrates herself as the main protagonist who directly speaks to the audience as if they are the ignorant tourist. Through the utilization of the second person perspective, she immerses the reader emotionally, which through the experience proves to be more captivating. From the start of "A Small Place," the author establishes an unsettling position for the reader by using second person perspective to give the audience a personal experience, "The thing you have always suspected about yourself the minute you become a tourist is true: A tourist is an ugly human being" (Kincaid, 14). The act of being the tourist in respect to Kincaid's statement is being unaware of the surroundings and people who reside in this country you refer to as a paradise. She pushes the audience out of their comfort zone to an unsettling acknowledgment of ignorance – if you have traveled and expressed these behaviors. The author presents the idea that the act of traveling with the mindset that indigenous people are benefiting is a form of self–justification rather than reality. Kincaid acknowledges the audience's ignorance of the situation as an institutional one that educated you to have this mindset. She describes this situation the people of Antigua endured, as something you were not taught, which exonerates your oblivious demeanor toward your surroundings, "...those new books about economic history, one of those books explaining how the West(meaning Europe and North America after its conquest and settlement by Europeans) got rich: the West got rich not from the free(free–– in this case meaning got–for–nothing) and then undervalued labour, for generations, of the people like me you see walking around...etc" (Kincaid, 9). She uses sarcasm to demonstrate the lack of knowledge the audience has, in order to educate them on both ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 5. Essay On Bad Indians And A Small Place Paragraphs are lacking flow, I simply just wrote down any ideas that came to my head. Bad Indians and A Small Place both entail the topic of identity, the telling of their history and definition of culture. Both take on these themes differently, but especially share the same message. In A Small Place, by Jamaica Kincaid portrays the fact that tourism is an occupation of place. She accomplishes this by utilizing second person narration, expressing her disgust of tourists to the reader. On the other hand, in Bad Indians by Deborah A. Miranda, she exposes and reveals the harsh realities of colonialism through discussions of inhumane exploitation, abuse, and sexual violence. Throughout her book, she tells the history of her family and the Indigenous ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Miranda includes to use personal and sentimental works, while Kincaid uses second person narration that puts the reader in perspective of the colonizer. Identity is a prominent and significant theme in both works. More so in Bad Indians, while A Small Place entails the theme of identity as a collective. There is a distinction in terms of identity, where in Bad Indians, the reader learns about more about the author, while A Small Place is more about the history of Antigua. Colonization has caused cultures to nearly diminish or dismantle them. Culture is a form of identity, Miranda definitely demonstrates the implications of culture as a result of colonization. On the other hand, A Small Place demonstrates that colonization still exists though, not visible to the eye, as she describes how tourism has negatively affected Antigua in her personal view. Miranda chooses to use diaries, photographs, poems, newspapers to illustrate not only her personal life, but her family and her people. Which is a completely different element as compared to A Small place, whereas Kincaid does not illustrate these things but more so portrays history of Antigua as a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 9. Compcompare the Ways in Which Larkin and Abse Write About... Compare the ways in which Larkin and Abse write about place. You must include detailed critical discussion of at least two poems by Larkin in your response. In timed conditions Gemma N Larkin and Abse both write about places in a very different, very unique style. One the one hand Larkin talks about the places of his past and how they are no longer accessible; the changing of a beautiful, unspoilt place to something short of an eyesore; a pace he is in but does not feel he belongs and even places within his mind. Alternatively Abse talks longingly of the places he once lived in, and how upsetting it is to find they are no longer the same. Some examples of the copious amount to choose from include Here, Mr Bleaney and Sunny Prestalyn, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Moreover, in the first stanza when describing the rural area he repeatedly uses assonance. "Skies and scarecrows, haystacks, hares and pheasants"– these soft consonant sounds make you slow down as the repeated "s" sounds become hard to say, slowing you down and not allowing you to rush past these, in Larkin's case, beautiful little details of the countryside. Furthermore, Larkin's poem Mr Bleaney refers to a place that the persona does not wish to be in, yet has ended up having surrendering and suffers the consequences. Mr Bleaney is essentially a poem about a circumstantial situation that is given as a dramatic monologue, and rather like a drama, tells a story that is full of lucid mystery. The first half of the poem is slow and deliberate and helps to create a macabre feel to the poem. A change of pace occurs in the second half of the poem, though is not immediately apparent. It then seems to be despairingly urgent, as Mr Bleaney subtly moves from a recollected past to an observed present, through his mediation with the new tenant. In addition Larkin's use of listing creates a dull and monotonous feel to the place, giving the reader the feel that no one, unless in a dire situation, would want to suffer living in such an undesirable place. One may argue the most symbolic thing in the room is the "sixty watt bulb". Light is a commonly used symbol to portray ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 13. Place Symbolism And Land Politics In Beowulf Stuart Elden, in his article "Place Symbolism and Land Politics in Beowulf", discusses the usage of place in Beowulf. He declares, "In this text, site and place are given a range of symbolic, material, and emotive resonances." There are copious examples in Beowulf where place has significant meaning. Settings are presented as either good or bad, boundaries are set and crossed, and the placement of boundaries created conflict and exclusion. In Beowulf, there are many places that are clearly presented as good and bad, safe and unsafe. In the text, the reader learns about places that have a somewhat concrete goodness or turmoil present. Heorot Hall described in the beginning of Beowulf is one of the good places. Of the hall, it is written, "Soon it stood there, finished and ready, in full view, the hall of halls". The hall is representative of the community and the identity of the realm, as well as serving as a gathering place for the people to drink and socialize. Elden describes the hall as a place of great joy and celebration, as well as a sacred place for various ceremonies and rituals to take place (cite this and make sure proper paraphrasing). These descriptions create a sense of community and safety in the hall. In contrast, there are many places, such as Grendel's mere or the dragon's lair, that are presented in a much darker, evil light creating a bad place. The mere is described with a level of ambiguity that creates a sense of unsettlement and eeriness in the reader. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 17. A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Kincaid wrote the book "Small place" to describe her life as a Caribbean. The book mostly focuses on the personal history of her home located on the island of Antigua. She maintains a bitter and a sarcastic tone throughout the book. In the introductory section of her work, she compares the Island with its former outlook before the bad English men took over the region. She presents the differences between the natives of Antigua and the tourist. It appears that Antigua is a small place surrounded by a big world. The first section of A Small Place details the destruction of the physical location of the colonial library. In the second section of the text, Kincaid returns to the old colonial library prior to its destruction with more detail of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 21. A Small Place Analysis Tyrisha Patterson ENG 203 10/12/17 Fort Payne's Memories Kincaid wrote A Small Place after she had left the island nineteen years ago. During this period, she had been a creative writer living permanently in the United States. She had spent much of her time on the island. Her hostile verbal talk after coming back to the island is an indication of how she is both a tourist and native as she claims 'every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every tourist is a native of somewhere'(Kincaid,18). She beautifully describes Antigua and describes it as a place where the sky and sea meet to exaggerate the island's surrealism. It shows that attachment