Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott focuses on four sisters; Jo, Meg, Beth, and Amy March that are a part of a very poor, humble family. While their father is off at war, they are left with their loving mother at home encouraging them to be a better person and the better version of themselves. As all four girls go through love and loss, they discover that they are truly brave and courageous. One very important major event was when the March sisters struggle to improve their various flaws as they grow into adults. Jo dreams of becoming a great writer and does not want to become a conventional adult woman. I would tell my friend that this book can make you very sentimental and it can make you think that even when people tell you that you cannot …show more content…
Jo March displays good and bad traits in equal measure, which makes Jo a very unusual character in the novel. Jo’s bad traits, her rebelliousness, anger, and outspoken ways, do not make her unappealing, instead they suggest her humanity and her attitude towards everything. Jo is a very optimistic character in the novel. She wants to have the character traits as a male by working and getting and actual study in college which is a masculine trait. In the novel, Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott, it states, “I want to do something splendid before I go into my castle, something heroic or wonderful.” This shows that Jo has plans to actually get somewhere in life. She wants to accomplish something good in life before something happens to …show more content…
Jo, during the book, did not want to be referred or compared to a female. In her own personal thoughts, she was frustrated in female and male expectations. She wanted to be able to earn a living, for example a job made specifically for men. There were also times where Laurie didn’t want to be a man. He wanted to pursue music which was a feminine pursuit not a masculine pursuit. Jo and Laurie both wanted to do opposite of what they were supposed to do but being in the 19th century American society, there had to be specific jobs and tasks for each gender type. In the novel, Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott, it states, “How silly!” said Jo. “Let him be a musician if he wants to, and not plague his life out sending him to college, when he hates to go.” (pg. 53) This strongly demonstrated that like Jo, she wanted to back up the idea of Laurie having a musical ability that was for women, not
The purpose of my essay is to explore how different social backgrounds and the social norms that follow affect the personality of two fictive characters and encourage them to break out of their station to find an identity. The protagonists Holden Caulfield in J.D. Salinger’s novel The Catcher in the Rye and Tambudzai in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s novel Nervous Conditions are both victims of social norms. Therefore, the foundation of this essay was to analyze the character’s social background, which has influenced their personalities, behavior and aspirations, and consequently their opposing actions against society. Holden Caulfield is an American adolescent during the period after the Second World War.
"The Boston Girl”, by Anita Diamant is a story about a young girl, Addie, living in a rough neighborhood, who spends time with Miss Chevalier. Miss Chevalier is portrayed as a stuck up and bossy woman through the beginning of the excerpt, and gradually becomes someone Addie cares for. Diamant progressively builds compassion within Miss Chevalier as she and Addie spend time together. Diamant builds compassion in Miss Chevalier by having her go out of her way to compliment Addie, this shows the reader sparks of compassion. As Addie and Miss Chevalier bond, Addie's confidence boosts as Miss Chevalier mentions how Addie has gumption.
Instead of focusing on their TVs, these people should be opened to wonders of the world around them, like Faber and Clarisse, so they are able to see what is truly important. We learned from Faber, a character where the author’s voice comes through to the reader, that Montag’s society was missing some very important aspects due to their obsession with physical things. One thing that is missing is quality. Faber describes this using books saying, “they have quality. And what does the word quality mean?
Name: Eva Wadley Block: 4/8 Title: Louisa May Alcott Paragraph 1: Introduction Louisa May Alcott has written many books, her inspiration for writing them is her family, friends, neighbors. Her book Little Women was based on her three other sisters, Abigail, Elizabeth, and Anna. Louisa was responsible at a young age, and she provided for her family at fifteen. Even though she did not have the easiest childhood she got through it.
The title “To Kill a Mockingbird” written by Harper Lee, regard to how it is a sin to kill a mockingbird, because all they do is sing. Atticus told the kids they can shoot as much blue jays as they desire, but not to shoot any mockingbirds for that reasons, because mockingbird do not harm nor do they bother anyone. In this novel, there are three main mockingbird, Tom Robinson, Jem, and Boo “Arthur” Radley. Tom Robinson was just an innocent black male accused of raping a white woman named Mayella Violet Ewell, Mr.Ewell oldest kid. Although all evidences point to Tom being not guilty, he was still convicted guilty because back in the days of 1930s in Maycomb, Alabama, everyone would pick a white person words over a black person word any day
So, she decides to pack and head out to London. “She had the quickest fancy, a gift like her brother’s, for the tune of words. Like him, she had a taste for the theatre” (Woolf, 365), and because of this Judith stands at a theatre door, awaiting to act and to be a part of the theatre. But instead “Men laughed in her face” (Woolf, 365), and even mocked her gender stating that no women could ever be in the theatre, let alone be an actress. This is Mary’s way of showing us how men view women, and how women were unable to get a job doing anything men were hired to do.
