Before completing this discussion, review the readings and videos from the lesson “Modernism and Postmodernism.” Next, answer the following questions:
How would you define the concepts of modernism and/or postmodernism? In reviewing the materials for this lesson, did you encounter an artist who was able to change your way of seeing the world around you?
Think about all that you have learned in the course this semester. Do you believe that the appreciation of art is the same as the enjoyment of art? Is it possible to both appreciate a work of art and also greatly dislike it? Why? For an artwork to be considered good, must it always be something beautiful? Be detailed and specific with your ideas.
Category: English
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Title: “Exploring Modernism and Postmodernism: Reflections on Art Appreciation and Enjoyment”
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“Learning Beyond the Classroom: A Narrative and Reflective Essay on My English 110 Journey” Portfolio Reflection and Multimodal Revisions: Reflecting on My Progress and Growth as a Writer
Please write a narrative essay 1st (2.5 pages):
We learn in many ways—at school, of course, but also at home, among friends, & in the world itself. Consider a time when you learned something OUTSIDE of a classroom & narrate that experience. Show us what you learned, how you learned it, & why it matters.
Begin either with a scene or with build-up to a scene (in medias res or exposition).
Be very specific. Choose a single experience—this is not an autobiography.
There are multiple ways to approach this—learning a new skill or sport, learning to set a table, learning to accept failure, etc.
This essay is creative nonfiction—it requires a plot with a clear beginning, middle, & end.
Your essay must meet the following requirements:
Minimum of 750 words (approximately 3-4 pages)
Focuses on a single, clear idea
Uses story elements of character, setting, & plot to develop the main idea
Uses MLA formatting
Extra credit opportunities:
We’ve spent time looking at & discussing multimodal texts. If your essay includes images that add to the story being told, you can earn up to 5 bonus points on the essay.
Visit the CWRC: you can earn up to 5 points (one point per visit) by visiting the CWRC & showing me the blue sheet you receive after the session.
Step 2: Please write a reflection essay (2.5 pages):
English 110 Final Portfolio
Your final project is to create a portfolio that showcases your best work from the semester. All three parts (one full revision, one multimodal revision, and one reflection essay) work together as a kind of exhibit of the ways that you have succeeded in the course.
Your final portfolio must include the following documents IN THIS ORDER:
A 2-3-page reflective essay
A multimodal revision of your narrative essay
A revised, MLA formatted critical response or research paper
Completing the Revisions
Select two essays you wish to revise.
The narrative essay will require a change of medium to a multimodal project that is not in essay format. This revision should represent your best attempts to “re-see” the piece & present it in a dynamic way for a specific audience.
The critical response OR research paper should be carefully revised for content, structure, & organization to create a polished, MLA formatted essay. This revision should show that you paid close attention to content, organization, audience, & polished language.
Expect to spend several hours carefully considering the comments you received on your drafts, the key concepts and strategies you have learned this semester, & your own experiences in the class. Substantially rework your essays. You should put a lot of thought into the papers you are revising, as you’ll want these revisions to demonstrate that you have made improvement in your writing & thinking in this course.
Completing the Reflective Essay
When you hand in the final project, the reflective essay will be the first element in the portfolio. However, it will be easier to write this essay AFTER you’ve completed your revisions.
Because the reflection essay requires you to explain how you’ve met the requirements of the course this semester, you should discuss everything that has gone into your revision process. Your audience should know, from reading the reflection, precisely what the finished documents say about the things you have learned this semester.
You should consider how your semester’s work has been both influenced by & is reflected in the revisions you’ve completed. Rather than simply listing changes you’ve made to the documents, you should talk about WHY you made the changes and HOW that relates to what we’ve accomplished in this course. You may want to discuss specific exercises or activities you did in class, ideas or strategies you gained through course readings, any help you received while visiting the CWRC, working with someone else outside of class, and anything else that contributed substantially to your success.
Recap & Specifics:
Your portfolio should include, bare minimum—a reflection essay, a multimodal revision of the narrative, & a revised copy of your critical response or research paper.
