Hannah Hymovitch To be turned in using the Asher Lev Assignment Submission course link. Please answer each question completely. You may use your book to complete this quiz. Each question is worth 3 points. 1. What is Asher 's "gift?" What problems does it create for Asher? Asher’s gift is the ability to see the world around him and present what he sees into his artwork and onto paper. Problems that this gift creates include disapproval from his parents, disapproval from the Rebbe, as well as the overwhelming sense of being a bad kid. 2. Asher is very aware of his heritage and the expectations of his parents. This pressure has an influence on his development. How does it affect him? How does similar pressure affect your development? …show more content…
His weaknesses are being inflexible in regards to seeing other people’s point of view as well as keeping his emotions in check and keeping his values consistent. 5. How does Asher feel about disobeying his father to pursue his art? Asher feels guilty about disobeying his father to pursue art. 6. What influence does Jacob Kahn have on Asher 's development? Jacob Kahn teaches Asher to figure out his own values and to see the world from other people’s perspectives. 7. What does Asher 's ancestor represent? Why does he return often to Asher 's dreams? Asher’s ancestor represents his past and his history. Asher’s ancestor returns often to Asher’s dreams whenever Asher’s behaviors are out of line with his Jewish beliefs. 8. What do Asher 's paintings mean to him at the end of book two? Asher’s paintings at the end of book two represent a compulsion Asher gets to paint the world as he sees it as well as a reminder of people’s disapproval and mockery towards him regarding his art. His paintings at the end of book two become more of an emotive outlet and even more expressive. 9. Would you consider Asher a religious person? Why or why not? I would consider Asher a religious person because he thinks a lot about his values and works really hard to act within his value system even though he doesn’t always succeed. 10. Asher Lev and Jacob Kahn have different religious beliefs. For
Directions: Answer each question in a paragraph—be sure to give specific details and examples. Remember that each of these questions has multiple parts to it. You must type your responses out and hand it to me by the end of our class period.
The past is a quintessential ingredient in the formation of one’s character. The memories in which one makes will be either treasured or treated as baggage. Holden Caulfield is entrenched within the past, so it consumes him and becomes a destructive force in his life, while Asher Lev is able to channel his past into construction through his art.
According to Erikson, this is when the elderly start to be proud of their accomplishments, but are also faced with disparity of the goals they never reached (Berger, 2011). Noah is proud to be telling Allie about their past and wants her to remember it because he is taking so much pride in it. Even though Noah wants Allie to remember their past, he is dealing with the disparity that his wife may not ever remember him. An example from the movie is when Allie remembers who Noah is for just a few moments, and he is so glad and has thought she is back forever, but Allie immediately goes back into not knowing who Noah is (Cassavetes, 2004). Noah is immediately sad and despised that his wife will never be the same.
In the novel, The Song of Solomon, by Toni Morrison, the author uses symbols in order to convey deeper meanings behind events that unfold throughout the story. One example of this is the repeated mentions of an egg during Milkman’s journey to discover more about his family and his ancestors. This egg serves to symbolize humans as well as humanity as a whole, and reveals characters deeper thoughts and feelings toward these subjects. Throughout the story, several characters discuss their feelings on the importance of an egg, and the differences in their thoughts also serves to reveal the differences in their views on humanity and humans of the time period in which they live. While these views shift between different characters, they also change
When Alex is thinking back about his family wishing for all these home cooked meals and love from his family that he will never receive again, it further reinforces Alex’s will to survive and escape from Furnace. After the first flashback, they start to get into more detail and show more about Alex’s family and who they are to the point where Alex can almost taste the freedom. Then the flashbacks take a turn for the worse when Alex starts remembering his old best friend, Toby, and how he watched Toby die and was then framed for his murder on top of it. Overall throughout the story the flashbacks meanings change a lot and share a lot of information about Alex from many different viewpoints. The author uses these different “types” of flashbacks to create different feelings for the reader depending on where the reader is in the book.
Far too often are students forced into reading books with vocabulary high above what they’re able to interpret because it expands their own, which is true--though this leads to a number of problems. Namely, many sometimes find this kind of diction to be overwhelming, causing them to become discouraged or simply lose interest in what they’re reading rather than expend effort to inform themselves of the meaning of such verbiage. One prominent example of this appearing throughout the novel is based on a certain “mythic ancestor” that frequently inhabits Asher’s dreams. He is often described rather simply as a faithful, righteous messenger of the Rabbi, but later on begins to serve as an immeasurably valuable symbol of Asher’s fears in abandoning the morals instilled in him since birth, as seen in this passage: “I was told about him so often during my very early years that he began to appear in my dreams: a man of mythic dimensions, tall, dark-bearded, powerful of mind and body; a brilliant entrepreneur; a beneficent supporter of academies of learning; a legendary traveler, and author of the Hebrew work Journeys to Distant Lands. The great man would come to me in my dreams and echo my father's queries about the latest bare wall I had decorated and the sacred margins I had that day filled with drawings. It was no joy
There are more significant symbols in the novel such as The Boy. The Man and Boy fight to survive many hardships, but through the darkness there is light, The Boy. He is very mature and cares for every stray person they pass. One person he cares for is a man named Ely, an old man with nothing but the clothes on his back, until he meets The Boy and his father." 'You should thank him you know, I wouldn’t have given you anything' "(McCarthy 173). The Boy wants everyone to survive and is willing to share his supplies even if it means he won`t have all the things he needs to live.
Someone’s past can very well tell you how someone’s future will develop, and whether or not it results in a good ending, their history and past will show why they failed or succeeded. The history is important to tell us what to do in the present and the future to flourish. In the novel, I am the Cheese, Robert Cormier suggests the theme that someone’s memory and past is essential to understanding who someone is through the use of multiple points of view and character development. The author uses multiple points of view in the story to help us understand a number of different things, including who Adam really is.
his father and dead mother. David's father has an idealized vision of his son as
David’s personal way of charting theirstory can be located in the Griqua family tree at the start of the novel. David wants to trace his ancestors to the Griquas, who searched for their own native land and whose leader, Andrew le Fleur,
Although both the previous events did put David into an adverse position, the following experience changed David’s outlook on life for the better. Finally there was someone to tell David the true meaning of mankind, Uncle Axel. Uncle Axel tells him to be proud of his telepathic abilities, instead of praying to be what everyone else thinks is the true image. Uncle Axel also changes David's outlook on the true image of man, he explains to him how it's not one's physical features that define him, but what's in his mind.
There is symbolism between Aaron’s new found pet and His Grandmother’s goat. In the text it says, “ Aaron thought of the worst, the most horrible thing he could shout at the boys.
Arthur Roth is this lonely Hebrew, kid that has great ideas on what he want to do. But he has a bad attraction
David has three dreams. David's first dream was at school. His second dream ended in the attic where David lives. In David's third dream, he smells smoke. Well in uses the dreams to symbolize events that happen in David's life.
Furthermore, many believe Abel’s jumpy thoughts to be a cause of war and PTSD but, Easson states “The autistic child lives in the immediate present and has very little concept of the future or past.” This directly relates to Abel in the manner that there is no transition to the flashbacks. It is seemingly all in one time. In Abel’s mind, he does not understand what is present and what is passed. They all seemingly morph into one in his