place. Her style makes me recall my childhood and teenage experiences of living in Fort Payne that helped shape my identity. Kincaid's style of writing establishes an intriguing reflection journey for the reader to undergo. The surrealism of Antigua remains as the same as it was back before Kincaid relocated elsewhere. In her book, A Small Place, Kincaid illustrates how Antigua holds different meaning to different people. To the white people, Antigua is a place for people to get away from their lives as indicated 'a life of overwhelming and crushing banality and boredom' (Kincaid, 18). Kincaid's description of the island is amazingly beautiful that to some extent it appears unreal. Despite the fact that the place is beautiful, the depicted poorness of the people appears unreal. It indicates that the beauty of the area is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 25. Corruption In A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Antigua is a possibly one of the most beautiful places to visit in the world, let alone the Caribbean. In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, she describes Antigua as place of prioritizing the foreigners and the "white" people. Regrettably, the country has been designed to become a tourist attraction over the years, causing the author's sense of Antigua to dissipate over time (p.23). Kincaid's perception of Antigua can be summed up by the unrepaired library, the past social and cultural interaction of the Antiguans (p. 42 – 43). To the tourist, the ruin library is possibly just another damage structure; however, to the locals and Kincaid, it has meaning, a place, a locale, and more importantly, a sense of place. In the story, it references the corruption of the politicians always trying to benefit themselves ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Despite the disturbance of place and the negative stigma of corruption, this paper argues that Antigua's single dependent economy (tourism) has caused the government to favor the monetary benefits over the social and cultural benefits. To explore the cultural and social "demise" Kincaid is telling through her story, this paper will explore the issues of corruption affecting the local's sense of place, but ultimately, corruption is not entirely bad for Antigua. Literature review Before exploring the underlying reasons and critiquing Jamaica Kincaid's "A Small Place", it is important to establish a mutual understanding of place and how corruption could affect the Antiguans. According to Cresswell (2009), place refers to important and substantial site that combines "location, locale, and sense of place" (p.169). Location indicates the exact area of the site, while locale refers to the "visible and tangible aspects of a place" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 29. Birdsfoot Trefoil: My Place In The Future Despite the recent abnormally high temperatures, the vegetation surrounding my area was just as dead as it had been the last time I documented it. I took the photo two hours later than I had taken any of the other photographs, but that did not seem to make a difference in the appearance of the spot. One cool thing I have noticed, however, is that the sun is beginning to rise earlier and earlier each Sunday morning. I think this will have a big effect on my spot in the future. As the Birdsfoot Trefoil begins to consume more solar energy, I am excited to see how it develops and begins to grow again. Recently, it has been very windy, but this did not impact my area in any major way. One of the topics we have gone over this quarter, is tourism and recreation and the effects they have on a community. When I think of tourism I often think of places like New York City or the monuments in South Dakota. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When one has their right to equality, they often have the liberty to do as they wish. This includes participating in recreational activities and traveling to different communities, despite the negative impact they may be inflicting upon the environment or the people of the community. Similarly, when a company needs to expand, they may assert their wealth as to show they are above/more equal than the actual people living in the community. Through this wealth, they have the social and economic liberties to build whatever they want, despite what is best for the community and the environment. To connect this back to my sense of place, the people that walk in the grass are probably unaware of how their actions impact the ecosystem below them. However, they are asserting their equality to walk in that area and have the liberty to do so. We often do not treat the environment as our equal, and therefore it lacks the liberty to choose how it is maintained and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 33. Jamaica Kincaid's Memoir 'A Small Place' Jamaica Kincaid's part memoir, part social commentary and historical flashback "A Small Place" is unique due to the perspective that it gives the reader about Kincaid's home and the people who inhabit it. Jamaica speaks to the reader in the second person first, citing each part of the text as a direct message to the reader, making them a part of the story she is trying to tell. This is essential for Kincaid to put the reader in the right frame of mind to retain the information located in the rest of the book. Kincaid is direct and uses a scathing tone that forces the reader to confront their actions and feelings regarding the subject of tourism. Kincaid can safely target any class in most countries because even those in poor economic situations ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The reason that the personal memoir begins later is because Kincaid has already made us care about herself and the island as a whole by putting us directly into the story, forcing us to play a role if we continue to read her words. Kincaid talks about how the cable company is owned by the prime minister's son, a well–known drug dealer and prostitution ring are both overlooked by the Prime Minister due to his benefit from their services. She speaks of the hospital being unfit for operation, with all of the rich people inhabiting Antigua flying abroad to the United States for all of their medical examinations and procedures. Our nature when reading something true and horrible, regardless of if we chose to admit it, is what does this have to do with me, or what can I do about it? Well, Kincaid directly puts us all in the story, forcing us to take notice of what is happening around us, making us tourists also indirectly makes us accomplices. Condoning this type of behavior is what tourists do when they turn the other way at the poor living conditions of the natives, continuing to pour cash into the rich and corrupted ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 37. Jamaica Kincaid's Essay 'A Small Place' In Jamaica Kincaid's essay, "A Small Place", she is acknowledges how the Antiguans hurts themselves, as they fail to see the pathetic irony that exists within their country. According to Kincaid, the Antiguans see slavery as a time in which a bunch of ships dropped off slaves, the ancestors of the Antiguans, to work under brutal conditions for many years. Then, as though it were magic, all of a sudden the day of "emancipation" arrives, in the eyes of the ignorant Antiguans, and all the slaves are freed. As Kincaid notes, the Antiguans speak of emancipation "as if it were yesterday" and as if slavery was a recent occurrence to their peoples, when, in actuality, the slaves were freed roughly one hundred fifty years ago. However, at the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Within the passage in which Kincaid describes the lack of awareness Antiguans have regarding their relationship with slavery, emancipation, and ignorance, Kincaid uses parallel structure and repetition. In describing the misconception the current Antiguans have about slavery, which something none of the current Antiguans have experienced firsthand, Kincaid uses parallel structure in the form of a triad to show the textbook view that the Antiguans have regarding slavery. Kincaid, as she states how the Antiguans describe slaves, writes: "they were beaten, they were murdered, they were sold". (Kincaid 54) Because, within the descriptions, only standard words are used to describe slavery in bland, three–worded clauses, the existing lack of connection the current Antiguans have towards slavery is shown, as all emotional connection with slavery is removed. When describing how commonly Antiguans use the words "emancipation", even though they are detached, the word is used three times during the course of three sentences, proving how the word has become trite amongst Antiguans. Because of the clichéd words and phrases Kincaid uses, the ignorance that Antiguans have towards their serious situation is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 41. Is Aging in Place Priceless? Essay The meaning of home to older adults transcends the financial and physical qualities of the brick and mortar. Gillsjo, Schwartz–Bardot, & Von Post (2011) suggested that "home was experienced as the place the older adult could not imagine living without, but also as the place one might be forced to leave" (p. 2). Notwithstanding an