The reflection is best completed after the revisions but should be the FIRST document in the portfolio.
Multimodal revisions should reflect a total re-thinking of the format & delivery of the essay’s content. They cannot be traditional academic formats of Powerpoint or an essay, & they should have AT LEAST two of the following modes: visual, aural, linguistic, textual, gestural. They may or may not reach original word counts because of formatting.
The revision of the critical response or research paper should reflect careful consideration for thesis, structure, content, language, & formatting. It should be a formally written essay.
Multimodal revisions that are physical or are file types not supported by Canvas can be handed in during my office hours on any day prior to the due date.
Your final portfolio will be the last thing I read before calculating your final average in this course, so you will want to make sure that it reflects your best efforts in all ways.
Grading:
Portfolios will be assessed according to their demonstration that students have met the learning outcomes for the course. Each category below carries 20 points for 100 total points in the portfolio.
Comprehends & analyzes college-level texts.
Integrates ideas from these texts into own writing.
Writes for a variety of audiences with clear purpose and focus.
Organizes ideas and uses textual support to develop concepts.
Controls grammar and mechanics and demonstrates style
An incomplete portfolio will not be accepted and will earn a grade of 0.
Below I have attached my grades in the course. I have also attached my resarch paper thathat can help. -
“Uncovering the Truth: A Critical Analysis of the ‘On Becoming a Human Lie Detector’ Website” Title: The Manipulation and Ineffectiveness of “Real World” Communication Techniques: A Personal and Research-Based Perspective
Website Analysis and Critique: On Becoming a Human Lie Detector
Check out: https://www.scienceofpeople.com/courses/lie-detection/
What is the purpose of this essay?
The purpose of this essay is to grapple with a complex multimodal text related to the course, which will (thanks to your careful analysis) shine light on course themes, in particular Ariely’s moderate-optimistic view honesty and dishonesty. In other words, your analysis of this text will serve as an illuminating lens to view not only the text itself but the course overall so far. In addition, you will gain a more critical perspective on how a claim is made (ex: “humans can—and should be– accurate lie detectors”) in relation to other experts’ opinions.
What will I be writing about?
On her website, “Science of People,” Vanessa Van Edwards advertises a course on “How to Be a Human Lie Detector.” The course promises to educate and train people in detecting lies and hidden emotions with up to 90% accuracy, as it promotes abilities such as “speed read anyone” and “find dishonesty behind words.” The course is expensive, and its marketing (images, expressions, “promises,” assumptions about human nature and deceit being all around us) is elaborate. Your job is to analyze the website as a kind of deliberate message about honesty and dishonesty all around us; to analyze how the website communicates that message (again, images, expressions, promises, assumptions), and how all this information either confirms or contradicts Ariely’s moderate-optimistic view of honesty and dishonesty you’ve been picking up from his book. Note: DO NOT sign up for the course. Only view the webpages that are available—there is already plenty to observe and pick up information on.
What kind of structure can I use for the essay?
Part A: Write the Introduction:
What does it mean to know ourselves as human? Should we strive to see, understand, and accept our own dishonesty? Or does being human obligate us to be “better”? –to be more honest, more integral, and to constantly improve ourselves? (And so should we be less tolerant of others’ faults—such as their lieing—as a result?) As your last sentence of the introduction, create a thesis statement that makes clear your position as well as the point that you realize there are two varying ideas of human nature in play–the view of Van Edwards on self-improvement (and intolerance for others’ faults) and the view of Ariely.
Part B: Next, talk about the advertised course:
Smoothly transition into your discussion of “How to Be a Human Lie Detector,” as it is advertised on the website: How is the course presented? What does Van Edwards want you to believe about lying? (“Point” to what you’re looking at on the site.) What does she want you to believe about people who lie? (“Point” to what you’re looking at the on the site.) What does she want you to believe how easy or hard it is to learn more about liars and lying? (“Point” to what you’re looking at on the site.) As you analyze these messages in the advertisement, analyze the language and images she uses–images, expressions, “promises,” assumptions about human nature and deceit being all around us. Depending on how you feel about this kind of messaging (and what you said in your introduction), also critique (evaluate) her perspective in a strong, ironic, or perceptive tone.
