Keller and Baca, The Knowledge of Writing In Helen Keller’s short story “A Word for Everything” a blind and deaf child who faced many challenges, in which she was despaired to understand the meaning of the words. The persuasion and motivation are the two key components that helped Helen to overcome her obstacles, and allowed her to acquire the idiom for writing. In Santiago Baca “Coming into Languages” a teenager who was incarcerated, always so eager to learn the power of writing. When writing, finding a place where he felt free, in where he could express himself without the help of emotions was important. The two stories are relevant to each other because Helen and Baca wanted to learn new words, so they could express themselves. The motivation and persuasion were the key that led Helen to overcome her barriers, and this awarded her with the idiom of writing. While Baca 's eagerness of learning how to write grew, it made the world seem different, since his emotions were shut down in the past. The despair of words emerged and he was reborn. The motivation and persuasion buried deep in help Helen to overcome challenges that she faced during her childhood. Her rough upbringing shaped her into what she is now, an eager to learn writer . At the age of seven her vocabulary was very limited. She was missing the sense of hearing and sight. However, this did not prevent her from learning new words. Her teacher, Ms. Sullivan, spelled the word "doll" on Helen hand, but she tried
Maya Angelou’s use of symbolism in the book is used to describe her displacement in society and how difficult it is to find self-identity, revealing the form of being a “Caged bird.” Maya is a caged bird because she is aware of the displacement of blacks in America and the entitlement and freedom of whites. “if growing up is as painful for the southern girl, being aware of her displacement is the rust on the razor that threatens the throat” (Angelou 4). Angelou is aware because of the color of her skin, she is living in a society that does not want her or anyone who looks like her. With her awareness Angelou, “...escapes stasis to become a subject in the perpetual process of forming and emerging. It is a dynamic subjectivity that emerges out
When Baca learned grammar on his own and started writing, he discovered that he had a real talent for it. He finally felt like who he really was—who he was meant to be. He says that “Writing bridged my divided life of prisoner and free
"All the world is full of suffering. It is also full of overcoming" said Helen Keller, a woman who faced many obstacles in her life ("Fun"). Most people don't dedicate their lives to help others, especially if they have disabilities themselves, but Helen Keller is a different story. At 19 months old, Helen Keller was diagnosed with a disease that led her to be deaf and blind. A true hero is someone who is dedicated to help others in need no matter the circumstances/struggle he or she faces, never gives up, and is an inspiration for others. Helen Keller is a hero because she overcame the struggle of being deaf and blind by never giving up, dedicated her life to help others, and made change in the world despite her disabilities.
People who are blind face many different problems in accomplishing everyday activities and becoming an independent individual. Some are able to overcome this issue while others struggle through it in their lives. In “Helen Keller’s Address before the New York Association for the Blind, January 15, 1907” she makes an appeal to the audience that the blind should be helped and made independent so that they can stand up and support themselves. She uses pathos or emotionally packed words, examples and anecdotes and cites from a prominent source to convince her audience that the blind are not helpless, but they are in need of guidance from people who can see in order to live and thrive independently.
In the profile article “Jimmy Santiago Baca: Poetry as Lifesaver” author Rob Baker, who also is a creative writing and English teacher proves to not only the readers but also the National Council of Teachers of English the significance of poetry. The authors main point is that poetry saved Jimmy Santiago Baca’s life, he shows us how by explaining the emotions when Baca began to read poetry; he then went on to write poetry and even publish his own works while still in prison, after Baca’s release, he became a dedicated teacher who also works with gang members and teaches workshops.
Maya Angelou was born in St. Louis, Missouri, is a writer,and she is known for many auto-biographical novels and she also writes poetry and essays. She also loved to study music, dance,and drama. From 1963 to 1966 Angelou was involved in the black civil rights movement. Maya Angelou wrote this specific poem called; “Phenomenal Women”. Angelou has a very creative way of saying things throughout her poem. Angelou talks about a woman in the poem that talks about herself a lot she repeats the phrase“ I’m a woman Phenomenally. Phenomenal woman that's me”( Angelou) therefore Angelou might be this person in her poem. Angelou is trying to show the reader that you need to have more confidence in your own person instead of worrying about others judgment.
Let the Circle be Unbroken portrays an african american family’s hardships against powerful white landowners and family tragedies. All in the perception of the strong-willed Cassie Logan. Let the Circle be Unbroken by Mildred D. Taylor is an enjoyable book with engaging characters, unpredictable plots, and an amusing genre.
