Cited: Yezierska, Anzia. Bread Givers. New York: Persea Books, 1999.
Cited: Yezierska, Anzia. Bread Givers. New York: Persea Books, 1999.
“They lived there because they were poor and black, and they stayed there because they believed they were ugly…Except for the father, Cholly, whose ugliness was behavior, the rest of the family- Mrs. Breedlove, Sammy Breedlove, and Pecola Breedlove- wore their ugliness, put it on, so to speak, although it did not belong to them.” (p.38) This ugliness that did not belong to them was always portraying itself their lives; everywhere they looked among themselves, they saw nothing but hideousness. Societal standards ingrained into their beings from adolescence leads to the whole family's…
Her parents explained to her that she would have to leave most of her belongings behind and to not get too attached to anything for that reason, not to mention, they didn’t have the money to purchase anything nice for them. For example, they never got presents on Christmas. “ They couldn’t afford expensive presents, and they didn’t want us to think we weren’t as good as other kids who, on Christmas morning, found all sorts of fancy toys under the tree that were supposedly left by Santa Claus” (39). Her parents told her this, for one, they couldn’t afford anything, and second, they didn’t believe on spending their money on anything that wasn’t a necessity. Her parents found a way to make up for the lack in gifts by giving them things that they could treasure forever. For instance, the Walls spent Christmas looking up into the Arizona night sky full of stars, and Jeannette’s father said she could pick any star she wanted as her Christmas present and said ‘Years from now, when all the junk they got is broken and long forgotten, Dad said, you’ll still have your stars’ (41). The way they viewed it was that it had more sentimental value and was more meaningful because it would last for years to come. As parents, the Walls were trying to show their children at a young age that they don’t need money to be…
Mr. Luria is a Russian immigrant who is Jewish, which gives him some unique identity. He dreamed to have a farm all the years rather than a job in the city which is more preferable for most people. He wants to maintain the same farming lifestyle as before. “He would begin to talk about his dream of a Jewish settlement on the banks of Red River.” Mr. Luria cannot get rid of his memories and emotions of being a Jewish Russian living a simple life cultivating on the farm. He even plans to build up a community of Jewish in the new country, for all Jewish to live together and avoid being assimilated. He feels glorious of being a Jewish although he is damaged because of it. The responsibility to his tradition makes Mr. Luria a bit conservative to accept the other people and traditions in the new country.…
Success is achieved by hard work and dedication. In Anzia Yezierska’s book “Bread Givers” Sara Smolinsky shows how that applied to her life. The author can relate to the story because she was an immigrant from a small Polish village and had to overcome many obstacles to become successful. She rebelled against her parents’ wishes of following the traditional path of a women immigrant and left home at the age of seventeen to live at the Clara de Hirsch home for working girls. The American dream for most female immigrants was the expectation of marriage and motherhood, a factory job, or if they were lucky a salesgirl. As for Sara and Anzia, that was not enough for either of them. The goal of Yezierska in her books were to recreate the feelings of the immigrant girl she had once been, and how she tried to break away from oppressive strictures of her religion to make a name for herself. “Bread Givers” was a one of her best works by reliving her struggles and obstacles of being an immigrant and trying to become successful through Sara’s life.…
Bread Givers, written by Anzia Yezierska, is a story that took place on the Lower East Side of New York City during the 1920s. The story describes the struggles Sara Smolinsky, a Jewish immigrant, faces through out her life such as poverty, discrimination, oppressing patriarchal values, finding her identity while still being unaccepted by her father.…
What is the American Dream, and who are the people most likely to pursue its…
The Portrayal of the Plight of Women by the Author, In Their Particular Period of Time…
The family is in poor living conditions. In line 9, Meeker tells of how “momma stood vacant eyed and hollow cheeked by hot suds” (Line 9). The mother waits until the children are outside, playing in the lot, before she “began to lick the crumbs from my sisters plate” (Line 19).…
In The Zookeeper’s Wife, readers are exposed to the story of Jan and Antonina Zabinski’s life through the second world war and the Nazi reign over Poland. Throughout the course of the novel, the audience is exposed to the two sides of the Zabinski’s family: Jan’s side and Antonina’s side. Jan’s side, full of action and physical risks, is equally as important as Antonina’s side, which is full of cunning tricks and advances. Both Jan and Antonina saved the lives of hundred of Jews during the Holocaust. For these reasons, when Jan incorrectly labels his spouse as a “housewife”, he is aiding D. T. Max’s theory that Antonina is more than a “housewife”, but “the alpha female in a unique menagerie.”…
