"Analysis of disabled and refugee blues" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Blue Raccoon

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    off course. Most of these ships were recovered‚ but one such ship drifted so off course that it could not be recovered. The name of the ship was the Blue Raccoon. The number of passengers was twenty. It went off course while going on‚ what should have been‚ a routine trip to mars. On the way it when off course. Over the next Twenty million years the Blue Raccoon drifted through the cosmos‚ until it came upon a planet. This planet was green and had life‚ much like early earth. This planet long forgotten

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    the Oxford Dictionary‚ loss is defined as "the fact or process of losing something or someone". "The Photograph" by Peter Kocan‚ "Disabled" by Wilfred Owen and "Dear..." by Paul Cameron all express the idea of loss in relation to war. Kocan’s poem‚ set in World War 1 involves the death of a soldier whose life is remembered through a photograph and similarly‚ “Disabled” recalls the existence of a soldier confined to a wheelchair after losing his legs in battle. In contrast‚ “Dear...” focuses upon

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    When it came to social inequalities‚ the African American community relied on drugs and music to overlook their struggles. “Sonny’s Blues” by James Baldwin was a short story about living in poverty in Harlem. In the beginning of the story‚ the narrator discovers that his brother Sonny was imprisoned for selling and possessing drugs and mentions the lack of communication between them. The narrator begins to have flashbacks of their childhood and his parents throughout the story. Before Sonny’s imprisonment

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    Power Outages Louis Armstrong’s “Black and Blue” uses simple questions for someone to recognize both he and Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man are comparable. To be comfortable and confident in your own skin is a recurring problem for people of color and seems to always be brought up in today’s society. Louis Armstrong goes on to say that “his only sin is his skin” and asks “how will it end?” (Armstrong). Different skin tones have separated all humans to a point of no belonging. Invisible is convinced

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    varsity blues

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    Ross Lodge Wheeler English 1302.004 3 October 2014 Varsity Blues In the movie “Varsity Blues‚” not everyone can appreciate what a small town Friday night feels like. Living life underneath a microscope. The whole town in the stands. You can practically fell them breathing down your neck criticizing every move‚ every play the team makes. That’s what it felt like for the boys from West Canan. No matter how tough things get you can always stand up for yourself‚ friends‚ and family. Growing

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    Funeral Blues

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    Funeral Blues Summary Stanza 1 Lines 1-2 Stop all the clocks‚ cut off the telephone‚ Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone‚ The song begins with a series of harsh commands : stop the clocks! Cut off the telephones! The speaker sounds forceful and even angry. These seem like physical representations of time and communication to us. He wants everything to just stop. In the next line‚ he ask for silence. He wants dogs to stop barking too. On the other hand‚ the speaker is addressing an audience

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    This means that she wants the Europeans to send those homeless to her and that she will “lift my lamp beside the golden door.” What she is saying that she will show them the way to America for liberty and freedom and they will be welcomed. How the Refugee in America reflects the American dream is by showing how it is the promise of freedom but is it true for everyone. The poem is a African American and how tells what freedom and liberty mean to him. He’s says “There are words

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    Refugees A refugee is a person who leaves his or her country due to a well-founded fear of persecution because of his or her race‚ religion‚ nationality‚ political views‚ or membership in a particular social group. Once a host country accepts an asylum seeker to become a refugee‚ the host county has a moral obligation to ease the transition from a refugee to a fully participating citizen. This may include subsidized housing‚ job training‚ and other financial and social services. This is good for

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    Throughout the essay‚ “Becoming Disabled” by Rosemarie Garland-Thomas‚ her main claim that she argues is that she wants the disabled community to be politicized in the eyes of society. First‚ Garland-Thomas talks about politicizing disabilities into a movement. She compares and contrasts movements for race and sexual orientations to the movements about disability (2). Disability movements have not gained as much attention as race or sexual orientation movements because so many Americans do not realize

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    Margaret Atwood is famous for being as a novelist‚ many of her poems were inspired by fairy tales. In her work the readers can always find traces about woman: their powers‚ their status‚ their spiritual world. Combine the two significant traits‚ “The Blue beard’s Egg” is a short story which retell a traditional classic fairy rale that originated from Charles Perrault’s “Bluebeard”. Atwood takes a modern peek of the old tale. In Perrault’s version‚ Bluebeard’s new wives would always break their promises

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