American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) survey (2010) which showed that the "majority of older adults polled preferred to age in place" (p. 1), the dilemma for many seniors is how to do so when faced with deteriorating housing conditions and "insufficient resources in retirement" (Neil & Neil, 2009, p. 53). In an effort to supplement inadequate retirement incomes, some seniors have capitalized on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Assistance is provided to an eligible homeowner in the form of a grant or a low–interest loan by a local government agency under the provisions of the HOME Investments Partnership Program (1996). While the overall intent of this program is admirable, the reality is that the objective measurement used to assess the scope of the proposed rehabilitation project is governed by the HOME Program, which defers to HUD's Housing Quality Standards (HQS) for compliance, according to Thombs, (personal communication, March 23, 2011). To that end, HQS (1995) requires that the proposed rehabilitation must also address such issues as lead–based paint for homes built before 1978, as cited in 24 C.F.R pt. 982.401, adding thousands of dollars to a repair project, according to Thombs, (personal communication, March 23, 2011). Simply put, the elderly homeowner may have applied for assistance to repair a leaky roof, or to replace an inoperable heating unit, but because federal HOME dollars are being used, the property must adhere to HQS standards, according to Thombs, (personal communication, March 23, 2011). In addition, the rehabilitation ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 45. A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid presents the hypothetical story of a tourist visiting Antigua, the author's hometown. Kincaid places the reader in the shoes of the tourist, and tells the tourist what he/she would see through his/her travels on the island. She paints a picturesque scene of the tourist's view of Antigua, but stains the image with details of issues that most tourists overlook: the bad roads, the origin of the so–called native food, the inefficiency of the plumbing systems in resorts, and the glitches in the health care system. Kincaid was an established writer for The New Yorker when she wrote this book, and it can be safely assumed that majority of her readers had, at some point in their lives, been tourists. I have been a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kincaid clearly attacks the tourists for not understanding the value of Antigua and its heritage; they are "ugly human being(s)" (115) because of their ignorance. The vacant gazers are ugly because when they have reached the zenith of banality in their own lives, they use the poverty of the natives of a tourist destination like Antigua to feel better about themselves; the natives' lack of wealth, opportunities and education all make that pasty–skinned tourist feel superior. The ugliness stems from the tourist's use of the native's backwardness to propel themselves forward. Kincaid describes the reactions of the native people as tourists walk by; being a native Antiguan herself, her description of their behaviour is probably accurate. The justification she provides for their behaviour is sound. Most areas like Antigua depend on the funds that tourism brings in. While whatever luxury can be provided is given to the tourists, it is the native people who see the daily trials and sufferings. Understandably, even though their income comes from the tourists they so despise, the native population is trapped in the never–ending cycle of poverty. Unable to escape their own situations, the natives find solace in mocking tourists for their cluelessness or awkwardness. Kincaid shows this most effectively when she says, "we Antiguans, for I am one, have a great sense of things, and the more meaningful the thing, the more meaningless we make it" (113). She immediately ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 49. Relationship Between Place And Music And The Song ' Inglan... The objective of this paper is to examine the relationship between place and music and analyze the song "Inglan is a Bitch" by Linton Kwesi Johnson in terms of place. "Inglan is a Bitch" exemplifies the link between music and place through its lyrics and sound. First I am going to define cultural geography and discuss how culture is linked to place. Then I will explain local music spaces and why music has a strong sense of place. Next I will analyze how "Inglan is a Bitch" relates to place. After, I will finish with an overall conclusion. I will be exploring these topics through the readings of Knox and Marston, Connell and Gibson and finally, Watson, Holyer and Mager supplemented by Lecture notes. According to Knox and Marston, culture produces a shared set of meanings and practices, while geography is the place in which groups shape those meanings and practices and "in the process form an identity" (Knox and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural Geography focuses on the way space, place and landscape shape culture at the same time that culture shapes space, place, and landscape" (Knox and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural geography examines cultural traits, cultural complexes, and cultural regions. (Rutherford 2016). It is a way to understand both landscape and human settlement patterns (Rutherford 2016). In the reading Sounds and Scenes, authors Connell and Gibson suggest that a local music space is a specific place that produces a distinct sound (Connell and Gibson 2003, 90). The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 53. A Narrative Essay About A Place Shimla The most matchless place to be, is Sirmaur, Shimla. The moving slopes, clean fresh air, and extensive size all outperform the city life. The recollections and happiness I encounter when I am there will dependably remain as a cherished memory to me. My home reside in country where it would snow intensely during winter, and in summer park, playgrounds would be the place where you want to be. My home resided in the country. A cow field was my lawn, and I would play find the stowaway with my companions behind the roughage bundles. From the minute we returned home and put our backpack down until the minute the pinkish, yellow sun was setting, my friends and I were dependably in another enterprise. Now and again, the brilliant beams would sparkle and emanate without a cloud in the sky. The delicate breeze was sufficient only to make it agreeable. The grass had officially dried from the early morning dew, influencing it to look newly cut and greener than any time in recent memory. As we would be circled making ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I generally made new companions, and there was generally such a great amount to do with these new associates. Exercises comprised of playing ball at the court, playing in the sand, riding bicycles, and rollerblading on the trail, playing on the wilderness rec center and tire swing, swinging, thus considerably more! Once my mother and I had our photo gone up against the swings and put in the Kullu News Sentinel. Once in a while, the congregation assembly would have an excursion for everybody there, and we would barbecue and appreciate each other's conversation. Indeed, even family get–togethers have been held there. The general population in Sirmaur are nation individuals, rational, and substance with the straightforward life. They are not worried about the best and most recent of things. This made the occasions at the recreation center a great deal more ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 57. A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, Kincaid criticizes tourists for being heartless and ignorant to the problems that the people of Antigua had and the sacrifices that had to be made to make Antigua a tremendous tourist/vacation spot. While Kincaid makes a strong argument, her argument suggests that she doesn't realize what tourism is for the tourists. In other words, tourism is an escape for those who are going on vacation and the tourists are well within their rights to be "ignorant", especially because no one is telling them what is wrong with Antigua. The biggest aspect of Kincaid's argument that makes it flawed is her anger. That is not to say that there aren't times where anger is justified. At the same time, the harsh language ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A tourist is under no obligation to know about the history of an island, city, state or country. It should be acknowledged that Kincaid displays anger at nearly every entity in Antigua, but at the same time it is her anger at tourists which seems to be the most misplaced because they are the ones who have the least power in fixing the problems the people in Antigua have. To the above point, one of the reasons that Antigua is a destination for tourists is because of its aforementioned aesthetic beauty. Antigua's beauty belies the reality of the situation that the people have, but it is not something that tourists should feel any responsibility to change. More to the point, Antigua's beauty is one of the reasons that tourists should not be challenged. Indeed, tourists have no reason to believe that the people of Antigua are miserable because of the