In the begging of this novel Sara Smolinsky, her Parents, and sisters Mashah, Bessie, and Fania, all live together in a small cluttered apartment. Her father, a Hassidic Jew, does not work to provide for his family, but instead preaches his family with strict spiritual guidance by studying the Torah as he pleases. Her father justifies his life style as his belief in the superiority of men. He proclaims as it says in the Torah "it says in the Torah that women came from man, and therefore women are nothing without man" (Bread Givers 15). Sarah's father is an immigrant who holds Jewish traditions as the…
In Karen Russell’s short story, “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves”, she develops the progression of the characters in relation to The Jesuit Handbook on Lycanthropic Culture Shock. The characters, young girls raised as if they were wolves, are compared to the handbook with optimism that they will adapt to the host culture. The girls’ progression in the five set stages are critical to their development at St. Lucy’s. The author compares Claudette, the narrator, to the clear expectations the handbook sets for the girls’ development. Claudette’s actions align well with the five stages, but she has outbursts that remind her of her former self.…
The protagonist lacks in all these three factors, making her stubborn, angry, and a know-it-all person. However, what she is not aware of is her family economic hardship neither the other kids. The innocence of the Protagonist is highly recognizable throughout the story, the taxi ride, the woman in a fur coat in the heat of summer, etc. The speaker has never seen someone in a fur coat during summer. She thinks is crazy, but that represents a symbol of wealth, something she was discovering through this lesson. Then they arrive at the toy store, and everyone is looking through the window amazed with the price tags. It took them a while to come inside the store, the kids know that they do not belong in there. Once inside, the speaker sees a clown, it is just $35 dollars really cheap compared to the other items in the store and pocket change for the rich folks. Going back to the slums in the train, the speaker starts to think a better use for that money, new bunk beds, food for her whole family, a trip to visit her grandfather, and even the rent and the piano bill. Through the process of analyzing, she said, referring to rich people: ” What kind of work they do and how they live and how come we ain't in on it?" Anger is flowing through her blood, and she questions herself why she cannot have a piece of the pie that represents the American wealth? Despite that other…
This quote sates that she doesn’t need a feather bed, because its never going to be cold in America, and that her life will be filled with luxurious things while arriving. The sad realization that America was not a land of golden pathways and free items came very fast. Swamped with people, New York's Lower Side became a place of poverty for most people. Immigrates found themselves living in poor areas, where grim and disease run out of control.…
First, it is important to provide some foundation support of what operations and supply chain management entail. Every firm or organization must make a product or provide a service to someone that is needed or valued. Operations are the collection of people, technology, and systems that are in a firm whose primary responsibility is to provide the company’s products or services (Bozarth & Handfield, 2008). “Supply chain is the network of manufacturers and service providers that convert and move good from the raw materials state through to the end user” (Bozarth & Handfield, 2008, p.4). Planning and controlling operations and supply chains are critical to the strategic plan of an organization, and so is the coordination and communication with other functional areas of the firm’s supply chain partners. Aggregate or sales and operations planning takes it a step further to include the process that facilitates an organizations plan and coordinate operations and supply chain decisions over a specific period of time.…
The shabbiness of the wallet, referred to, in which she finds the fifteen dollars is a symbol of her impoverished life. When she finds the fifteen dollars it gives her a feeling of importance which “she had not enjoyed for years.” (Chopin, Vogue 7, 1897) When she first purchases the silk stockings she puts them into what is described as her “shabby old shopping bag” (Chopin vogue 7, 1897) which could symbolize luxury in poverty and when she trades her cotton stockings for the silk pair it gives her a sense of freedom, as if she’s breaking free of her current life poverty. She then proceeds to buy a new pair of shoes and be fitted for a pair of gloves which is a nod to the more comfortable and luxurious lifestyle she had been a part of…