Most girls were fully bipedal and could do many other human things. But at stage two, there was already separation between the successful and the unsuccessful girls. Jeanette was the most hated of them all. At this stage Clausette had begun to learn one of the most prominent human characteristics, jealousy. “Then she would sing out the standard chorus, “Why can’t you be more like your sister Jeanette?
To Kill A Mockingbird Literary Analysis Throughout To Kill A MockingBird, by Harper Lee there are many acts of courage. This is shown in Atticus Finch, Jem Finch, and Boo Radley. Atticus shows the most courage in the book but all three of these characters show true courage in some way, shape, or form. Boo Radley showed a lot of courage, but he was not in the storyline as much as Atticus. Throughout To Kill A Mockingbird, courage is defined as standing up for people and doing what’s right.
The main character of the book Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson, Melinda, has a traumatic past. As a result, she is now suffering from the mental disorder depression. She has most of the major symptoms, three of which are self esteem issues or dysmorphia, withdrawal from friends and family, and lack of motivation or enthusiasm. These are all normal emotions that everyone experiences sometimes. But when a person feels like this every single day, there are bigger problems.
One of the main protagonists, Mama, is telling her son the reasons for what she did to help her family’s struggle. She says, “When it gets like that in life-you just got to do something different, push on out and do something bigger....” (588). The character Mama gets a check from the insurance company for $10,000 dollars due to her husband’s death and she doesn't know what to do with it. In the play, A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, Mama is motivated to/by the chance to get her family a house.
In Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” demonstrates the personal growth of the dynamic protagonist Louise Mallard, after hearing news of her husband’s death. The third-person narrator telling the story uses deep insight into Mrs. Mallard’s thoughts and emotions as she sorts through her feelings after her sister informs her of her husband’s death. During a Character analysis of Louise Mallard, a reader will understand that the delicate Mrs. Mallard transforms her grief into excitement over her newly discovered freedom that leads to her death. As Mrs. Mallard sorts through her grief she realizes the importance of this freedom and the strength that she will be able to do it alone.
The feminist theory is based on finding and exposing negative attitudes toward women in literature. Their goal is to reveal the reality of how women get portrayed in literature due to the fact that most literature presents an inaccurate view of women and are most of the time minimized. In the Catcher in the Rye there is a few female characters such as Sunny, the girls at the club, and Sally who are put in situations that show nothing but stereotypes and puts them in a bad spot throughout the novel. J.D Salinger decides to put some of the female characters in situations that can cause those who read this novel to think bad or leave readers with a bad image of women. This bad image on women is due to the fact that he decided to portray some of
Essay 1 Date Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird “To kill a Mockingbird” is a novel in which Harper Lee, the author, presents forth various themes among them the unheard theme of social molarity. Harper dramatically uses a distinctive language through Scout, who is the narrator of the story to bring out the difficulties faced by children living in the southern Alabama town of Maycomb. Harper has dramatically displayed use of bildungsroman throughout the story; this helped to give the story a unique touch of a child’s view to bring out a different type of humor and wit. It has also used to develop and thrive the theme of morality in the society.
The novel "Little Women " portraits the difficult journey from childhood to adulthood from four teenaged sisters Jo, Meg, Beth, and Amy called the March girls, and how they survive growing up in a difficult time highlighting the inferiority of women as compared to men with the ideas explored throughout the novel being women 's strive between familial duty and personal maturation, the menace of gender labeling, and the need of work. As the novel develops it is fascinating that Louisa May Alcott writes "Little Women," reflecting on her own life and many of the experience of growing up during the nineteenth century. Jo 's character is a replication of Alcott herself with her speaking directly through the protagonist. Social expectations played a important role for women with the idea in which you had to marry young and create a new family which Meg does; be submissive and devoted to one’s guardians and own family, that Beth is; focus on one’s art, pleasure, and people, as Amy does at first; and struggle to live both a dedicated family life and a significant accomplished life, as Jo does. Both Beth and Meg obey to society’s expectations of the role that women should play, Amy and Jo at first try to get away from these limitations and grow their uniqueness.
When they were not accepted by society like men were. Also not all people understand an argument immediately. The author starts by explaining her fictional story and introducing her argument. She starts off by saying“It would have been impossible,completly and entirely, for any woman to have written the plays of shakespeare in the age of shakespeare. Let me imagine, since facts are so hard to come by, what would have happened had shakespeare had a wonderfully gifted sister, called Judith, let us say”.(Woolf)