beauty of the land and the hard work that the people of Antigua put in to make sure that the tourists have a good time (even if the tourists acknowledge that the workers may be poor). One example of how Kincaid's argument is flawed is when she says that tourists appreciate the fact that Antigua has no rain, when the lack of rain actually leads to droughts which negatively affect the natives in the long–term. Kincaid's discussion of rain is representative of the difference between her perspective and the perspective of the tourist. The tourist has no stake in Antigua beyond how it profiles as a vacation ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 61. Analysis Of A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Antigua is a small island that was discovered in 1493, by Christopher Columbus. The natives that lived there were made slaves by the British and the economy thrived on producing sugar. In 1834 the British abolished slavery giving Antigua its independence. The sugar industry was failing so the economy relied on tourism. A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid is about Antigua. Kincaid narrates her novel in second person, blaming the tourists for ruining the culture of Antigua. Kincaid explains that the British were cruel to the Antiguan people but she forgives them for it. Kincaid also talked about how the Government is currently corrupt and how beautiful Antigua's land is. Kincaids novel is broken up into four parts that address all of these issues in Antigua.The way A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid was written is effective in the way that it tries to persuade and inform the readers. In part one of A Small Place, Kincaid tries to persuade the readers, she does this by talking directly to them. Kincaid says that the tourists ruin the culture and that they are not justified in coming to Antigua for a vacation. Kincaid thinks that tourism is ugly, "an ugly thing, that is what you are when you become a tourist"(Kincaid 17). Kincaid is trying to persuade the reader instead of informing them with a fact or observation. This direct use of second person is successful to persuade the reader. It is successful because the reader might feel guilty for traveling and might change his or her perspective on traveling. In part four of A Small Place, Kincaid tries to persuade the reader. Kincaid tries to make the reader think that Antiguas beauty is unreal. Kincaid also instead of informing you with facts or observations talks about how the British should be punished for enslaving Antiguans and says in her opinion why they did it. Kincaid wants the reader to feel that Europeans are truly unhappy, "to satisfy their desire for wealth and power, to feel better about their own miserable existence, so that they could be less lonely and empty– a European disease"(Kincaid 80). This use of persuasion successfully makes you think about human nature. It makes the reader think of why people would enslave others for money and power. In part ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 65. Review: A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Substitute Assignment In the novel A Small Place written by Jamaica Kincaid, the following quote is further developed, "That the native does not like the tourist is not hard to explain. For every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every tourist is a native of somewhere" (Kincaid, 18). After a novel full of rants on how the tourists are completely awful, this quote is quite controversial. Jamaica Kincaid is telling the readers that although tourists and locals do not get along, at some point in everyone's life they are a tourist. Whether they are traveling to a completely different place or just discovering new aspects of their home. This may be what Jamaica Kincaid meant generally and in a more literal way, but there also seems ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "They are too poor to escape the reality of their lives; and they are too poor to live properly in the place where they live, which is the very place you, the tourist, they envy you, they envy your ability to leave your own banality and boredom, they envy your ability to turn their own banality and boredom into a source of pleasure for yourself" (Kincaid, 18–19). The locals are completely envious of the tourists because they are able to turn the home of the locals, which the locals feel so bitterly about, into a perfect spot for themselves. The tourists get the chance to escape their homes and boring lives, whereas the locals of Antigua feel they do not get the chance. Of course they dislike the visitors, they wish they could be them and they wish they could have what the tourists have. Yet, the tourists feel the same way; they wish they were 'lucky' enough to live on the island of Antigua. Just as the locals in the novel come from Antigua, these visitors are also locals of some place, some place the Antiguans wish they could go. It just plays an endless cycle of each local wishing to be a tourist, and each tourist wishing to be a local. This is what Jamaica Kincaid meant by that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 69. Irony In A Small Place This story " A Small Place" has a voice of anger because the author uses irony and points out crime that the colonists did to her hometown. The author uses the expectations of the tourists when they visited Antigua to tell us about the reality of Antigua. She uses sarcasm to tell the truth of the island throughout the story. When she calls the tourist " the ugly human being" or when she calls out all the things that the colonist did are crimes, these things show the audiences that the author was really angry about the past of Antigua and the effect of the past until now. Her emotions is just a response to the circumstance, so we cannot blame her because of her intense words in the story. Her writing style is really unique to make the audiences ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 73. Explore How Perceptions of Belonging or Not Belonging Are... A connection to a physical location may present us with the perception that we either belong or not belong however, it is the connections that we form with people in places, memories of previous places and ones response to experiences within places that heightens ones sense of belonging or alienation. The concept of belonging through connections with people, experiences and memories in certain places is explored in the texts Romulus my Father a memoir by Raimond Gaita and Oranges and Sunshine directed by Jim Loach. It is not a connection with the physical landscape that allows us to experience a sense of inclusion but rather connections built with people or communities that either heighten ones sense of affiliation or estrangement. This ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Raimond also justifies his mother's affair with Mitru when he describes his mother as "a troubled girl from central Europe who could not settle in the dilapidated landscape that heightened her isolation". The complexity of the bond is developed through Anna's first attempt at suicide, which is more of a desperate cry for help; "In words that were barely comprehensible she said that she loved me and wanted to say goodbye, that she would fall asleep and then die". This vivid memory of his mother saying goodbye leads to a very complex bond between the pair. Perhaps the most intense memory of his mother that Gaita has is the memory of his mother returning from hospital after this suicide attempt, "alone, small, frail, walking with an uncertain gait and a distracted air. In the vast landscape with only crude wire fences and a rough track to mark an human impression on it she appeared forsaken. She looked at me as though she had returned from the dead, unsure about the value of her achievement". The memory is bittersweet, although she is alive after a failed suicide attempt; she conveys a vivid impression of someone who does not belong in the place they are in and does not seem to belong in that life. Raymond's memories of experiences at Frogmore, especially experiences with regards to his mother, has shaped and built his connection with Frogmore allowing him to experience ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 77. My Favorite Place One of my favorite places in the world that has affected my life the most is my childhood town and my home in Mobile, Alabama. I grew up in a beige, two story house that sits on a long yard backed up to Dog River. My house is about ten minutes outside of downtown Mobile, AL and is very close to Mobile Bay. Spending time near the water and growing up in the area that I did greatly influenced the way that I think about things and the way that I live my life. My family has lived in them same area for generations and not many have moved away. In Jamaica Kincaid's A Small Place, Kincaid talks about how when multiple generations grow up in the same area, they tend to become more invested and involved with the area that they are in, growing in their appreciation for the place that they grew up. The place that I grew up in has greatly affected the person that I have become in ways such as where my ancestors are from, how I view social issues, and my own personal identity. My mother's family lived on the same river about a mile away, and my father's family had lived in the city for generations. The area I grew up in was the same area that my parents and grandparents grew up in, so it is safe to say that I was greatly influenced by the area. Since I have such a deep connection to the area I grew up in, I have developed a fondness for the river and the wildlife in it. My whole life I have loved to go fishing and skiing on the water, or just sitting on the bank of the river to relax. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 81. The Giver Places The Giver is set in a futuristic era in which Jones lives in. There are multiple places within this small utopian community. The place is close to a river which will be important for a plot later on. The places are the nursery, childcare center, school, the Department of Justice, amongst others. One of the most important places in the book is a place called "elsewhere" which is what the people call everywhere else outside the community. At the end of the story, Jonas goes outside the community so find this so called "elsewhere". The surroundings of the community were perfect since it was like living in a bubble for them to be shielded from the "cruelty" of the world. The weather was always glorious and people hardly got hurt thanks to all the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His personality was curious, kind, anxious, and brave, Jonas was an average twelve year old with brown hair, light brown eyes, an averagely good looking face and he was a little tall. One of Jonas's good traits was that he was loyal to his loved ones and this is shown especially in how he looks after the baby Gabriel, how much he cares for and loves his. Jonas's weakness was his kindness because it changed his judgement involving the plan he and The Giver had and it also nearly got him and Gabriel killed when Jonas took the baby with him. This book is about a boy named Jonas who lives in place and time different than ours. The story follows Jonas as he takes one of the most important steps in everyone in the community's life, becoming a twelve and getting assigned to a job; not only does he take that step but he is assigned to the most honored job of them all, The Receiver. Jonas's goal was, at first, just to train with The Giver so that he could then take his place and do his job but after learning about the truth about his community and its lack of memories, color etc. he decides to let everyone know. He was trying to accomplish this goal because as he kept receiving all those memories he liked so much he wanted everyone to experience them. The community was against Jonas because they didn't understand what he was trying to do. The climax of the book is when Jonas starts to realize the lies to the community and that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 85. A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Jamaica Kincaid, an essayist, explains the idea that history of the Caribbean (specifically Antigua), helps shape identity through her book, "A Small Place". In regards the history, Kincaid also discloses how capitalism and colonialism are used as a foundation in shaping our epistemological ways of knowing the self and the world around us. In this essay, Kincaid uses tourism as a way of viewing the effects of capitalism and colonialism. She disliked tourist and through her accounts, there is tension between the tourist and the natives of the receiving countries. Kincaid believes tourist as so blind to the "true" Caribbean and in a way believes they act superior. Throughout the book Kincaid explains how she begins to view herself and how ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kincaid explains, "The government allowed meat known to be contaminated by radiation to be distributed in Antigua" (Kincaid, p. 61). She also discloses how government officials are involved in drug trafficking which is known to the public but not mentioned as much. One of the genres that can be used to depict Kincaid's concept is romance. The main characters would include of a native of the Antigua island named Violetta Ambrose as well as a foreigner from the United Kingdom named Alexander Davies. Violetta works at the Mill Reef Club as a waitress at the bar and Alexander was a member of the club through association by his dad. His father was a member therefore making him a member. He comes from a wealthy background and attends one of the best universities in the U.K. Both come from different worlds, different perspective of their worlds and Antigua, as well as what it means to be part of the Caribbean. The two main characters will encounter each other. Violette would be serving him and his friends rum. Alexander is seen talking with other member's son when he and Violetta lock eyes. He was talking with his friends about the beauty of Antigua. How the beach is bright and sunny, water cool and fresh and the fact that Antigua is "culture rich". Violette hears their conversation as she is pouring rum into their glass. Violetta doesn't ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 89. Analysis Of The Reader ' A Small Place ' Maddie Wiersma Dr. Nicole Sheets EL–347: Creative Nonfiction 11 November 2015 The Reader as "You" Jamaica Kincaid immerses the reader into her essay "A Small Place" through the use of second– person point of view, continually referring to the reader as "you." She characterizes the reader as a tourist from a privileged Western nation and narrates the experiences and thoughts of the reader while visiting Antigua for the first time. By portraying the reader as the tourist through second– person narrative, Kincaid criticizes the ignorance of Eurocentric assumptions, as well as the total superficiality of Western tourism. Ultimately, this technique allows her to capture her disdain for Eurocentrism, alienating the reader from Antiguan culture. In the first sentence of the essay, Kincaid promptly employs second–person narrative by addressing the reader, "If you go to Antigua as a tourist, this is what you will see" (257). Immediately, Kincaid invites the reader into the essay, provoking the audience to imagine themselves as tourists. The reader can relate to the tourist and can identify with the excitement of traveling to a place where "the sun always shines and the climate is deliciously hot and dry for the four to ten days you are going to be staying there..." (257). However, Kincaid then confronts the reader with the problems inherent in this egocentric way of thinking. She proceeds to call out the reader's ignorance about the climate: "since you are a tourist, the thought of what ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 93. People and Places in the Service Industries 1005HSL People and Places in the Service Industries Portfolio Assignment Brief Having completed your quiz, you now need to produce work for your portfolio. The portfolio will be marked out of 100 and forms 50% of the total assessment for the course. There are 3 main parts consisting of 6 sub–sections to the portfolio (1a,1b, 1c, 2a, 2b, & 3) each focussing on the lectures from Weeks 2 to 8. The first step in building this portfolio is to choose a tourism place. This could be a city, hotel, restaurant, theme park, or an event. You will complete 3 main activities: 1. An investigation into the tourism place you have chosen. (40 marks) a) Provide a description of the tourism place you have chosen, including its sense of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This promotional material can be in any form but must be attached to your portfolio, and justified in words. If your promotional material is a video clip or web–based, hyperlink the material to your portfolio. (20 marks) Word guide: 600 words 3. A reflection and anticipation of how this tourism place might change in the future. (10 marks) Anticipate how this tourism place might change, providing support for your opinion. Your support should cover some of the key concepts discusses in weeks seven and eight on changing landscapes and renewal and urban precincts. * Word limit: 300 words In preparing your portfolio for submission, familiarise yourself with the content on this site http://www.griffith.edu.au/academic–integrity/information–for–students Other required elements (10 marks) Format: Include word count. Use font size of 12, Times New Roman, double–spaced. Include a Table of Contents, with appropriate lists of figures, artefacts, appendices or copies of any web pages you include in the portfolio. You may create links and hyperlinks from your word document to webpages. Referencing: Anything obtained from another source must be referenced properly. You should have at least 5 references. If it is the work of someone else, it must be referenced completely and properly. We follow the APA 6 referencing style. For information about this style, go to L@G and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 97. Summary Of A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Antigua is a possibly one of the most beautiful places to visit in the world, let alone the Caribbean. In "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid, she describes Antigua as a place of prioritizing the foreigners and the "white" people. Regrettably, the country has been designed to become a tourist attraction over the years, causing