Part C: Next, make a choice: This course does—or does not—hold interest or value for you:
Yes, this course holds definite interest or value for me.
Perhaps this course goes along with your notions of how human beings should constantly improve themselves and not make excuses for themselves or others. Perhaps certain marketing messages or images from the site struck a chord with you, based on your past experience and what you know of other humans. Perhaps you think the course could explain some aspects of human nature that have always annoyed you or that you feel need more attention in today’s world. Bring in some mention of Ariely, and make your case with examples that are believably based on your experience or your own close-up observations of your community, news, culture, or social scene.
No, this course and others like it hold no interest or value for me.
Perhaps you can discern manipulation coming from the site in several places. Perhaps you do not trust Van Edwards for her self-presentation or inconsistencies. Perhaps you’re thinking the approach she offers is not “real world,” not sustainable, and could possibly even backfire in relationships or psychologically for individuals. Bring in some mention of Ariely, and make your case with examples that are believably based on your experience or your own close-up observations of your community, culture, news, or social scene.
Part D: Finally, add some research:
What is one research source you can find—for example, a source on how children learn to trust, or how detecting lies is or is not possible—that supports something you’ve said in Part C of this paper? -
“The Importance and Growth of Certifications and Opportunities in the Travel Nursing Profession”
One writer forgot to add citations and complete one sentence.
Furthermore, achieving and renewing certificates like Basic Life Support (BLS) and
Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) is important. Having certifications like Certified
Emergency Nurse or Certified Critical Care Nurse can
(Complete the sentence)The travel nursing profession has experienced significant growth in recent years due to the
RN registering shortage in certain regions or specialties and the increased demand for nurses.
(Citation required).However, because of the sourcing from local, specialty, and business factors, actual earnings may vary. In peak
times, the top earners among travel nurses can pocket significantly more money and make $2,703 per week (citation required).With the continued development and evolution of the healthcare sector to cater to diverse
demographic and healthcare needs, the demand for travel nurses is predicted torise (Feeney).
Additionally advanced telemedicine and technology medicine may bring more opportunities for
travel nursing to develop and spread (citation required) -
“The Poisonwood Bible Book 2: Questions and Analysis”
please look at the attached pdf and answer the questions based on the poisionwood bible book. Please complete book 2 questions up to question 15
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“The Magical Music Festival: A Night to Remember” It was a warm summer evening in the small town of Rosewood. The sun was setting, casting a golden glow over the town’s quaint buildings and lush greenery. The streets were bustling with
Write a story about a memorable event in your life. It could be a concert, a family celebration, a sporting event, a graduation, or something else. Include details about where it took place, who was there, when it happened, and why it was so memorable. Also, include details about sights, sounds, tastes, and smells to help the reader feel like he or she was a part of the experience
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“The Pursuit of Eudaimonia: Understanding Aristotle’s Concept of Happiness through Virtue and Unity of the Soul” “The Pursuit of True Happiness: Exploring the Role of Character, Pleasure, Honor, and Wealth in Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics” “The Rational Goal of Political Life: Exploring the Relationship between Eudaimonia and Honour in Aristotle’s Philosophy”
Essay outline he provided :
Outline of an essay that would demonstrate understanding:
Begin by elaborating what Aristotle claims is the true meaning of “happiness”
1. start from Aristotle’s claim that the “nature” of a human being is what it is when fully developed
2. the “nature,” in this sense, of human being is a being able “to put into action the power of reason (1097b 24-1098a 4).”
