Preview

The Problem of Place in America and My Neighborhood: the Breakdown

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
622 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Problem of Place in America and My Neighborhood: the Breakdown
"The Problem of Place in America" and "My Neighborhood": The Breakdown of
Community

WR 121 Paper #2

In Ray Oldenburg's "The Problem of Place in America" and Ishmael Reed's
"My Neighborhood" the authors express their dissatisfaction with the community.
Oldenburg focuses on the lack of a "third place" and the effects of consumerism on the suburbs, while Reed recalls his experience with prejudice communities.
Their aim is to identify problems in our society that they find to be a problem.
Although neither of these authors offer solutions, the fact that these problems are addressed is enough. Some basic similarities between these two authors is they are both attempting to identify problems in our society today. There are many that are ailing our society at this time, yet I agree with them in their deductions. It seems that they have addressed two of the main ills today, prejudice and consumerism. These keep our communities from becoming unified. Fear is one of the prevalent themes in both essays. In Oldenburg's essay the suburbanite fears the unknown, his neighbors. People feel threatened by the size of the communities and they do not know anyone. These is due partly to consumerism, which keeps people indoors. Reed was feared because of the color of his skin.
Dogs would bark at him as he walked by, cops would enter his own home to harass him, people would yell racial slurs, and he was even watched closely to make sure that he did not abduct a child off the street. These fears are a result of the media and our society telling us to fear certain types of people.
Television often portrays the black man as a dope dealing slander who hangs out on corners with a forty of "Old E." Soon people begin to believe all that they hear and begin to discriminate against others. One glaring difference in the two authors essays is that they both address the same problem yet they touch on differing aspects. Oldenburg talks about the deterioration of the suburbs. One

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    In the first chapter the authors begin by laying out their thesis: place matters (Dreier, Mollenkopf, & Swanstrom 1). The authors look at three different Congressional districts to show how place is different in metropolitan American. Those places include "poor central-city in the South Bronx of New York", "a district that spans the West Side of Cleveland and its suburbs", and "a wealthy outer-ring suburban district west of Chicago" (Dreier, Mollenkopf, & Swanstrom 3).…

    • 2690 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Thomas Wood Murder Case

    • 769 Words
    • 4 Pages

    They knocked his door down and had flashlights shining all over his house and his family asking if they saw anything.…

    • 769 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “It’s a great neighborhood,” a testament to Clybourne Park said by former resident, Kevin Taylor. Kevin was a small man, about 5’8”, grey haired and with a black bowler hat. He wears navy blue slacks, a red button up-shirt with a blazer over it. He walks with a slump in his step as though something is wrong but he doesn’t quite know what. He hadn’t lived in Clybourne Park for five years, moving out in July of 2011, during a period many refer to as heavy gentrification. In 2016 Kevin came from Englewood Chicago, the location of his current home, back to Clybourne Park, to retrieve a box of personal items, he thinks were left at his old house. On his way he stopped by where a favorite place of his, a basketball court, used to be…

    • 825 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Paul Revere S True Ride

    • 748 Words
    • 3 Pages

    also stayed in the city, tended his business interests and as secretly as possible, kept an eye on the…

    • 748 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Anyone Lived in a Pretty How Town by E.E. Cummings tells the life cycle of townspeople and of one unknown couple. The subtle language choices, inverted syntax and use of repetition make this poem stunningly effective. "Anyone" is the protagonist, who is disliked by the "women and men" or "everyones" of the town, because he is different and follows his own routine. This poem tells the love story of Anyone and Noone. "Anyone" is used as a proper noun,this person isn't spoken about as if he were just anyone, and that he appreciated and valued his and Anyone's individuality. Using 'Anyone' as a single specific character reinforces the idea that this person was isolated from the rest of his town. The use of inverted syntax shows that Anyone is the protagonist of this poem, set in a "pretty how" town. "Pretty how" seems to describe the superficial lifestyle lived by the members of this town. Anyone is a colorful character in a town of black and white.…

    • 673 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Life in the ghetto

    • 673 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In “The Ghetto Made Me Do It” an essay by Francis Flaherty, Flaherty explains the effects of growing up and living in the ghetto and the legal establishment affiliated with the ghetto. Felicia Morgan was born and raised in the ghetto; she experienced things in her first 12 years that some people will never experience in a lifetime. Growing up in a violent world can have an emotional and mental toll on anybody and it took a toll on Morgan. Her mother was a drug addict and one time set her father on fire. Morgan had witnessed her parents eating dinner with guns next to their plates at age of seven and was raped at age twelve by her landlord. “So perhaps it’s not too surprising that Morgan, as a teenager, committed six armed robberies and one intentional homicide in the space of 17 minutes in October 1991” (Flaherty 163).…

    • 673 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Gentrification in my city of baton rouge is a good thing because it creates job opportunity and it gets rid of things that make our city look bad such as graffiti. Although some people may disagree thats gentrification is a good thing, I have a number of reasons as to why it is. Businesses are created which help people which fixes financial problems and puts people in homes and off the streets. Its gets rid of graffiti makes our city look more attractable and brings tourists that provides us with money which goes towards building our city up better. It also sets a better for our children to keep the city looking right.…

