The Case of Lonnie and Dorothy 1. List the needs that Lonnie and Dorothy have. Then prioritize them. The needs that Lonnie and Dorothy have are important to be met in order for them to live comfortably.…
In “Isolate” by Dorothy Livesay, the only child’s personality is creative and self-centred. The child often invents new games from existing ones to attract other children by imposing “some twist to Hide and Seek [the children have] never thought of” (8-9). She breaks the traditional rules of the games and creates a new order, which reveals her creative trait since she ignores the existing constraints. The child is also manipulative because she uses her talent for her own desires. Other children are forced to behave according to her new rules in games and the child has “[made] herself a centre” (5) by “holding [the children] all intent” (13).…
St Lucy’s Home for Girls is a safe haven for warewolf girls to learn and change into better humans. Claudette, a student at St Lucy's Home For Girls follows the nuns curriculum closely but sometimes she strays from it. This short story written by Karen Russell follows three girls as they learn please and adapt to their new way of living, all of them heading in separate directions. In the beginning of claudettes journey everything is new and different however She shortly learns that hard work is crucial to adaptation and that from that point on the stakes would be high. As her progress moves forward, she began to realize that she needed to go her separate way to succeeded and when she was finished at St Lucy’s…
Island Possessed: Presentation Paper Island Possessed by Katherine Dunham is a beautiful introduction to Haiti. The book is comprised of stories, recollections and historical facts about the island that spare no details; good or bad. But the book causes the reader to reevaluate the definitions of good and bad while reading. Is good really good and is bad just different? Her articulation of emotions toward the historical Haitians, Haitian Vaudun culture and the people put into perspective how uniquely possessed this island really is.…
The fictional story of Liz’s life and death deserves a place in the magical realism genre. Written by Gabrielle Zevin in her novel “Elsewhere”. The story fulfils all five points of magical realism: lyrical/fantastic writing, an examination of human existence, criticism of society, cultural hybridity, and authorial reticence. Done in two-hundred and seventy-five pages though the viewpoint of Elizabeth Hall. It starts with an examination of human existence early on.…
In the first two chapters of Fatal Invention by Dorothy Roberts, the content primarily focuses on how the idea of race began in the American Society and different ideas that white people, who called themselves Caucasians, Causations created to make themselves superior over all other races. From the beginning, Roberts makes very clear statements about how she feels towards the circulating ideas, studies, and treatment to, initially, black people, who called themselves Negroes, and, eventually, all other races excluding whites. Roberts stated several times that “Race is not only interpreted according to invented rules, but, more important, race itself is an invented political grouping. It is a political category that has been disguised as a biological one,” (4). While reading the article, several red flags resonated in my brain about socially accepted beliefs about people of a different race.…
Through Dorothy’s slumber she is taken to the magical Land of Oz, where she encounters companions who actually resemble her friends back on the farm in Kansas. Dorothy and her new companions then travel to the Wizard in order to have their wishes granted, except the Wizard gives symbolic gestures to please these demands. Dorothy ultimately awake in her own bed surrounded by family and her real life friends. The two differences that can be found between the novel and the movie is the concept of dream vs. reality,…
Fatal Invention, by Dorothy Roberts (2011) was an extremely powerful reading. It opened my eyes tremendously to racism, both from the past and the present. I knew racism was something people faced each and every day, but I don’t think I ever registered that it happened or happens to this degree. The term “race” has been applied to discriminate against different groups of individuals. Robert’s talks about the history of race and how it has come to be today.…
Is the way we are currently teaching our students detrimental to their academic career? Dorothy Sayers, an expert in medieval studies, deliberates that the way students presently acquire information is not effective, therefor Sayers suggest that certain medieval educational methods should be implemented so that students can “learn to learn.” The technique used to teach students has changed over the years. Even the great philosophers of ancient Greek had different opinions on knowledge. Sayers’s new modifications have some concerning and fanatical aspects and others that are meticulously planned and easily accepted.…
Our history books don’t teach us much about the slave’s perspective on slavery, only the white man’s point of view. They don’t seem to go into detail about how their culture was broken when taken from their homeland, and forced to forget their sacred traditions that were passed on to them generation after generation. A Woman Named Solitude does just that. This inspiring story follows a young girl named Solitude as she tries her hardest to overcome the challenges slavery puts in front of her. André Schwarz-Bart’s A Woman Named Solitude is a striking tale about how slavery can affect the inner self.…
In The Lost Tools of Learning, Dorothy Sayers, introduced a new idea about how we go about education. Miss Sayers thinks we need to change how we educate our people by “turning back the wheel of progress”, to the end of the Middle Ages (p. 1). She suggests that we keep our children in school longer, and teach them to teach themselves. She says this because she believes that our current educational system only teaches kids to do things like read, but not fully understand what they are being taught. This leaves the children vulnerable to the written word because they can only read it, but not be able to tell if it is true or not.…
"For the sole true end of education is simply this: to teach men how to learn for themselves; and whatever instruction fails to do this is effort spent in vain. " These words penned by teacher and author, Dorothy Sayers, clearly presents her primary point in the essay "The Lost Tools of Learning. " Comparing our modern education with the Medieval method, she observed that the tools to learn for oneself had been largely abandoned. Troubled by all she found lacking in education 's current methods, Dorothy Sayers outlined her ideas on the main problem of modern education, her proposal of re-instituting the trivium, and the importance of the integration of subjects.…
Besides the perspective of labor, morals and manners there is also another perspective that has affected me personally in the home seating and my education. Dorothy Smith’s standpoint theory, “is grounded by the assertion that women have devalued social statuses in patriarchal societies” (Roberts, 2015). Smith argues that men have obtained the most values and powerful positions in the paid employment. For decades men have been more recognized for either effort in the work force than women. Even though today more women are in the work force, they are still expected to come home to clean, cook, wash and care for the children.…
Since it’s mainstream release in early 2016, Robert Eggers’ The Witch has attracted much attention and numerous accolades for its unique and arthouse-esque take on the horror genre. His directorial debut, the story of a devout Christian family terrorized by unknown forces in the wilds of colonial America has left audiences as perplexed as it has greatly unsettled. Much of the details of the story remain shrouded in mystery, and this has inspired many different interpretations of the film’s themes. This, of course, adds to the disturbing tone of the movie, but a closer analysis helps make some sense of the onscreen events, if not make them even creepier. One especially noteworthy scene is Caleb’s death.…
Doyle, Arthur Conan. The Original Illustrated Sherlock Holmes: 37 Short Stories plus a Complete Novel. Secaucus, N.J.: Castle, 1978. Print. The Adventure of the Empty House is one of the short stories that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle writes about Sherlock Holmes.…