Preview

Pride In The Emperor's New Circle

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
499 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Pride In The Emperor's New Circle
Is pride something that is passed down from generation to generation or is having pride in ourselves and others an emotional feeling that we only have control over? I believe that pride can be both ways if I was around others that voiced and showed their pride it would feel normal to acknowledge my own pride and the pride I have in others. Pride is a spiritual feeling, and if you lose your pride you lose everything theoretically, you just don’t feel like you’re worthy of respect.

In Europe most of the Kings and Queens have pride in what their families have become over the generations. But if someone should come along who was actually better than themselves at ruling, they wouldn’t believe it to be possible because of their heritage they have been raised to believe that no one is as good as themselves. In the movie “The Emperor's New Groove”. The main character Kuzco is a cocky emperor that is always busy with people from villages coming to him and asking him for favors. Yzma the main villain in the movie poisons Kuzco’s drink with a potion that turns Kuzco into a llama, then he
…show more content…
Walter realizes how important this house is to his mother and tries to reassure Karl that he and his family have no intention of causing any problems and that all his family wants is to be good neighbors’. Karl doesn’t seem to understand or he just doesn’t care that this house is important to the Younger family. Walter finally realizes that Karl doesn’t care how his family feels, so Walter doesn’t hesitate to kick Karl out. Walter is finally able to understand that money isn’t what makes everything right in the world, it’s more important to have the love and respect of family and friends and to have pride in yourself and your

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Walter Lee is the head of the family and in the beginning of the play he seems to be extremely bitter. He works for a rich white man as a chauffeur. This easily makes him bitter on the inside because he sees everyday what it is like to be rich. You can tell this because he tells Mama that he sees the rich white boys sitting down to eat every day and he knows they are talking about business or something about closing a million dollar deal. Walter Lee has had many business ideas in the past but they all seem to flop to the ground in a hurry like humpty dumpty. When he comes up with the idea of going into partnership with some men to open a liquor store his Mama is upset with him. He eventually convinces her into giving him a cut of the money from the insurance company after she buys a house for them to move in to. When he gives the money to his partner for the business, his partner runs with the money and is not seen again. This makes Walter very upset and he goes off the deep end for a short amount of time. The need of money may be important but it is definitely not worth losing your family over. After the money is lost, Walter invites the white man back to the apartment to discuss his offer and plans to accept the bribe to his family for them not to move. When the man gets to the apartment, Walter changes his mind and tells the…

    • 519 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Younger Family, including Walter, were very unlike other middle-class families. First of all, most of the families that were portrayed had greater economic opportunities. The income of the family was a communal effort, yet it was Mama and her check that established her as the matriarch of the family. Like his family, individually, Walter also suffered…

    • 179 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    raisin in the sun

    • 357 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the book A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, Act 2 Scene 3 Ruth started of the scene by dancing in in the family’s house. She’s very excited that they are going to be moving out in a week, to live in Clybourne Park. The man (Karl Linder) arrived at the family’s house and he told the family why they shouldn’t move in or buy the house in Clybourne Park. He stated to them that the younger ones will destroy their community because they are black, all the residents that were in his community were white. Karl kept trying to find ways for them to not move, so he then tried to offer them more money than they were to pay for the house in exchange for not moving to Clybourne Park. Walter, Ruth and Berneatha had all got upset because of what Karl tried to offer them. Walter then told Mr. Linder that they will not accept the offer and he had demanded Mr. Linder to leave.…

    • 357 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although not broke, the Youngers are considered barely above poverty. With little income, and one young boy to care for, the household wealth does not hold up well. Even though Walter works as a chauffeur, he does what he can on his meager remuneration. Obviously, most people would hate being a chauffeur for many years and Walter is no exception. Later on in the play, Walter defies his work by staying out and going to the bar instead. This seeds the start of a long string of bad decisions that ultimately lead to Walter’s job being on the line. This defiance, developed within Walter at young age due to his fiery and explicit personality, will begin to greatly affect how he reacts to certain situations and his overall decision making process, furthering the risk on each choice Walter makes. Henceforth, Walter would rather drink his problems away than work through them. This will impact Walter’s goal of obtaining a middle income lifestyle for his…

    • 659 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The young boy, Travis, has to sleep in the living room, many of the other family members share rooms, and the entire family shares the place with other families. It is even mentioned that they have to share the bathroom, which also happens to be outside of the apartment, with some neighbors (LTHE 725). Overall the reader can tell that the Youngers do not have a very rich lifestyle, and living in such tight quarters with so many people is sure to get irritating. To make living conditions even tighter, the audience later finds out that Ruth is pregnant. The audience gets a glimpse into how worrisome it is for the family that there will be someone else packed into the small home, and to have another person that also needs a lot of monetary care. Beneatha, Walter’s sister who is also living with them, even made a comment about where the baby was going to sleep, and sarcastically said the roof (LTHE 743). That made Ruth feel even worse, and the audience finds out that she already put down a down payment to get an abortion (LTHE 752). The lack of money has even lead the family to consider abortion, which is something that, by many people, is considered to be ethnically…

