Angelica Ocaña Rhayven Broome 15 November 2011.  The final chapter it deals with her race, ethnicity, and culture as a whole. She begins by discussing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Question Exploration Guide
Advertisements

WHERE TO NEXT? Using Reading Data. Group Learning Pathways.
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
A.
Borderlands La Frontera
At the Border, 1979 by Choman Hardi. Today we are learning to … Interpret and analyse Choman Hardi’s poem ‘At The Border, 1979’.
The Great Gatsby Chapter Seven. The Party is Over.
Fag Throughout the first half of the novel we, as readers, like Fag and her world view more and more. We often sympathise with the injustice she constantly.
Beaten into submission: The cycle of abuse. The scenario Imagine a young, beautiful and attractive women. She feels reasonably good about herself, she.
Power in ‘Of Mice & Men’ By Hannah & Joe. Slim Slim, with his "God-like eyes" whose “ear heard more than was said to him” and whose “slow speech had overtones.
S1: Pattern of mixed emotion manipulation In a moment you will read a short story. The main character is a girl in your age. Please read the story carefully.
Bell Work: Aug. 19 th Describe the the character Sheila Mant. Grab a Pathways book Turn in Signed Syllabus.
A Good Citizen of the United States
Introductory & Conclusion Paragraphs. How should we organize our ideas? c Introduction Conclusion Body Paragraphs.
English Author, Feminist, Essayist, Publisher, and Critic rohrbachlibrary.wordpress.com.
Expressing Your Emotions
‘Of Mice and Men’: Everything in the novel happens in cycles

Of Mice and Men All the characters in the novel are lonely. Choose three characters who are lonely and show how Steinbeck develops the theme of loneliness.
Uncle Tom’s Cabin Presentation by Robert Martinez Primary Source: War, Terrible War by Joy Hakim Images.
JENNIFER SMESTAD ERIN CROCKETT GIRESSE TCHEGHO Enrique’s Journey.
Module 1: Unit 1, Lesson 3 Inferring about character: Analyzing and discussing points of view (Chapter 2)
Can You Trust Your Perceptions? James J. Messina, Ph.D.
Anger Management Anger Management. IDENTIFICATION THOUGHTS FEELINGS ACTION.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
+ Education and Immigration PIC Team Project Summer 2015 Emily Riner- Costantino Janit Saechao Soledad Hernandez.
Dedication This book is dedicated to my mom and my stepfather for making me come to school. I wouldn’t of got through this semester without them.
Journal 1 Are you excited for school to start? Do you like English? Why/Why not? What did you do this summer? What is the American Dream? Does it still.
Family Interview Nichole Salvador EEX 5051 June 29, 2009.
Paragraph Writing Step 1: Topic Sentence 1.The topic sentence MUST be one sentence in length and present the central argument of the paragraph.
Push and Pull Factors in “El Norte” and “Lupita Manana”
Chapter 4: Section 3-pg. 89. Examples of loss can include death of a family member, the divorce of one’s parents, the death of a pet, a breakup with a.
Jennifer: Mother's Day
BOOKS THAT MADE A DIFFERENCE TO… Amanda Blaha. Can reading really make a difference? I have never really been big into reading. But, once I find a book.
Search For My Tongue.
Coping Skills.
CONFLICT TYPES. Before Conflict Protagonist – Main Character the story follows, usually the good guy in a story. Antagonist – The character who opposes.
Conflict is a natural occurrence in every human beings life and is usually viewed as a negative improper way of dealing with situations. I believe in.
Laura Williams.  Jerome David Salinger was born in 1919 and was raised in New York  The Catcher in the Rye was published in 1951  Struggled with the.
Sight Words.
High Frequency Words.
Match the words on the left with the definitions on the right: Should we legalize brothels? 1. a prostitute a. someone paid to go out socially with other.
Ethnic Identity By: Khansau Amadu.
A Raisin In The Sun English 9
Can You Trust Your Perceptions? James J. Messina, Ph.D.
Dealing with Other Nations Chapter 10 A Changing Nation.
Introductory & Conclusion Paragraphs
Warm up - Getting started! In groups of 3 or 4, freeze frame a moment from a rite of passage, for the rest of the class to guess, e-refs for the best examples.
CANAH MCNEAL Title: Revolution Author: Jennifer Connelly Publisher: Delacorte Press Year of Publication: 2010.
QUESTIONNAIRE: TRUE OR FALSE?. 1. PEOPLE WHO TALK ABOUT SUICIDE DO NOT ACTUALLY KILL THEMSELVES. False Most people who die by suicide talk with at least.
Introduction Literature as an art can be explain in different ways One approach tries to emphasize the role of reader Another approach tries to emphasize.
Title and Author Photo of book or some other Relevant illustration.
1 John Steinbeck & Of Mice and Men. 2 Topics of Discussion John Steinbeck’s Biography America in the Great Depression and Dust Bowl The Novel: Of Mice.
Chapter 14: All Things Light, and All Things Dark.
A View From The Bridge By Arthur Miller The Plot in sections 1.Alfieri Alfieri tells us that he is a lawyer. His role in the play seems to be to introduce.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
Gathering Blue Chapter 2
REPRESENTATION CLASS DISCUSSION ANSWERS
Search For My Tongue.
Fry Word Test First 300 words in 25 word groups
Racism.
Conflict in Literature
Second Grade Sight Words
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
Literary Device: Personification
Literature Review Project: The Bluest Eye
TKAM Close Reading Questions
Presentation transcript:

Angelica Ocaña Rhayven Broome 15 November 2011

 The final chapter it deals with her race, ethnicity, and culture as a whole. She begins by discussing a “cosmic race”, one that consists of all races, an intermixed species that resembles those people on the borderlands. It resembles them that they are a mix of several cultures, races, and ethnicities. However, this idea is hard to sort out because one struggles to find a harmony within their self when they have a mixed background tugging them constantly in different directions. She describes this as standing on banks of a river, shouting questions, and challenging ideas of one another. Trying to tear one down to take it over is not the solution.  She says that for this to work they have to rebel against the ideology of having one right and one wrong, and have two separate ideas alongside each other in harmony. If this can’t be achieved then the ideas should simply move on from this battle between sides all together. She explains that in order to get this type of freedom, one must move from critical thinking, moving to a single goal, and move to divergent thinking, and working towards a whole perspective that includes rather than excludes. She describes how the new mestiza must cope by learning to tolerate the wrongness of her people and humbleness.  She puts herself as the a mestiza, a lesbian, and a feminist she claims no race or ethnicity, but all races and ethnicities because she’s a member of all of these groups. She explains that she and her people have not melted in the pot, but rather stuck out and they have become a separate group of Americans. She knows that someday her people will be a real ethnicity with real culture like it had been in the past. That day will come again.

 Gloria explains in this chapter that for them to unite they have to rebel. Do you think she is targeting women or men.  Now that this novel is finished, do you think Gloria was biased in her book, or she has the right to say her opinion bluntly?

 “I'm that far land where I was born intense nostalgia invades my thoughts and see us so sad and lonely leaf in the wind which would mourn, I would die of feeling.”  This is translated in English.  She describes her homeland in need of help. That it cries of pain and suffering. It seems troublesome to her. She puts her emotions into this poem.

 In this poem, she describes the life of a normal Hispanic women who works all day. that gets no respect, men spit on her and belittle. She describe one part as looking at her hands thick and calloused like a man. That shows how hard she and her people work. Especially as females.

 Cultures is self-explanatory. It describes Gloria the author as a young women. Helping out the family, doing what women should be doing. She said that her brother’s never helped women worked was beneath the. She describes that she would overturn the culture, that she would make a change.

 This poem describes a journey a group of men are trying to attempt  As they go through the torture of having to deal with fear and terrible weather they are trying to reach their goal of illegally crossing the border for their family  They hope to find two things: papers that will label them as legal in the U.S and Labor to obtain money for their families left back in Mexico

 ‘when I hear the words “corran muchachos” I run back to the car, ducking, see the glistening faces, arms outflung, of the Mexicanos running headlong through the fields kicking up clouds of dirt’ (146, Anzaldua).  This quote can be seen as an emphasize to this poem because it says how the illegal immigrants have to run (from officers) and live in fear.

 In this poem we read about how an immigrant from Mexico made it to a ‘field of a ranchito in Tejas’ (154, Anzaldua)  What do you think ‘…caught in the net along with the paloma’ (154, Anzaldua). means?  Why do you think it is this poem is titled: A Sea of Cabbages?

 The narrator throughout this poem seems to be a land owner who is asking immigrants for rent. If they do not pay he seems to threaten them with death.  The landowner seems to abuse the immigrant family  What are some quotes you can find that can demonstrate the abuse?

 This poem is very graphic about a woman  This is a difficult time she is going through, why do you think out of all the poems so far, they all talk about a male and there is this one about a female?  Why do you think there is so much pain portrait leading to a tomb?