In The Living, a young adult novel by Matt de la Pena, the reader follows the main character, a teenage boy named Shy, as his quest to work over the summer for extra cash becomes a life threatening journey he never could have expected. In this novel three themes are very present in the forms of Romero disease, stereotyping, and the past versus present experiences. All of these topics arrive in very different ways, but can be traced back to not only Shy’s life experience, but Matt de la Pena’s as well. Though it is not always the main focus of the storyline, Romero disease plays a huge part in shaping the action. In the beginning the illness is introduced as a deadly infection that seemed to appear spontaneously and left its victims so dehydrated …show more content…
Addison assumes Shy to be an uneducated, uncultured Mexican-American boy while he presumes her to be a snobbish, rich white girl who gets whatever she desires just from being born into privilege. In this example they actually happen to prove each other wrong. Shy uses his resourcefulness and empathy to help the pair survive on a broken life boat with meager fishing supplies and only enough water to manage for a few days. Addison shows herself to be resilient and even when she does break down, she always picks herself back up and powers forward. Though this was an example of judgement going wrong for the better, there is another instance where it goes correct for the worse. When Shy discovers he is being stalked by a man in a black suit, his instincts immediately tell him to avoid possible danger which he tends to follow in all but two situations. In the first, he pulls the injured man from a wrecked section on the ship with the help of another crewmate and get the suspicious man to the safety of the lifeboats. In the second, thinking he can trust him a bit more after the rescue, Shy follows him to a secluded cave where the plots about Romero and his employer’s hand in it are revealed. Unfortunately, this almost leaves Shy dead when a gun is pulled out only for him to be saved by a mysterious character known as Shoeshine. This
4- Cisneros purpose was that she put constant tension into the story to keep the readers intrigued and to keep a good story going. House on Mango Street essay Tension, hard to portray, but when done right, it can change everything. The official definition of the word tension is “mental or emotional strain” This is seen many times in the book “The House on Mango Street”. In House on Mango Street, Sandra Cisneros excellently portrays tension in many different ways.
In chapter ten Shy is talking to his mom and hears about a relative being sick and he again wishes to be off of the ship and is
I understood the Theme of the book ”Life As We Knew It” by Susan Beth Pfeffer because I like survival books so I can quickly infer that the theme is family survival. I think that the theme is family survival because Miranda’s family is trying to survive in the new harsh weather in the world. The theme is inferred when it comes to books because the author isn’t just going to tell you the theme because the author wants you to really understand the book. If you can infer the theme this means that you understand the book. The theme is family survival I can infer this because Miranda’s family is going through a hard time because Ms.Nesbitts ' died in the book.
The first part of the book included the first known cases of Marburg disease. The Marburg disease became available in Marburg, Germany in 1967. Also, the well-known stories of Yu G. who was the first person to die from Ebola Sudan in 1976, and Mayinga N., a nurse who became infected with Ebola Zaire after helping treat a patient who dies of the disease. At first, Mayinga was in denial about her abnormal symptoms and spent two days in the city around thousands of civilians exposing her infection to everyone around her before going to the hospital, she ended up dying just like Monet. Another story consisted of a Lieutenant Colonel, Nancy Jaax.
The first reason I will not re-enlis is there is lots of diseases like smallpox, pneumonia, putrid fever (typhoid or typhus), dysentery, and hypothermia.
“She came back with her lipstick in her hand. She held it there, open, pointing upward, and stared at Lisandro. They spent several minutes looking at each other that way, in silence, separated by the crystal frontier” (188). This quote, in my opinion, provides one of the biggest and best examples of how Carlos Fuentes views love. This theme of love is present in ever chapter throughout his book.
This shows diseases were a crucial hardship for the
Maturity is the feeling of needing to prove that one is sophisticated and old enough to do certain things. In the short story “Growing Up,” Maria’s family went on a vacation while she stayed at home, but when she heard there was a car crash that happened near where her family was staying, she gets worried and thinks it is all her fault for trying to act mature and angering her father. Society wants to prove how mature they are and they do so by trying to do things that older people do and the symbols, conflict, and metaphors in the text support this theme. First and foremost, in “Growing Up,” Gary Soto’s theme is how society acts older than they are and that they just want to prove they are mature. Maria wants to stay home instead of going
What idea does the author develop regarding the conflict between pursuing a personal desire and choosing to conform? “Street lights glow red, green and yellow too, do you let signs tell you what to do?”... The words from Lady Gaga ponder over the balance between conforming to authority or self fulfillment. Do we let our individuality falter under the presence of authority and social demands, or do we maintain our own identity and achieve self-actualization? In a society where sacrifices have to be made in order to avoid prejudice, we show tenacity towards who we are at core.
Matteo Alacran’s journey to find his place Everyone struggles to find their place in society, but who knew that someone who wasn’t human struggled too. In the novel, The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer, Matteo Alacran also called Matt, does just that. In a future version Mexico, Matt Alacran, a clone of the evil drug lord, El Patron, struggles to find his place in society. Matt is looked at as a monster since he is a clone, but El Patron sees as Matt as an equal.
The immigrants entering the United States throughout its history have always had a profound effect on American culture. However, the identity of immigrant groups has been fundamentally challenged and shaped as they attempt to integrate into U.S. society. The influx of Mexicans into the United States has become a controversial political issue that necessitates a comprehensive understanding of their cultural themes and sense of identity. The film Mi Familia (or My Family) covers the journey and experiences of one Mexican-American (or “Chicano”) family from Mexico as they start a new life in the United States. Throughout the course of the film, the same essential conflicts and themes that epitomize Chicano identity in other works of literature
“Romero’s Shirt” written by Dagoberto Gilb reflects how difficult is to life in a foreign country and having to start from nothing. Romero, the protagonist, is an immigrant described as a hardworking person that live with his family but does not fully enjoy his life. He has focused so much in his economic situation that he has not taken proper care of his family and even himself. The author uses a shirt, at the beginning very insignificant but that gains a high connotation as the story evolves, to symbolize how important was to Romero his old life.
Name: Thy Pham #17 The Importance of Humanity What if you’re an exact copy of someone?
The poet successfully illustrates the magnitude with which this disease can change its victim’s perspective about things and situations once familiar to
Class and gender/sexuality are complicated in “Drown” by Junot Díaz. Yunior and Beto are ex-best friends who are separated through the complications. Their relationship tenses up when Beto decides to better his life through education. At first glimpse, Yunior’s struggle with class and sexuality could be based within his homophobic fear. The typical understanding that Yunior’s unmotivated attitude stems from fear is flawed because it fails to recognize his stance to not change who he believes he is and where he is meant to be.