Jimmy Baca A Place To Stand Essay

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    There are many things in life that can transform a person. Jimmy Santiago Baca’s transformation came through prison and poetry. A Place to Stand is a memoir written by Baca to depict his life-long struggles. He starts it off by explaining his bumpy childhood and rough upbringing. He goes on to explain his incarceration, the struggles he faces while in the prison, and how he learns to make the days go by quicker and stay out of trouble until the day he is free. His tough prison life is turned

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    inmates did not receive a high school Diploma (Harlow 1).” The best way to decrease the overall inmates is to have an education system that works. In the thrilling memoir, A Place to Stand by Jimmy Santiago Baca, Jimmy is faced with various obstacles such as abandonment, discrimination and most importantly illiteracy. If Jimmy had an education he would have stayed out of prison furthermore maximum security prison. Equally important, with education and its resources for a better future, there is no

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    In A Place to Stand, Jimmy Santiago Baca introduces the readers to his life, providing many details from his past that allow the readers to understand his present. Throughout the novel, Baca finds himself in the midst of violence where ultimately, these instances lead to a common theme of abuse. The physical and mental abuse that Baca endures throughout his childhood plays an important part in shaping Baca’s entire life. Furthermore, the abuse that Baca suffers inflicted by his father, his mother

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    Careless inmates leave as careless felons. In the memoir, A Place to Stand, the author Jimmy Santiago Baca understands the challenges of prison. Baca didn’t have much of a good life growing up; in and out of foster homes, getting into trouble and winding up in jail, but something good came out of all of that. Baca went through many positive transformations which are conveyed in his poems, “I am Offering This Poem”, “Who Understands Me but Me”, and “Immigrants in Our Own Land”, which were accomplished

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    criminals, but changes each individual in a different way. Keep in mind, the transformation doesn’t always have a positive outcome. Jimmy Santiago Baca, author of A Place to Stand, had a very hard time adjusting to the life in prison. After two years of being depressed and sitting in the “hole”, Baca found his affection for poetry that changes his life for the better. Baca states, “I was able to reach out and find a finger hold on the fragile ledge of hope. Hope didn’t support me all the time, and

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    are also able to discuss them and take a stand. The book, " A Place to Stand" written by Jimmy Santiago Baca is a book that contains all of the significant issues that our class has learned about throughout the semester while talking about his childhood and the hardships he dealt with starting at a young age. The key topics seen on Baca's work are family and tied on to that is loss he suffered not only pf his family but

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    The autobiography A Place to Stand by Jimmy Santiago Baca determines how neglect can corrupt an individual and lead them to incarceration. Throughout Baca’s life, he experienced neglect from parents, peers and society. At an early age he was abandon by his mother; resulting with him living in an orphanage. Baca’s father was inattentive towards him and his siblings, due to his alcoholism problem. As Baca got older, he encounters a girlfriend and friends who would only use him for their own benefits

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    The effect that captivity can have on someone is massive. Jimmy Santiago Baca, the author of A Place to Stand, describes his life and his choices that formed him into the man that he is today, through this memoir. Unfortunately, it took Baca years of struggle and hardships to get there, but thankfully, incarceration led him to the revelation that changed his life, writing poetry. Within his work, Baca expresses, “My writing became the receptacle for my sorrow. I wrote even when I didn’t want to,

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    A Place to Stand In Chapter 3 of his memoir, poet and author Jimmy Santiago Baca recalls being eighteen when he was notified his mother had returned to Albuquerque and living a comfortable life with her new family. All hopes of reunifying with her were shattered on the day he visited her and was introduced as a friend, this was a betrayal in his heart. When he was released from a Montessa Park jail after four months of incarceration for suspicion of first-degree murder, he made the decision to leave

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    sometimes positively changes lives. Jimmy Santiago Baca writes in his memoir A Place to Stand his experiences involving the negative and positive attributes. Within prison his whole life changes as he puts in the effort to transform his life through writing. In his book he writes, “I became a different man, not because prison was good for me, but in spite of its destructive forces. In prison I learned to believe in myself and to dream for a better life” (Baca 4). His poems, “I am Offering This Poem”

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