the author's sense of Antigua to dissipate over time (pp.23). Kincaid's perception of Antigua can be summed up by the unrepaired library, the past social and cultural interaction of the Antiguans (pp. 42 – 43). To the tourist, the ruin library is possibly just another damage structure; however, to the locals and Kincaid, it has meaning, a place, a locale, and more importantly, a sense of place. In the story, it references ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Africa, corruption is a major concern in hindering the country's development. As d'Agostino, Dunne & Pieroni (2016) states that combating corruption can improve aggregate economic performances and improve the "indirect effects that come through the interaction between [government] corruption[s]" (pp.84). However, Mckoy (2012) argues the lack of information and understanding in the Commonwealth Caribbean causes many management practitioners to use information from other countries and regions, like the continent of Africa. As such, he defines Caribbean analysis on corruption are based upon opinions, anecdote and cross–country correlations (Mckoy, 2012, pp.10). In Antigua, the economy is dependent on the service sector with 77.5% of the GDP (CIA, 2017) and the employment rate is 82% (CIA, 1982). Within the service sector, travel and tourism accumulates 60.4% of the GDP and 54.3% of employment, with a forecast of growth of over 10% in 2017 (World Travel & Tourism Council, 2016, pp.1&3). If a country's economy is so heavily dependent on travel and tourism that continues to build more hotels and increase the cruise industry, it is understandable that the government focuses heavily on it. According to figure 1, the GDP continues to rise, with an exception in 2008 where the economic recession occurred. The government of Antigua possibly solely focused on enhancing the economy via ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 101. Are Haunted Houses Are Not The Place? The number of haunted houses, both professional and ameture, has reached well into the thousands as of 2016. That means you have many to choose from this coming holiday. The average big house, a professional house with a substantial run time, draws in at least 300 patrons a night. Yet, with the millions of participants every year, I would confidently say that less than half, if even that, are really getting the most out of the experience. Worry not, for i have prepared all that you need to know about having the best experience that you can. The first step to really enjoying a haunt, is to make sure you choose the right one. If you've never been to a haunted house, you should look up the ones in your area online. Each big house should have it's own website, complete with both videos and reviews. Look through these to help yourself get a feeling as to how the haunt operates. You also have to know yourself. Haunted houses are not the place for foolish lies and false bravado. If you are deathly afraid of spiders, don 't buy tickets to Phobia Haunt, which has a sub walkthrough called Arachnophobia, just because some girl you like wants to go. Not only will this make you never want to go to another haunt, but she won't agree to another date if you peed yourself in front of her because you tried to act macho. Now that you've chosen the haunt that you want, it 's time to get ready to go. The season usually begins around September 16, and wraps up November the third, which means ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 105. How The Environment Affects A Person And Many Places Places have a lot of significance tied to them depending on what they mean to people. The place that I am going to talk about in this paper reminds me of a peaceful place, because it has provided me with comfort and has allowed me to grow within this calm place. Oxford Dictionary defines place as "A building or area used for a specified purpose or activity: 'the town has many excellent eating places'. Specific memories link with certain places that individuals go to, and have had them shape them into who they are, or have guided them into having a better understanding with what brings them peace. It has been shown that places actually do bring a certain emotion or feeling onto a person, almost like an extra sense. "Modern science is confirming that people's thoughts, feelings and actions are indeed shaped not by just their genes and neurochemistry, history and relationships but also by their surroundings. How the environment affects a person and several places that are considered by some cultures to be sacred and discussed." (Gallagher, 1993, p. 62) A place that has an importance to me is the park behind Parkwood hospital. It has a field with beautiful flowers that you can admire all day long, and there are also walkways with a tiny waterfall followed with a couple of benches to be able to sit down and admire the scenery. On the other side of it, there are picnic tables and areas for families to come together and spend time with each other while admiring the outdoors and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 109. Jamaica Kincaid A Small Place "A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid is a critical representation of a hypothetical story outlining the adventures of a tourist visiting Antigua which is the hometown of the author. Kincaid in her writing tries to place the reader in the shoes of the tourist telling more of what the tourist would see through his or her travels on the island, Antigua. In this context, Kincaid attempts to paint picturesque scenery of according to the tourist's view of the Antigua Island. On the other hand, she as well stains the images therein with some critical details of some issues which the tourist would in many ways overlook such as the bad roads, the inefficient plumbing systems, the problems facing the health care system and even the origins of the native ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She, unlike most writers, does not dictate an individual on the things they should be doing or their views. She essentially addresses one on what they are and what they think. Further, her plight is not on the tourists but she tries to highlight and express the real lives of the natives in Antigua. The lives of the natives are always unclear to an outsider or for this case a tourist. She holds on the assumption that natives inherently provide the staging and they are the elements which make it a small place. The visiting of the tourists on the other hand according to Kincaid is a selfish individual who is assumed obnoxious as long as they are carrying along their demands to the small place devoid of the concerns therein. In this manner, Kincaid tries to bring out the real meaning of the small things in the small place. In one way or the other, the tourist is pleased that his or her trip is not ruined by rains but on the other hand, they do not understand that their demands are not corresponding well with the native due to the constant insufficiency of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 113. Describe A Place Analysis I. Introduction If you sit and look at all of the things around you that are considered to be geographical; for example, schools, houses, restaurants, landscapes, and even the streets that we walk on every day they all have a story to tell. Some of these things have been here for years and some only for months. The people that lived here before us and the people that will live here after us will all have their story to live and tell. Each place has a special meaning to that one person that maybe no one knows. There is a special place that will always be with me; it is not extravagant, but it is a place that means a lot to many people, not just me. It is a small restaurant, in the small town of Nocona, Texas, called Dairy Queen; a little place that reminds me of home. Let us take a closer look at this wonderful place that is one of the main attractions of the city of Nocona, using the five themes of geography: region, location, place, movement, and human–environmental interaction. II. General Overview Recently, we went home to see family. Home might not necessarily be where you live, but where you feel the love of your family. Home might be where you feel comfortable or at ease in the sense that you can just take that one big deep breath and let everything out and relax. When I think of that place I think of the smells, the people ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Most of the roads around this building are dirt roads, but, the highways are pavement. The parking lot of the Dairy Queen in Nocona is gravel. So, when you drive in to park you can almost guarantee that rocks will be slung around. There are stop lights on every corner of where the Dairy Queen sits. Although, these stop lights are not like in the big city, there hung by wire. This little town is not as wealthy so they do not have lightning posts like the ones you see in the big cities. That is okay though. These lights get the job ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 117. Literary Devices In A Small Place Gentle waves, lush greenery, and sun–soaked beaches, Antigua embodies your ideal holiday destination. But Jamaica Kincaid turns your paradise upside down in her new memoir A Small Place. Using her pen as a sword, Kincaid