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Gwendolyn Brooks grew up in Chicago, where his family moved when she was six years old. Gwendolyn Brooks takes his mirror and sample. Reflected in his poems, stories and feelings, without knowing it, you always have company. Gwendolyn Brook...
wear words, consume alcohol and have premarital sex. They think that these things are cool and necessary to be a part of society. Brooks states that these people put their lives at risk doing these things and the consequences of their actio...
and Patricia Smith’s What It’s Like to Be a Black Girl (For Those of You Who Aren’t) are powerful and unique reflections of racism at its highest. The most prominent things portrayed in both stories are the black race, racism, and the cult...
the theme of the stories, What’s It Like To Be a Black Girl by Patricia Smith and The Welcome Table by Alice Walker. Each of the stories talks about discrimination of some form. The main character in each is a protagonist black female. Whe...
John Smith? The following is an excerpt from a longer piece written by Benjamin Franklin about 1784. Franklin clearly does not regard Native Americans as "savages": he is using the term for ironic effect. The "savages" are, in fact, as civi...
James Daisy Miller, written in the late 18th century, who tend to be more internally simplistic. The modern literature influence of Hemingway's idea of a hero Closely related to the Stoic concept of "tough guy" that has been used to describ...
the life of an ordinary man. A man who is destined to face numerous adversities; which will cause him considerable distress and will eventually, lead him to master his fears. A hero is the story of a man, who faces his greatest fears and co...