    • 140 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Miranda, Lin Manuel. In the Heights. The Fabulous Fox Theatre St. Louis . 12 Nov. 2009.…

    • 1951 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    An Essay On Ghettos

    • 659 Words
    • 3 Pages

    There were many ghettos that were filled with hundreds of thousands of jews in the biggest ghettos and their life was not easy. They had barely any food and most of them didn't have jobs. They sold their clothes for food. They were just trying to survive with basically nothing. In this paper i will tell you about what all the Jewish people had to go threw.…

    • 659 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Suburbs: The Dark Age

    • 772 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Before the time the superhero’s group came along, Applevillage experience the Dark Age. Gangsters, known as The Suburbs, ruled the Dark Age. The Suburbs consisted of three nasty villains: Stan LEES, DePECTIcon, and HEMoss. These three forces of evil worked together to corrupt and sabotage all the apples in Applevillage, the only food and drink source as far as the eye can see. Two young villagers, Luna and Juan, needed to survive of off these nasty apples, and apple juice so unfiltered, it shouldn’t even be called apple juice.…

    • 772 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    From the outside, one would think that these vendors make the neighborhood a little sketchy, when in reality they actually enrich the community providing order and peace of mind to many regulars in the neighborhood. These people worry where to go to the bathroom, where to find their next meal, and have to deal with many worries and hardships. There are hierarchies, similar to class, within these diverse vendor communities where some are more respected than others depending on the work they do. These people are often public characters that “…take responsibility, not because they’re paid to, but because they have a talent for it…they may not have any ambition to be a public character, but it comes…

    • 151 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dahmers Confession

    • 2566 Words
    • 11 Pages

    He stated that it is obvious that he realized that they were wrong because he went to great time and expense to try to cover up his crimes. He stated that he used quite a bit of caution by setting up alarm systems in his apartment, that being In the outer door, the sliding door leading to his hallway bathroom and bedroom, and his bedroom door. He stated that he set up a fake video camera and told other homosexuals that he had brought to his apartment that it automatically turned on if his door opened up without the alarm being turned off. He stated that this was all done in order to keep people from entering into his apartment and discovering the evidence of his criminal act.…

    • 2566 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Suburbia

    • 1196 Words
    • 5 Pages

    A “staple” of a quality liberal arts education would be theater that truly presses the boundaries of conventional society. CU’s recent rendition of Eric Bogosian’s Suburbia revealed how great Boulder is at pushing the limits of what is considered politically correct, and challenging taboos. The story takes place in front of a 7-11 in a small, suburban New Jersey town, and follows a tragic two day span in the life of a few early 20 something youths, who are circling the proverbial drain. The youths spend the majority of their time drinking and complaining about the world instead of working to improve themselves. The main character, Jeff Gallagher, is a troubled alcoholic who is in love with the idea of his girlfriend Sooze Beckwith. To say that their relationship is complicated would be putting it lightly, with Jeff’s “Rebel Without a Cause” mindset and Sooze’s dream of moving to New York and becoming a successful artist. They were doomed from the start, but with the introduction of Neil “Pony” Moynihan, the play’s antagonist, their fate is sealed. Easily considered the most complex character in the play, Tim Mitchum’s character appealed to me the most as the playwrite dared to spotlight an American hero, the soldier, in a way considered most taboo. Propaganda films since the 1920’s have done a fantastic job at glorifying the soldier as an American hero, so Bogosian’s decision to depict the honorably discharged Irag veteran as an unfulfilled alcoholic with performance anxiety is extremely progressive and daring. The interaction between Tim and the Pakistani store owners was an excellent depiction of modern day racism and prejudice. The action of the play begins with the reunion of the gang’s aforementioned high school companion turned successful musician, Pony. His presence is unwelcomed by Jeff, who feels his relationship with Sooze is threatened by the successes experienced by Pony. The conflict only gets worse as Sooze starts to fancy the idea of…

    • 1196 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of his earliest experiences with racism caused him to be “surprised, embarrassed, and dismayed all at once…[as he realized that he] was indistinguishable from the muggers who occasionally seeped into the area from the surrounding ghetto”(1). The adjectives in this excerpt make that reader experience the horror and embarrassment that Staples felt in this instant, and forces then to think about the consequences of showing any hesitation or uncertainty one might feel. The diction makes the passage feel mortifying and distressing, which gives the reader an inside look at what being alienated feels like. By revealing to the reader that he had been discriminated against personally, he establishes his ethos. In the instance where a women begins to run away from him, Staples remembers that “it was the echo of the terrified woman’s footfalls that [he] first began to know the unwieldy inheritance [he had] come to - the ability to alter public space in ugly ways” (1). By sharing this memory with the reader, Staples creates himself to the reader in a knowing and solemn…

    • 562 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    * To anticipate when population become at risk for particular emotional problems and to identify and change social and psychological factors that…

    • 2131 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics