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Ellen L

The Importance of Family Communication « Your Relationship Blog - 0 views

  • Many families are experiencing lack of communication, although they all live together but they don’t often talk to each other.  How does this happen?  Are they invisible to each other, or they just don’t know how to speak up and open a communication?  For a kid having this family is not healthy for him. He become hesitant to talk about his problems for example in school; when he has a failing grade and his parents are needed to talk to the principal for their child’s performance.
  • Good communication skills in a family may build self-esteem, because a child learns of his capabilities from what his family tells him of himself.
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    This talks about the importance of family communication in a more modern sense, yet they values still hold true to AILD and Frankenstein. It discusses how children raised with poor communication skills cycles into family crisis, confusion and lack of self-esteem. These are all things faced by the characters of these 2 books. 
Ellen L

Black Community/Black America - 0 views

  • It is not easy for the Black America to empower itself when all the odds appear to be against the community. Many members of Black America find themselves being afraid to participate openly in the political and economic processes that might empower the Black Community. This fear has led many in Black America to believe that they must exhibit a racelessness persona in order to achieve vertical mobility in America.
  • Education is a tool that Black America must use for social change, to educate its youths, and to correct the mis-education of and about the Black Community.
  • lack educators and writers must commit themselves to helping Black America define itself. The capacity to untangle the complex racial, social and cultural human experiences in the United States of America, that helped to define Black Americans, seems to elude the Black Community. Educators are needed to help untangle the meaning of racial stratification and its impact on the Black identity (politically, socially, culturally, and economically). Thus the identity of the Black Community suffers.
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    This article discusses the course of action the author believes will most successfully mobilize the black community further.  Henry discusses the importance of education and identity in achieving social mobility.
Ellen L

Why We Write About Grief - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • writing has always been the way I make sense of the world. It’s a kind of stay against dread, and chaos.
  • After she died, I kept writing — and reading — trying to understand or just get a handle on grief, which was different from what I thought it’d be. It wasn’t merely sadness; I was full of nostalgia for my childhood, obsessed with my dream life and had a hard time sleeping or focusing on anything but my memories.
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    This NYTimes article discusses how people cope with death through various means of art and communication--specifically writing. The authors interviewed in this article explained how this form of communication was the only way they could understand what happened, thus saving them from the insanity of being lost. The Bundren family copes with Addie's death in no communicative way. As this important outlet does not exist within the household, it may well explain the strewed psychological states of many of the characters. 
Willie C

Family, Humanity, Polity: Theorizing the Basis and Boundaries of Political Community in... - 0 views

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    "Frankenstein is a novel that is deeply interested in a particular kind of social union, namely, the political community. Written in 1818 and in the moment between revolution and reform, Shelley's novel invokes contemporary discussions and theorizations of political community"
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    This source goes into the role the community plays in the novel. As the romantic value of human connection comes up, so does the community in a changing role. This is another one of Shelly's criticisms of her society.
Ellen L

Importance of Parental Supervision | Parenting | Disney Family.com - 0 views

  • The survey indicates that parents misunderstand what's important to their kids, underestimate their maturity, overlook problematic behavior and withdraw themselves from their children's daily lives.
  • "Clearly, there's a connection gap if half the people in a conversation think they don't get a chance to explain themselves," says Kutner. "If one person tends to dominate most conversations at the expense of another, it can create an environment filled with misunderstanding, anger and resentment."
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    Following the shooting at Columbine High School, several surveys were conducted to understand how the parents were unaware of their children s violent nature. What they found was a huge communication gap between parents and their children that  led to misunderstanding and anger. This is exactly what happens between Victor and the monster, as Victor is unwilling to communicate, thus creating a barrier between the two. 
Connor P

Literary Reference Center - powered by EBSCOhost: Frankenstein - 0 views

  • Victor and the creature are “doubles” (or mirrors) of each other because they are both struck with the inability to successfully communicate with society. This theme demonstrates the balance of the conscious and unconscious aspects of human behavior.
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    This source shows the doppelganger between the monster and Victor as they are doubles of each other. One of their connections is the fact that both are isolated and cannot communicate with society. This leads to the theme of isolation.
Sarah Sch

(7) Race Riots of the 1960s - 0 views

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    "Unemployment among African Americans was well above the national average, and one-half of all black Americans lived below the poverty line (as opposed to one-fifth of whites). Not surprisingly, tensions ran high in black communities."
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    "The 1960s saw the most serious and widespread series of race riots in the history of the United States."
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    "Property damage exceeded $45 million. So many people had been arrested-more than four thousand-that some had to be detained in buses. More than a thousand people were injured, and forty-three people had been killed. The dead included looters, snipers, a policeman, and a fireman, as well as many innocent people who had been caught in the cross fire."
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    This article describes the major race riots in the 1960's in response to racial disparity. The riots were engendered by racial tensions between whites and blacks aggrandized by competition over jobs and housing. The black communities were overcrowded and crime-ridden, and the blacks were unwelcome in white communities. Racism results in riots that ends with bloody violence and the death of innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire. This article provides an example of the consequences of rampant inequality in society between races which resembles the riots present in Invisible Man and Malcolm X.
Sarah Sch

Chicago Riots of 1919 - 0 views

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    "Seeking housing in white communities, blacks found themselves unwelcome and sometimes attacked. Competition for jobs and housing increased racial tensions"
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    "African Americans retaliated, and soon innocents of both races were beaten and killed as the riot intensified. Seven days of mayhem produced thirty-eight dead, fifteen whites and twenty-three blacks; 537 injuries; and 1,000 homeless families."
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    This article describes the historic event of the Chicago Riots of 1919. The riots were engendered by racial tensions between whites and blacks aggrandized by competition over jobs and housing. The black communities were overcrowded and crime-ridden, and the blacks were unwelcome in white communities. This article provides an example of the consequences of rampant inequality in society between races which resembles the Harlem riot present in Invisible Man.
Willie C

Themes of As I Lay Dying | Novel Summaries Analysis - 0 views

  • every character is essentially isolated from the others. Moreover, the characters in the novel do not communicate effectively with one another.
  • The absence of his mother’s love leads Darl to isolation not only from others but also from himself.
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    This source discusses several themes of the novel, including isolation, death, sanity, and identity. Without the role of any decent parent, most of the children evolve into isolated, uncaring characters, who only seek their own self interests. This contrasts sharply with Jewel, who has a caring mother, and ends up sacrificing all that he cares about in order to respectfully (in his opinion) bury his mother.
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    "Faulkner's use of multiple narrators underscores one of his primary themes: every character is essentially isolated from the others. Moreover, the characters in the novel do not communicate effectively with one another"
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    This source outlines the themes in As I lay Dying, as well as giving examples. This quote provides an overview of Faulkner's style of using the different characters as narrators in order to further emphasize that the characters do not communicate well.
Connor P

Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

  • As a result of their communication problems, members of the Bundren family live alienated from each other—whether willfully (like Addie or Jewel), unknowingly (like Anse, Cash, Dewey Dell, or Vardaman), or painfully (like Darl).
  • This alienation extends to neighbors, who misinterpret or simply cannot fathom the family's actions.
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    This shows the isolation and alienation in the characters live. As isolation spawns alienation, this main theme reflects the families ability to communicate together and interact
Emily S

As I Lay Dying - 0 views

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    "aulkner's use of multiple narrators underscores one of his primary themes: every character is essentially isolated from the others. Moreover, the characters in the novel do not communicate effectively with one another. Although the reader is privy to the characters' thoughts and emotional responses, none of the characters adequately express their dilemmas or desires to others."
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    Part of the satire Faulkner uses to describe the Bundreon family, is their lack of communication, typical in a family experiencing extreme hardship. They all have feelings that is shared with the reader while being kept from all members of the family, ironically while they spend immense amounts of time with each other on their journey.
Vivas T

William Faulkner: Major Novels - 0 views

  • As I Lay Dying breaks from this absorption with the isolated hero. It is instead a study of community, simple country folk (the Tulls, Armstids, and Bundrens), that is almost comic, and certainly reflective of some faith in humanity.
    • Vivas T
       
      This article illustrates the importance of communication and cooperation within a society. It portrays the lack thereof in Faulkner's novel, which contributes to the characters' problems in the piece.
Vivas T

Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

    • Vivas T
       
      This article highlights the alienation within the Bundren family. It portrays the lack of communication, as well, which illustrates the importance of language and relationships in life.
  • As a result of their communication problems, members of the Bundren family live alienated from each other—whether willfully (like Addie or Jewel), unknowingly (like Anse, Cash, Dewey Dell, or Vardaman), or painfully (like Darl)
David D

As I Lay Dying: The Coming of Roads and a New Age for the Family and the Community - 0 views

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    "In this sense, the roads in the novel function as the intersection of the family and the new age of the southern rural community."
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    This article relates the roads that the Bundrens take in burying their matriarch to a crossroads of family life in the rural south. Instead of a traditional close family unit, southern families at the time the novel was written were beginning to separate and take different paths in life. The transition is described in the Bundrens' bumpy road to Jefferson to bury Addie.
Sydney C

Communities Turning Recession and Foreclosures into Positives - 0 views

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    The poor living conditions in TGOW are not a thing of the past. This article, from 2009, talks about how people are once again being booted from their homes by "the Bank Monster"
David D

Ongoing Agriprocessors Scandal Raises Questions About What it Means to Be Kosher - 0 views

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    The Kosher meat industry is supposed to provide the highest quality meat while having high standards of business ethics and righteousness. The source shows that even in the Kosher industry, identity theft, child labor, and other unethical practices are abundant. However not only in 2008 have Kosher plants done wrong , they have been breaking the rules for years. This string of arrests has stirred much controversy in the Jewish community.
Zaji Z

The Valley of Ashes: F. Scott Fitzgerald and Robert Moses by Roger Starr, City Journal ... - 0 views

  • That this narrow aperture should grow from a heap of ashes and refuse suggests that in the triumph of the industrialized, commercialized, and banalized world to come, the American dream of open horizons and limitless possibilities would be reduced to a burned-out, undifferentiated mass.
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    Today, the valley of ashes represents not only a section of New York, but rather, moving to the rest of the country, where reports of deserted homes and communities by factories are simply abandoned, despite a history of economic growth in the path, the dreams and lives that people created for themselves is now nothing but a pile of dust on the ground. 
Sarah Sch

(4) Feral Children - 0 views

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    "A 17-year-old with the mentality of a child of three, Hauser was reeducated over the next five years, regaining many of the faculties that had been stunted by extreme social and sensory deprivation, to the point where he could communicate verbally although his speech was substandard."
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    Feral children are, "Lost or abandoned human children raised in extreme social isolation, either surviving in the wild through their own efforts or "adopted" by animals"
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    This article demonstrates the ability for a parentless individual to be rehabilitated. Feral children are children who have raised themselves or animals raise. They have no or little connection to humans. Likewise, Victor abandons the monster and leaves the monster to raise itself. This shows that if Victor tried to teach the monster compassion that the monster would never have resorted to extremes. The article would support an essay including the irresponsibility of Victor towards the monster
Connor P

Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

  • The bounds that Frankenstein transgresses are those of obedience to community. He makes himself a monster in two senses. The price is death not only for himself but for his family and potentially all humanity.
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    This source shows that irony that Shelley creates in which no one truly knows who the monster is. Through the behavior of Victor, he leads the reader to question wether or not he is the monster. This also shows the isolation of his life.
Emily S

In Cold Blood - 0 views

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    A criticism of the nonfiction book examines Capote's sympathetic portrayal of the murderers. This passage that Capote's sympathy with Perry could have been caused by his own nightmarish childhood. Another factor could have been his distaste in communities such as Holcomb.
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