slashes Antigua's façade of perfection into shreds and presses the blade against the throats of tourism, colonialism and corruption. Many denounce Kincaid's latest book as an over attack, her gaze too penetrating and intimidating. The tone of voice continuously shifts throughout the memoir, starting from sardonic, manifesting into anger, to slowly conclude in melancholy. Though particular accusations, such as when the narrator cruelly rejects "you" as "an ugly thing", may upset the readers, Kincaid purposely provokes reactions of defensiveness and guilt to challenge us ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The autobiographical–novel maintains its poetic form through repetition, alliteration, and rhythm. As Kincaid writes, "...for no real sunset could look like that; no real seawater could strike that many shades of blue at once; no real sky could be that shade of blue..." This charm lulls and immobilizes the reader, such that Kincaid's narration graduates from the victim of such transformative power to a practitioner in her own right. The mystical form powerfully mixes with historical content, opening up new possibilities for discussions that extend the political argument beyond the metaphysical. Indeed, the deceptive simplicity of diction and the finely controlled syntax examine Antigua's clouded process of existence with incisive clarity. An emotionally truthful, intimate, and poignant piece, A Small Place demonstrates the author's conflicting attitudes of love and disappointment towards her birthplace. As Covi praises, "Reading A Small Place is like looking at the sea: the message is carried by the tide, but it is impossible to say upon which particular ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 121. Examples Of Colonialism In A Small Place Why does an author write about his/her feelings? Or maybe even why do they express their ideas? Jamaica Kincaid, the author of A Small Place talks about the struggles she experienced through her life. The key concept of her essay was various dealings she had during the British ruling in Antigua. Understanding her point of view may be difficult, but one may get an idea of her thoughts by looking through a Marxist, Postcolonial, and a Psychological lens. Throughout the essay Jamaica Kincaid expresses her idea of the severe power imbalances that existed in Antigua. This is viewed through a Marxist lens, which enables to analyze how the power is distributed and imposed. Kincaid evidently reveals that the government is fully in control and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She feels that the Britishers showed their power everywhere and did not do anything that benefitted the Antiguans. For example, a library which was very near and dear to the author was not well– maintained by colonialists. She mentions in her book that there is a sign that says, "REPAIRS ARE PENDING" (Kincaid 9), and how there has been nothing done to repair the building. As the government was very corrupt, they were caring for themselves. Kincaid also mentions that due to racial segregation, she was very stressed and mentally weak. She describes how the natives should be treated equally without any racial discrimination and desires to be a tourist. She mentions, "Every native would like to find a way out... every native would like a tour"(Kincaid 18). This quote explains on how the natives will never get the feeling of being free, how they will never sense the feeling of luxury, and how they will always be in poverty. Jamaica Kincaid reveals that she lacks an actual culture to live up to. She always says that the English ruined it for her. As Hirsh and Schweitzer wrote, "Kincaid lacks a real homeland". Kincaid also writes about the reason she changed her name, was wanting to express her cultural identity. In an interview with Hirsh and Schweitzer, she said that she renamed herself "Jamaica Kincaid", because it suggested her West Indian ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 125. A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid A Small Place, by Jamaica Kincaid, tells the history of a small postcolonial island called Antigua, which is located in the Caribbean. In this nonfictional text, published in 1988, Kincaid examines the challenges that Antiguans were left to deal with after the English left and in her writing Kincaid reveals how European colonization left Antigua with injustice, corruption, and poverty. The book is sectioned off into four parts. The first part focuses on tourism, the second part studies the colonial legacy of the island, part three talks about the political situation of the island, and part four expresses some hope for the future. Throughout the book, Jamaica Kincaid makes it very clear that she does not approve of tourists by saying things such as, "An ugly thing, that is what you are when you become a tourist, an ugly, empty thing, a stupid thing, a piece of rubbish pausing here and there to gaze at this and taste that..." ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kincaid depicts the impact of imperialism and colonialism over a nation and the way it can ruin a nation's future. In "A Small Place," by Jamaica Kincaid colonialism is theme that is strongly depicted. England is portrayed as a colonialist power. England is the source of all problems in the Caribbean although it is also the place that provided education to Antiguans during colonialism. However, I found it interesting the way Kincaid also incorporated the complicated role that the United States played by portraying the U.S. both in a positive and negative light. Mostly in section one and three Kincaid analyzes the influence America has on Antigua. Kincaid speaks about the social influence of North America in Antigua in terms of the racial division they ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 129. Aging In Place: A Case Study in place is long term care delivery system for older community adults designed to keep them in the environment of their choice as long as possible. This care system includes physicians, nurses and other professionals' to support older adults' medical functioning, functional wellbeing and social support to maintain them in their homes (Popejoy, Galambos, Stetzer, Popescu, Hicks, Khalilia, Rantz & Marek, 2015). Aging in place have two folds of benefits: from the perspective of older adults and the policy maker. Most adults want to grow old in their own homes i.e. age in place. Aging in place offers a sense of autonomy; maintain the identity and social relationship, being in home older adults is not compelled to change their lifestyle and daily routine. Older adults with low economic status do not feel the economic burden in comparison to being in nursing homes. On the other hand policy maker also think that institutional care is much more expensive than aging in place (Iecovich, 2014). There are many challenges that older adults who want to age in place come upon. To overcome those challenges, new and advanced technologies are required that will help maintain independence, dignity and home care. Assisted living technologies (ALTs) play an important role. There are two types of ALTs: Home and Environmental Modifications and Telemedicine and Telecare (Graybill, McMeekin & Wildman, 2014). Telecare is an enhanced delivery of health and social services to people esp. older ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 133. Jamaica Kincaid's A Small Place Jamaica Kincaid published the nonfiction book, A Small Place, in 1988. A Small Place presents the theoretical story of a traveler going to Antigua, which is Kincaid's residence. Kincaid places the audience in the shoes of the tourists and tells the tourists what they would see through their movements on the island. In this book, Kincaid uses identity factors to represent the tourists. She uses socioeconomic background, which is a coalition of one's income and social background. She also uses culture. Culture is how someone was raised. It represents their attitudes, language, and belief that has been brought from one generation to the next. In A Small Place, Jamaica Kincaid demonstrates that Antigua's natives take on different meanings for different ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In A Small Place, Antigua has negatives and positives. It is viewed as a negative place to the natives because they see the island as sad and oppressive due to the slaves it held at one time. However, the tourists do not view the island as oppressive because they look at the island's beauty and not the history. In the United States, it is opposite. The South has a positive side for freedom of space, hunting wildlife, and farming. However, the North would view the South as backwards, inferior, old, and racists. When comparing the US to Jamaica Kincaid's ideas in A Small Place, the tourism's view is opposite. Antigua's tourists view the island as a beautiful place. The South's tourists do not view the South as a beautiful place. The socioeconomic background affects the way the natives and the tourists view Antigua. The Natives are aware of the brutal history of owning slaves. Therefore, they view Antigua as a terrible place. Antigua's tourists are unaware of the island's past and only look at the present. They view Antigua as a beautiful place. Antigua's tourist also