3. this is “action” as eudaimonia, i.e., as the objectively truly “good” action in a given context
4. it is “the realization and perfect practice of virtue”
“a being-at-work of the soul in accordance with virtue, and if the virtues are more than one, in accordance with the best and most complete virtue”
5. virtues are of two kinds, moral and intellectual
“the best and most complete virtue” is the virtue of “justice” as the practice of “complete virtue” in relations with “one’s neighbour” Nicomachean Ethics Book V, chap. 1
its practice, therefore, is itself eudaimonia as “the realization and perfect practice of virtue”
6. provide some detail about the moral virtues such as their connection to the concepts of “hexis” and “mean” that are relevant to explaining why pleasure, honour and wealth cannot be the ultimate objects of rational desire
make use of Sachs’ “Three Little Words” here
6.1 hexis
“holding oneself in a certain way”
“one holds oneself in a stable equilibrium of the soul, in order to choose the action knowingly and for its own sake”
“in a condition from which one can’t be moved all the way over into a different condition”
“Virtue cannot, by this account, be an inflexible adherence to rules or duty or precedent.”
role of “habit” in the development of hexis
child has an inborn potential for such development
to develop the potential, the child has to be enabled to settle down out of the emotional turmoil of childhood
“habit” is the way of doing this – Sachs uses Hamlet’s advice to his mother to illustrate the idea
the key point is that “habit” creates a condition in which “hexis” in the above sense (not a habit) can develop
when developed, hexis makes virtuous action possible as action actualizing the “mean”
this is action chosen knowingly as an end it itself – i.e. it’s an action actualizing moral virtue as eudaimonia
6.2 the “mean”
the person with fully developed moral virtues, i.e. fully developed hexis, is a spoudaios, a person of moral stature
such a person is able to directly perceive, in any particular circumstances, the act that will actualize the “mean,” i.e. the act that will actualize the moral virtues as eudaimonia
fully developed hexis is required for perceiving things “as they truly are”
“This sort of perceiving contains thinking and imagining, but what it judges, it judges by perceiving it to be so.”
this enables objectively truly “good” action as the action that actualizes the “mean” – eudaimonia,
the idea of this as a “mean” divides failures to achieve it into those that involve “excess” and those that involve “deficiency,” both being failures to fully develop hexis
It is not necessary to take this into account when determining what will be “beautiful” in a given context; fully developed moral virtues, i.e. fully developed hexis makes the “beautiful” action in a context directly perceivable
7. the “virtuous soul” as a “unity”
“We sometimes think of life as a conflict between the head and the heart, but in such a situation there is no unity of the human being, but only truces, compromises, and temporary victories of parties with divergent interests. The virtuous soul, on the contrary, blends all its parts in the act of choice.
“This, I think, is the best way to understand the active state of the soul that constitutes moral virtue and forms character. It is the condition in which all the powers of the soul are at work together, making it possible for action to engage the whole human being. The work of achieving character is a process of clearing away the obstacles that stand in the way of the full efficacy of the soul. … In the sense of character of which we are speaking, the word for which is ethos, we see an outline of the human form itself. A person of character is someone you can count on, because there is a human nature in a deeper sense than that which refers to our early state of weakness. Someone with character has taken a stand in that fully mature nature, and cannot be moved all the way out of it.” Sachs “Three Little Word” p 13
“the ultimate effect of moral virtue: that the one who has it sees truly and judges rightly, since only to someone of good character do the things that are beautiful appear as they truly are (1113a 29-35), that practical wisdom depends on moral virtue to make its aim right (1144a 7-9), and that the eye of the soul that sees what is beautiful as the end or highest good of action gains its active state only with moral virtue (1144a 26-33)” Sachs “Three Little Word” p 21
8. Then explain why each of pleasure, honor and wealth cannot be the source of true “happiness”
“since every kind of knowing and every choice reach toward some good, let us say what it is that we claim politics aims at, and what, of all the goods aimed at by action, is the highest. In name, this is pretty much agreed about by the majority of people, for most people, as well as those who are more refined, say it is happiness, and assume that living well and doing well are the same thing as being happy. But about happiness— what it is— they are in dispute, and most people do not give the same account of it as the wise. Some people take it to be something visible and obvious, such as pleasure or wealth or honor”
“to review all the opinions is perhaps rather pointless, and it would be sufficient to review the ones that come most to prominence or seem to have some account to give” p. 3
8.1 explain the following passage ruling out pleasure
“Most people and the crudest people seem, not without reason, to assume from people’s lives that pleasure is the good and is happiness. For this reason they are content with a life devoted to enjoyment. … Now most people show themselves to be completely slavish by choosing a life that belongs to fatted cattle, but they happen to get listened to because most people who have power share the feeling of Sardanapalus.” p. 4
To fully explain this, you should also make use of the section in Book III of the Nicomachean Ethics on the virtue of “temperance”: Book III, chaps. 10-12 A key point is that:
“the things that are pleasant to those who are passionately devoted to what is beautiful are the things that are pleasant by nature, and of this sort are actions in accordance with virtue, so that they are pleasant both to these people and in themselves. So the life these people lead has no additional need of pleasure as a sort of appendage, but has its pleasure in itself.” 1099a 16-17 Sachs Nicomachean Ethics p. 14
8.2 explain the following passage ruling out honor
“refined and active people choose honor, for this is pretty much the goal of political life. Now this appears to be too superficial to be what is sought, for it seems to be in the ones who give honor rather than in the one who is honored, but we divine that the good is something of one’s own and hard to take away. Also, people seem to pursue honor in order to be convinced that they themselves are good. At any rate they seek to be honored by the wise and by those who know them, and for virtue; it is clear, then, that at least according to these people, virtue is something greater, and one might perhaps assume that this, rather than honor, is the end of the political life.” pp.4-5
The key points here are: 1) seeking honor means the individual does not know what eudaimonic being-at-work is, but such knowledge is a prerequisite for being able to actualize such being-at-work; and 2) if an individual’s being-at-work does actualize the perfect practice of virtue, the only individual able to know this, given what it is, would be the individual whose action it is. That individual, knowing this, would not seek or desire honour. These points need to be explained in terms of the first part of the essay explaining eudaimonia.
Explain why, though honour s “pretty much the goal of political life,” it is not the rational goal, namely. political activity as actualizing eudaimonia for its practitioner.
8.3 explain the following passage ruling out wealth
“The life of money making is a type of compulsory activity, and it is clear that wealth is not the good being sought, since it is instrumental and for the sake of something else. For this reason one might suppose that the things spoken of before are more properly ends, since they provide contentment on account of themselves, though it appears that even they are not what is sought, even though many arguments connected with them are tossed around.” p. 5
In Aristotle’s particular context, obtaining a certain amount of “money” is “compulsory” because eudaimonic being-at-work requires instrumental means that, in that context, are only available by buying them in a “market” using “money.” The relations with others this requires must be inconsistent with eudaimonic relations because they are inconsistent with the reciprocal practice of “justice” in the sense spelled out above. This explains why, in Marx’s critical appropriation of these ideas, an “ideal society” cannot involve “markets” in which relations between individuals are mediated by “money.”. -
“The Rising Cost of College: Exploring the Factors Behind Skyrocketing Tuition” “The Rising Costs of College: Understanding the Causal Chain and Addressing Rebuttals”
The instructions for the Definition Essay are found in Chapter 10 of the textbook.
Reminders:
Use academic tone
Use correct MLA
Use the Classical Argument Strategy
Introduction
(assuming the classical argument model)
Exigency/catchy opening – if the topic is the expense of college, as college students, surely you could think of something relevant here?
Explanation of context – here, it might be a question of why some problem has arisen
Thesis: College tuition has increased approximately 260 percent since 1980 because of declining funding from state governments and the competition between colleges to attract students with ever-more elaborate services, all coupled with the normal operation of inflation.
Make transition.
Body
What pattern have you chosen for your reasons? Will you try to arrange things chronologically, in a causal chain or web, or will you go for something more like order of importance? It is best, of course, if your reasons follow the predictive thesis you used in your introduction, so we will use that precedent; for our example, order of importance.
Prove that your social phenomenon – here college costs rising – is true.
“State support for higher education has declined.” This assertion is the “Y” in our sequence, and you must prove it is true. You can look at your state – or likely any state, for that matter – or you can look at national data, but they will all tell a similar tale. You can look at gross dollars, remembering to adjust for inflation/change across time; you can look at support as a percentage of operating costs. Just as a point of pre-emptive rebuttal perhaps, note that if school budgets started increasing, then the percentage of state aid – even if the money remained steady – would look like a decline, so you need to be able to show that is not the explanation for what has been happening. Point out, for example, that even if money remained steady, inflationary action inevitably means that money supports less and less. Once you have shown your “Y,” you must then also prove the “–>,” which is the causality itself. Argue that less state funding must be made up, thus the increased tuition costs. Again, some causal connections will require less work because their warrants are more likely to be widely shareable, but you must not merely assume the connections are apparent or clear, and you must directly address the causality to at least make the links explicit.
“Colleges compete with more expensive amenities.” You must prove this “Y” true, too. Quote college presidents talking about the pressures to recruit and retain students in a highly competitive world; explain the logic that a place where a lot of students go to school is probably a place where a lot of students would like to go to school – because nothing draws a crowd like a crowd, so the colleges have to be willing to draw a crowd; demonstrate the modern rise of swanky dorms, student rec centers, highly visible sports programs, etc., all designed to capture the student imagination; at the same time, you show that these programs’ costs are borne by the students in the form of tuition or fees. Just as with any other reason, having proved the “Y,” now address the “–>” and show how increased publicity and advertising budgets, sixteen racquetball courts, climbing walls, or multiple dining halls directly add to a student’s cost.
“Inflation continues to operate.” The simple fact of the matter is that very few things in a modern economy ever get cheaper. Technology (like personal computers) often does after the first few generations, but then it levels off and even at the “cheap” price, will still get more expensive as time goes by. The nature of capitalism is the appreciation of goods and services, and colleges are not immune from these forces. Just because a history professor, for example, is still teaching the same history of Tudor England does not mean the cost of employing that person remains the same: health insurance, competitive salary, and on and on. And that does not even begin to cover the costs of operating the physical plant of the college itself: the heat, the AC, the tar for sealing the parking lots, the increasing complexity of the Wi-Fi network or electron microscopes, and on and on. Everything gets a little more expensive every year, and when there is less money, that gap compounds, and the students get squeezed.
Be sure to prove the “Y” and the “–>” for all the reasons in your chain/web.
If you have not already done so along the way, now is the time to address rebuttal. The Rebuttal might take at least three forms beyond summarizing the opposition arguments and whatever concessions to opposing strengths you need to grant. First, it is possible someone will argue your phenomenon (X) is not real or really happening; you would have pre-empted this already if you were thorough in point #1, above. Second, a critic might argue that your causes (the Ys) are not real – they did not really happen, etc. You would have addressed this with strong grounds. Third, a critic might argue that your connections (the –>s) are not real – thing X does not lead to the next thing. This would be the position of someone who might agree that Person H is poor and did commit a crime but would point out that most poor people do not commit crimes, so the causality is broken. You would have addressed that with strong backing.
An opponent may also offer a different set of causes. The writer George Will, for example, argues that college costs have primarily risen to capture the increased money available in federal and state student loans. More loan money –> students can spend more –> colleges will charge more.
You would need to be able to prove that Will has the causality almost exactly backward – the federal and state governments have converted much of their funding into loan programs, but that has resulted in less directly appropriated money (which you have already shown), and that leads to budget shortfalls, and that is where you came in. The amount the federal government has made available in Pell Grants, for instance, has had to increase to keep up with the lack of funding;[8] it is not the case that the increasing federal money is causing the rise; it is a result of the rise. The root cause is not greedy colleges, but parsimonious state legislatures. Just as with any other rebuttal, you must also be able to prove these kinds of claims, too.
Conclusion
Summarize what the readers have learned from your argument.
Suggest a next step or connect this causality to a larger issue. Now that the readers have learned this thing, what should they do with the knowledge? Support a realignment of state priorities? Look into alternate funding models for college?
End in some vivid way designed to stick in the readers’ minds; here some education or school-related reference seems suitable: “The next time you want to vent your frustrations about tuition, don’t blame your professor, but call your state senator, then maybe go for a relaxing swim in the campus’s new Olympic-size pool.” -
“Exploring the Theme of Stereotypes in American Born Chinese and Clap When You Land”
The book American born Chinese by Gene Luen & The book Clap When You Land – By Elizabeth Acevedo The content of the discussion post should be involved In this post, you will want to reference the whole of the book for both books and use multiple points of evidence to fully support your central questions and topics. Be thorough in your discussion and make sure to bring multiple perspectives and ideas to the table about the books ,Keep in mind this is a Summative Assessment grade and in order to earn full credit, you need to support your thinking fully and showcase insight that enhances your speaker′s voice. Focus on your big takeaways and not just plot detail–It is important to use the perfect balance of plot detail, your perspective and supportive quotes. Please respond to one peer post Below:
Connor Morris (American born Chinese) The graphic novel American Born Chinese, written by Gene Luen Yang, is a story capturing three connected perspectives that come into contact with familiar challenges. An idea throughout this one idea is that of stereotypes and the judgment some face. The three characters Jin Wang, Chin-Kee and the Monkey King are all on separate journeys through the book, and the interactions they face as individuals portray the ideas of stereotypes very well. Jin faced this concept as young as early education from his teacher and peers. Later on, however, he is still pressed by these ideas. On page 96, after Jin’s friends make some jokes about him some bullies walk by, and say “Hey I think (with a c instead of a t) it’s getting a little nippy out here”(Yang 96). Following this, the reader can observe Jin and his friends looking at the ground, awkwardly in silence. Following this page, Jin decides to perm his hair to try and be more like the character Danny, since Amelia likes him. These two closely paired moments show the adversity Jin and his friends face and that Jin is trying to fit in more for social approval.
For the Monkey King, he is made fun of early on by the other gods in heaven. So, after proving himself to all lower deities, he faces Tze-Yo-Tzuh and is overpowered. Following this, the monkey king is trapped under a pile of boulders with a seal forbidding his achieved powers separating himself from the other monkeys. When the legendary status monk, Wong Lai Tsao requires the Monkey King’s help by order of Tze-Yo-Tzuh. To escape the boulders and help the monk, the Monkey King accepts his true identity, and changes back to his original size to help the monk. The monkey king changing back into his original form shows that he has accepted who he truly has been all this time, even with the stereotypes received from others as being a monkey. Ex: Page 150 (Yang).
Chin-Kee is something else entirely, buddy is devious at times. He is the ultimate evil cousin as he makes Danny seem less smart, and ruins his reputation every year by coming to America and it is revealed later this is why Danny keeps changing schools after he visits. On page 202, the story shows two other random students saying “His spit got on me!” Followed by, “Dude, you’d better go get checked out for S.A.R.S.”(Yang 202). I didn’t know what S.A.R.S. stood for until I researched it, and it is a respiratory disease similar to Covid, from 2002 originating from Asia. Seeing how Chin-Kee sees dirty, rude, and weird, prompts the students to assume just because he is also Chinese he could be carrying a disease. While it does make sense that saliva would get you sick, the part about S.A.R.S. is specific to Chin-Kees culture. These three examples prove how each character goes through similar challenges when it comes to how others see them, and that the resolution is in accepting who you are. This is certainly true for Jin and the Monkey King, it turns out Chin-Kee’s character runs America, and I don’t he’s worried about getting into parties in heaven or impressing girls. -
Title: A Tale of Two Brothers: A Comparison of “The Red Convertible” by Louise Erdrich and “Fences” by August Wilson
Please write a compare/contrast essay on the short story “The Red Convertible” by
Louise Erdrich and the play “Fences” by August Wilson. Please follow the prompt on the included page. You can also follow the outline I have also included. For each of the three body paragraphs please include three quotes from either the short story or the play that support the thesis of the paper. There also has to be three outside sources used to help support the thesis, these can be quotes or a paraphrased section as long as it is in MLA format. Please include a work cited page as the last page with all the sources listed alphabetically with proper MLA formating.