Life writing is a genre that’s more equivocal than other genres. It has its own codes and conventions which help convey its own key ideas and messages. The arrangement of the codes and conventions help the audience recognize the connection between other life writing texts. One of the these is how perspective is used to convey the authors aspects of the real incident. This convention links to the one of the codes, language, where the composer uses languages to create personal accounts of a person’s life. All authors use language to express their experience. This verbalization is what links all life writing texts together.
To begin, I will be discussing money, one of the many themes in “The Living is Easy” by Dorothy West. This book is about a woman named Cleo, who grew up in an upper-class African American family. Cleo was always into the business world ever since she was a little girl. She moved to Boston and married Bart Judson also known as “The black banana king.” They have one daughter named Judy. Bart owned business that he transported bananas. He was a very productive and wealthy man, but when things took a turn for the worst, he had lost all his money leaving Cleo with the remains of it. Their marriage was solely based on money, while Cleo sisters, Charity, Lily, and Serena had it differently. They loved their husbands, so much that money was not a necessary object, and no money was involved. The sisters had visited Cleo without their spouses for most of the book making their mindsets change as well as their attitudes towards their husbands. This mindset has shown the many problems with Bart Judson’s money and revealed how careless the characters can be.
In prison Baca writes and searches with a hungry to compose poetry at a high standard. After he finds poetry as his escape, he burst at the seams without it. Baca stated, “Language gave me a way to keep the chaos of prison at bay and prevent it from devouring me; it was a resource that allowed me to confront and understand my past, even to wring from it some compelling truths” (Baca 5). Even when he finds himself in solitary he attempts to memorize poems so he always has literature with him to analyze. After a while of him studying and perfecting his skills in
In Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, despite actions that suggest otherwise, Janie is neither feminist nor a role model due to her reliance on men and desperation for independence. Throughout the novel, Janie requires the men and death to rescue her and give her the ability to help herself. Janie's lack of feminism is represented in her passivity with men, and in how she does not endeavor to protect herself against their abuse or oppression. Literary critic Trudier Harris claims that “Janie lacks the ability to determine her own fate. She is primarily passive, which is anathema to feminist philosophy. Feminism is about women finding ways to determine their own fates, to change their lives for their own… well-being". However,
A loss for words by Lou Ann Walker Is sort of like her own biography of her life With deaf parents. The book starts out with The author's feelings of being a person of hearing and And sort of feeling like an outsider because of her parents. Her maturity had to be at a certain young age because she had to interpret and handle many important situations. The readers are then introduced to Walker's parents and how they got their diagnosis. Walkers father named Gale was diagnosed deaf when he attended a funeral out in the cold at three months of age. I thought this particular part of Gale was interesting as he was outside just like everyone else. Walkers mother, on the other hand, Doris Jean, became deaf when she developed a high
William Gibson's play, The Miracle Worker, illustrates how people who triumph over hardships can succeed in achieving their goals. The play follows Annie Sullivan, a half-blind northern young woman, as she travels to Post-Civil War Tuscumbia, Alabama in order to teach Helen Keller, a blind and deaf little girl. When she arrives in Alabama, Annie meets Helen's family members; her father, Captain Keller, is a stubborn, commanding former Civil War captain and her mother, Kate Keller, is a young, overly protective woman, both of them have kept Helen almost as a pet because they did not know what to do with her or how to treat her. In order for Annie to succeed in teaching Helen, she has to battle with Captain Keller's stubbornness, Kate's
She tells the story of her life to present the examples in her life and to show her own uniqueness. Keller proved that her deafness and blindness would not stop her from being an extraordinary person. She also wrote to express her survival of her disabilities and how she overcame them. Keller’s purpose was to inspire people to endure. She communicated to disabled people especially to help them realize what they are capable of.
With the 1960s came a need for change, as an immense amount of smog and toxic chemicals used in agriculture and industry caused, the blue to fade away from the sky and water in America. Rachel Carson provided the catalyst for this change with her book Silent Spring published in 1962, which revealed the harmful impacts of pesticides on almost all wildlife and human beings. People reading a book wouldn’t be enough, though, for twenty million Americans came together on April 22, 1970, to celebrate the beauty of Earth and raise awareness about increasing concerns for the environment and declining quality of life. (maybe add a sentence about structure and diversity of the movement) Without these key events leading to the Environmental Movement’s diversity and unique structure through the 1970s, American values in politics and way of life would not have been able to change.