view Antigua as beautiful because they have money and therefore do not have the same financial ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 137. The Bennett Place Farmhouse And Discovered The History American History never seemed interesting to me, especially when I was asked to choose an informative historic sighting. Many sites did not call my attention nor appeared to suit my interest, that is until I researched the The Bennett Place Farmhouse and discovered the history that hides behind this simple farmhouse. Fascinated by my trip, my perspective opened up to a variety of views and ideas about the battles and surrenders that resulted from the Civil War. The history of the site, the valuables and sighting, and my reflection towards the Bennett Place Historic Site all contributed to my understanding of the many surrenders that occurred during the great Civil War . The Bennett Place farmhouse, at the time of 1846, was occupied by the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Johnston disobeyed orders and met Sherman again at the Bennett farm on April 26 which resulted in another meeting. On the final meeting, the Confederate forces became completely disbanded. The military surrender which ended the war in the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida, and involved 89,270 soldier. Of all the meetings and compromises between General Joseph E. Johnston and General William T. Sherman, each contributed to largest surrender of Confederate soldiers that terminated the American Civil War, on April 26, 1865. The history hidden behind the Bennett Place Historic site reveals itself once you set foot on the grass and enter the room of history treasures and valuables Once I arrived to the sighting there was a visual representation of General Joseph E. Johnston and General William T. Sherman portrayed beside the big bolded words that marked "Bennett Place Visitor Center Entrance". My family and I walked in and noticed the tour began with souvenirs from a small store. One side of the store having souvenirs of the Union and the other side having souvenirs of the Confederates. Books, american flags, confederate and unions hats, and shirts were all displayed in a arciach way. As if the store wanted us to not only see history but feel the history and feel as if everyone were in that time era. As we walked along there was a slightly dark room, this is where the fun began. What first ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 141. A Small Place Analysis Jamaica Kincaid's novel A Small Place is a fictional novel about her life growing up on an island that has been imperialised by the British. Jamaica Kincaid shows acrimony to the colonization of her country, towards the corrupt government that has stunted the growth of her country, towards the white people that took Antigua in their hands and molded it into something embryonic. The dictionary defines third world as "the underdeveloped nations of the world, especially those with widespread poverty," with this description, Antigua will be classified as a third world country after achieving their independence from the British. A Small Place reveals that post–colonial Antigua is still pinned by a form of slavery through the nation's poor economy, government corruption, and the impoverished Antiguans. The poor economy and corrupt government are hand in hand to help create the impoverished Antiguans. The corrupt government of Antigua restricts their citizens ability to buy specific goods, like cars, in order to benefit the people working in the government, "banks are encouraged by the government to make loans available for cars, but loans for houses not so easily available; and if you ask again why, you will be told that the two main car dealerships in Antigua are owned in part or outright by ministers in government" (Kincaid 7). The government forces the banks to make it easier for the purchase of cars that are partly owned by the ministers of the Antiguan government so they ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 145. A Small Place By Jamaica Kincaid Jamaica kincaid has a new and interesting point of view to bring to us through her poetic writing style. She talks about postcolonialism and how her life was affected by it throughout all of the book she wrote, A Small Place. Often times Jamaica Kincaid talk about a woman's perspective and how postcolonialism is a period where men make the decisions this is a great example of where the readers can take time and analize her writings of Antigua through a feminists point of view and can help us to better understand what Jamaica Kincaid is trying to say. Jamaica Kincaid also talks about how here home country Antigua is a old, poor, rundown country that used to be farms that slaves maned for the English, she also says that the english do not want ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 149. What It Means To Have A Sense Of Place What does it mean to have a sense of place? Some would say that is a trick question, simply because there is no clear–cut definition of what a sense of place is. Every individual's sense of place is unique to them and it is based off of one's own experiences, beliefs, and emotions. As J. Anderson, the author of Understanding Cultural Geography, stated "Place is one of the trickiest words in the English language, a suitcase so overfilled that one can never shut the lid" (Anderson 37). A sense of place is much more than an area of space, it is "the way in which places are experienced subjectively, and how they are created off of a basis crammed with emotions, feelings, and a sense of attachment that one has" (Cresswell 424). From the works of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Cresswell, states, "sense of place describes a complicated set of emotions and feelings that are evoked by a particular place." (Cresswell 424). Throughout his article, Cresswell illustrates multiple different aspects of his idea of sense of place, and he also explains a multitude of different ways with which one can form an impression of place in a particular environment. Although in the latter part of the article, Cresswell begins to depict a world where "globalization has led to a reduction in the variety of senses of place and that in fact, places are becoming more or less the same as each other" (Cresswell 425). Due to globalization, people all around the world are more connected than they have ever been, and with that being said more and more places are becoming similar. Cresswell refers to these similar environments as "nonplaces," and affirms that these "nonplaces, which are areas such as airports, shopping malls, fast food outlets, tourist sites, and transit areas" (Cresswell 425) are spreading like wildfire. Cresswell gives an example of this when he states, "A business traveler now can go to a Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam and have a meeting, stay in a Sheraton Hotel that is much like any other Sheraton Hotel, eat a pizza or Thai curry that is like and other pizza or Thai curry, and then return home without ever experiencing anything particularly Dutch or unique to Amsterdam" (Cresswell 425). This aspect of "placelessness" is emerging and spreading more and more throughout our world each and every day. It is vital for our countries, states, cities and towns to depart from creating more placeless spaces, and begin to foster more unique and homely ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 153. Jamaica Kincaid's A Small Place Jamaica Kincaid's novel "A Small Place" is a novel made up of a series essays that dives into the daily life of the island of Antigua. Antigua is a small beautiful, nine miles wide by 12 miles long, island. Tourism is an industry that makes huge amounts of money. Hotels, beaches, and fun in the sun all come at a price, but where is the money really going? Antigua with its many resort hotels and tourist attractions, seems rich in wealth but what about the native descendants of the island. Are the natives actually benefiting from tourism? Kincaid who grew up in the once colonized island explains the islands' history during colonialism. She also, gives insight on the island after colonialism. In "A Small Place" Jamaica Kincaid uses critics tourism ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kincaid gives an example of this in the novel," you make a leap from being that nice blob just sitting like a boob in your amniotic sac of the modern experience to being a person visiting heaps of death and ruin and feeling alive and inspired at the sight of it..." (Kincaid 16). The quote basically is suggesting that when people become tourist they do not consider the poverty or infrastructure of the place they are going to. Kincaid implies that when they tourist see the poverty, and the dilapidated infrastructure they feel good about themselves. The tourist feels like they have it better than the people living on the island of Antigua. This quote relates to tourism being a new form of colonialism because it relates to how the colonizers felt that the natives were beneath them. During colonialism and slavery, the natives lived in dilapidated housing, they had the minimum resources to survive. Tourism also exploits the native culture in m any other ways ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...