After reading the first article "Okahandja Lessons", by Emily Rapp, without a doubt, it is a descriptive and narrative essay where the author has the ability to describe how was her journey to Namibia where always happens something very fast. Also, Emily Rapp reflects on her personal experience explaining what she learned about this journey. She created in my mind emotive and terrible images with concise language and clear details. This essay is very well written but the author creates confusion…
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the Straw Into Gold; Metamorphosis of the Everyday. Cisneros has a personal writing style. The way she words her sentences illustrates that she is talking about a situation that has actually occurred to her. “I had the same sick feeling when I was required to write my MFA exam…” Cisneros then speaks on issues she experienced growing up as well as what she experiences as an adult. Olaudah is the author of The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano. Equiano creates a journalistic writing…
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poem, that are constructed differently have their own stories to tell. Basically, the authors are trying to convey their messages and stories by using their own style of characterization, rhythm, and a fictional setting that will be used for their narrative. The beauty of stories and poems are usually generated through the imagination of the readers, which consequently allows them to build their own connection with the literary piece. Through imagination the readers are able to visualize what the author…
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The Horrid Journey If it were not for the stories past down from generation to generation or the documentations in historical books, the history of the twelve million African slaves that traveled the “Middle Passage” in miserable conditions would not exist. Olaudah Equiano contributes to this horrid history with The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano. Through this narrative, the appalling personal experience of each slave is depicted. He accomplishes his rhetorical purpose of…
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geographical and cultural landscape of migration” (13). Momaday is goes on a journey to find himself, particularly his cultural heritage, including values of his ancestors, as explained here. He considers “the role of landscape in The Way to Rainy Mountain” as “inextricably connected to the interplay of the three narrative voices” (14). The relationship of the three voices shows the extent of Momaday’s success on his journey of finding out his ancestry. The use of these three voices also gives the…
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Into the Wild: Book vs. Movie Into the Wild happens to be my favorite book, and also one of my favorite movies. Most people like one or the other, but I think the two complement each other because of the varied stances taken on the main character himself. In case you’re not familiar, Into the Wild is based on the true story of Chris McCandless who, after graduating with honors from Emory University in 1990, gave his entire savings of twenty-four thousand dollars to charity and set off following…
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steady hand and a will of iron.” This quote by writer W.A. Domingo sums up the consciousness of the cultural, social, artistic and literary explosion in Harlem, New York during the 1920s, known as the Harlem Renaissance. A movement made, lead and embraced by African-Americans in the midst of rapid, progressive changes in the United States. This period sought to give a new perspective on the life of American’s most neglected groups, from black writers, visuals artist to poets and musicians, the birth…
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producing her identity and sense of pride. It also shaped her perspective of personal agency and individualism, on race and slavery, which was unconventional for the time period. This is all revealed and takes center stage in her craft as well as her commitment to preserving African American culture. She was a significant figure in the Harlem Renaissance, who left a mark with her work in anthropology and literature. Her journey is intriguing as she reveals herself through her writing, navigates her controversial…
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Malcolm Forbes once said “diversity: the art of thinking, independently together.” This conveys the idea of Zadie Smith’s personal narrative Speaking in Tongues about embracing ones equivocal character. Smith applies the use of symbolism, ethical appeal and conflict of man vs. self to persuade her audience to have a flexible way of communicating. She interprets that fitting in society does not mean to lose one’s language, or cultural background, rather fitting in can simply mean to have a flexible…
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Authorial Voices in Octavia Butler’s Kindred Butler’s text not only address the concept of racial identity, but also tackles the concept of authorial control. Ashraf Rushdy notes that the Neo-Slave Narrative genre as a whole began to come about as a response to William Styron’s book Confessions of Nat Turner. This novel spark the conversation regarding who should be able to retell these histories, and Rushdy notes one of the most problem aspects of Styron’s novel: “its presumption of assuming the…
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