    • 1390 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Raisin in the Sun

    • 589 Words
    • 3 Pages

    4.) The money symbolizes many things for the family like a way out of the ghetto. Walter no longer wishes to be a chauffeur and a servant to the white…

    • 589 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Walter’s life takes a traumatic turn when he learns that he has lung cancer and is only expected to live another few years with treatment. His only concern upon learning this is the financial burden this will place upon his family. They were already tight on money with Walter Jr.’s medical bills and the upcoming birth of a second child. Because of this, Walter initially refuses chemotherapy, claiming he wants to live out his days in the comfort of his own home with his family. However, when he is convinced by his…

    • 5967 Words
    • 24 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pride is a deep pleasure of satisfaction from one’s own achievement but is having too much pride a problem in today’s society? There are different kinds of ways to express one’s pride such as through an organization, sport, education or themselves. Imagine, a senior who recently been accepted to their dream college, University of Austin. That student will wear all the UT gear they can possibly find and represent their soon to be school. There are alumni’s who wear their college rings next to their wedding rings and even drivers who have the license plate of their graduating class and college. Even the people from Houston have pride to show off where they are from. Therefore, they throw up the “H-Town” sign up in the air or wear Houston gear of our sports or even skyline. Everybody has a bit…

    • 1285 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Big Walter Masculinity

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Mama says that big Walter “worked himself to death” just so he can support his family. Walter has troubles supporting his family because he is trying to be the best man in his eyes which is hurting the family. Walter wants to be a rich successful man and can give whatever his family wants. Walter sets his mind on his liquor store and he will do whatever it takes for it. Walter wants to have this liquor really bad that the money Mama gave him and spent it all on his store and didn’t even get the store.…

    • 832 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Secondly, Lorraine Hansberry tries to give people the inspiration to be proud of who they are. In the book, Walter Younger constantly states how unfair the Blacks are from the Whites. Also, in “Scene Three”, the Youngers put an offer on a new home, but a man, named Karl Lindner, tries to prevent that. Karl is from the town they plan to move to, and is a part of management. He goes on to tell the family that because they are Black, the Whites in the town will not be happy and cause a riot. Walter Younger proceeds to tell him, “This is my son, and he makes the sixth generation our family in this country. And we have all thought about your offer… And we have decided to move into our house because my father—my father—he earned it for us brick by brick.” This was Walter sticking up for his race and his family. Another situation the Youngers have pride in is money. When Lindner offers the family money to not move into town, Mama does not want to take it, unlike Walter. Mama tells Walter, “Son—I come from five generations of people who was slaves and sharecroppers—but ain’t nobody in my family never let nobody pay ‘em no money that was a way of telling us we wasn’t fit to walk the earth. We ain’t never been that poor…We ain’t never been that—dead inside.” Mama shares her pride for keeping her and her family stable, and there being a boundary to asking others. Although Beneatha and Walter are adults, Mama continues to try to teach them life…

    • 1483 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At this point of the play Walter is coming to realization that he is doing a lousy job of supporting the family and he truly believes he can do better. He thinks that in order to do better though he needs money and because of this he believes "life is money." Lena replies to Walter shamefully, "You ain't satisfied or proud of nothing we done" (). Obviously, Walter, not being happy about where he is in life, upsets Mama greatly. Lena and Big Walter had worked really hard to provide a future for their children and now Walter is ashamed of their rundown apartment and lower-class lifestyle. Walter longs for a bigger and better future. Even though her children are losing pride of their lives, Lena continues to be proud of where she and her family have…

    • 611 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Walter was so desperate he often fights and argues with Ruth, Mama, and Beneatha. Also a thing that makes him like that is the racism at that time he often see who the White people from high social status had everything they want, kids attended different schools, neighborhoods were separate from the other, that also made him be like that. He was so desperate he inks to a new low and calls Mr. Lindner back, saying that he'll accept the Money, a think his family was not agree with. This is…

    • 786 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Critical Lens Essay

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The theme expressed in this story is the primacy family. Success is measured by the quality of family life. Making money and having a prestigious career are important, but not as important as maintaing a happy home undergirded with love. Walter's eagerness to live a life of wealth brought not only him but his family down to a poor financial status. His action had a consequence, and in this case he was not the only one to pay for it. However, the family…

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Money corrupts Walter but his obsession is out of love, he wants the best for his family, wants his son to become something more than him. Ruth urges Mama to give Walter a chance about his investment scheme. She feels like “something is happening” (page 42) between the couple and that Walter “needs this chance”(page 42) to restore his self-esteem and repair the rift in their marriage. Mama eventually gives Walter a chance to proceed with his investment. Things begin to lighten up between Walter and Ruth. Walter is finally feeling financially secure and invites Ruth to the movies. Like young lovers, they felt remembering old…

    • 620 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Many people think self-respect is having pride. Having pride is the same thing as having self-respect for yourself, but some people can take pride as being better than someone else. There are a few examples of pride being portrayed as self-respect. One of the examples of pride can be, you got an A on a test you studied for and it brought you joy. Another example of pride can be, you feel satisfaction from maybe helping someone in need, or being able to finish something.…

    • 203 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays