Preview

ESOL 260 The Color of Water Study Guide chapters 15 17 docx

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
441 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
ESOL 260 The Color of Water Study Guide chapters 15 17 docx
ESOL 260 The Color of Water
Study Guide
Chapters 15-17
Chapter 15. Graduation
1. Describe Ruth’s graduation from high school and her feelings about leaving Suffolk.
Ruth tries to attend her graduation, not just because she wants to, but because attending became a symbolic victory over her father. She wants to get away from her religion and her dad, but she also wants to take care of her mom.
When she realizes that her father’s decision and and religion always affect her, she decides to get away.
Chapter 16. Driving
2. How does Ruth feel about driving? What distinction is there between
Rachel and Ruth in terms of driving?
Although she feels scared of and hates driving, she still wants to try. Rachel knows how to drive,but Ruth doesn’t. However, they are the same person.
3. What has McBride seemingly learned from Chicken Man? How does
McBride react to these lessons?
James has begun to learn that bad things would happen if he failed to change his behavior. James starts to look to God for guidance, strength and comfort.
4. Why does it take Ruth so long to recover from her second husband’s death? How does she respond/cope?
Because she has so many things to recover from. She acts like she is fine, although she is not. It is just not because of her second husband’s death. It is also because of the dissipation her Jewish family, abandoning her mother and the tragic death of her first husband. She keeps moving like riding a bike, walking, and going on buses. She doesn’t let anybody come near her.
5. On what is Ruth perfectly clear, and how does that conviction influence her life?
She believes in God. Even if she was completely tired and depressed, she still got up on Sunday and went to church. Going church makes her feel better.
Chapter
17. Lost in Harlem
1. What role does Andrew McBride (Dennis) play in Ruth’s life?
He is her first husband, and she really adores him.
2. Why does Ruth describe Harlem as ‘magic’?

ESOL 260 The Color of Water
Study Guide
Chapters 15-17

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    leaves her home to live with her aunt. She is challenged with the life of Puritans. Kit is doing…

    • 340 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mcbride recognizes how the contrasting cultures and beliefs that come with each group of people creates resentment between different peoples. McBride asserts that people hate those who are different from themselves primarily through the racism he depicts in The Color of Water. For instance, when McBride depicts how his mother, Ruth, raises him and his eleven other siblings, he depicts how Ruth is constantly abused and ridiculed by the black community. McBride argues how the black community loathes his mother due to the actuality that she was a white woman raising James and his mixed siblings.…

    • 443 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    James was a straight A student. Like his most of his siblings, he was intelligent and on the ‘right’ path, but this all changed when James’ stepfather, Dennis, died. He made a turn on his path of life and started to associate himself with the wrong crowd. The structure holding up his life decayed. Dennis was always pushing all of his children to succeed academically and when he died school became insignificant to James; he started doing drugs and getting into trouble with the help of other people. Dennis wasn’t only the structure of James’ life but also Ruth’s and when he died, Ruth mentally collapsed. James’ took advantage of this and did what he pleased, ”I would just go out. There was no one to tell me not too.” (138). He rebelled against Ruth and distanced himself from her. James had to find a new mentor to lead him because he didn’t know his place in life anymore. His grades went down, he failed his classes, and stopped showing up to school. He began to associate himself with the wrong crowd, and smoke, drink, steal, mug, and deal drugs. He was out of control and no one was around to stop him. His mother sent him to his sister’s house to be “straightened out.” It is there he meets a group of men that hang around on the street all day. This was James’s “true education” (p. 144). Basically, they consist of drunks and stoners. By rebelling he felt liberated, “I turned 15 on the corner, but could act like I was twenty-five and no one cared.” (147) One of the men who particularly stand out to James is Chicken Man. James starts to look up to him, an old drunk, who substituted the role his stepfather played. One day James gets into a fight and seeks advice on revenge from Chicken Man. Chicken Man being wise and sober at the time says, ”You don’t know shit from Shinola,” he said. “Is that how you want to end up, goin’to jail for him? Because…

    • 1592 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    A recurrent reason for someone's faith in God is because of their desire to be sheltered from the cruelties of their real lives and Mcbride’s mother certainly has a lot of pain built up inside of her. Mcbride picks up on these cues even as a child…

    • 470 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    determined “ to pick herself back up” and to fight through the pain and get back to her new/ normal…

    • 535 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The next chapter that I chose from The Color of Water involving conflict is chapter 11. Ruth McBride Jordan, known in her youth as Rachel Shilsky, grew up in the town of Suffolk and during her time living there racism and discrimination were in full force. All the kids at her school didn't bother with her because even though she was white, she was still a Jew and she just wanted to be an American teenager like the rest of them doing the same things. They never accepted her and that's why when she finally had a friend who didn't judge her he was black. Ruth says "My black friends never asked me how much money I made, or what school my children went to, or anything like that. They just said, 'Come as you are.' Blacks have always been peaceful…

    • 493 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In The Color of Water by James McBride, we are taught through the eyes of a black man and his white mother that color shouldn’t matter. Although Ruth McBride Jordan had grown up as a Jew and had a father who disliked Jews very much, she was never prejudice against them and learned that she fit into the black world better than the white world. When she married a black man, she accepted Christ into her life and told her children, “God is the color of water.” She taught her kids that color didn’t matter, because God loves all races.…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    out about her husband’s death, after giving into her initial emotions and breaking down, she…

    • 1984 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A WOMAN DOING LIFE NOTES

    • 3069 Words
    • 10 Pages

    She pretend to be well, a lifesaving lie that leads to her acceptance of her fate as a lifer…

    • 3069 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    In The Color of Water, author James McBride writes both his autobiography and a tribute to the life of his mother, Ruth McBride. In the memoirs of the author’s mother and of himself, they constantly face discrimination from their race in certain neighborhoods and of their religious beliefs. The trials and tribulations faced by these two characters have taught readers universally that everyone faces difficulties in life, but they can all be surmounted.…

    • 1134 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    The memoir, The Color of Water, by James McBride, is a story of two charmingly similar but also enticingly different lives. One of narrations is of James himself, describing his struggles of growing up with a “very strange mother” (9), as well as attempting to find himself as he was both black and Jewish, and was never quite sure of where exactly he fit in. The other narration is of his mother, a Jewish immigrant who has her own fair share of issues in life to deal with, as she is a white person living in a black world. McBride’s goal of his writing was to compare his own life with his mothers’ by showing the similarities, but also the differences by using both people as narrators. These two narrations help to show details of both Ruth and James' life.…

    • 917 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Anxiety On Jasmine

    • 530 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Student Professor Mary Curby PSYC 325-DL 1 14 February 2016 Case Study: Anxiety on Jasmine Jasmine comes in today to discuss her anxiety issues and if she potentially could be diagnosed with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD). Jasmine is a middle-aged mother of two, married, and has a stable job. . She has a good relationship with her parents as well as her sister. She has a family history of moderate anxiety from her mother and her uncle had a history of panic.…

    • 530 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Color of Water

    • 1100 Words
    • 5 Pages

    "I 'm light-skinned" (McBride xix) is what James 's mother had always told him whenever he asked her whether she was white or not. James 's ethnic/family background had been a mystery to him ever since he was a child and also carried on with him into adulthood. He never knew his mother 's history, where she came from, or relatives from her side of the family. This created confusion within James. He could not identify himself as white or black because he did not have any knowledge of his family. Resulting in, his childhood to be filled with fear, embarrassment, frustration, and isolation. Many of James 's adult years were filled with even larger problems concerning race and his own identity, he later solved the mystery of his identity through the writing of the book, The Color of Water, where James 's mother unrevealed their family 's history.…

    • 1100 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Surprisingly, Mary Dunham Faulkner’s article “Sisters in Healing,” is based on an introspective study of consciousness, as to how far a woman’s determination to help other women through her own brokenness will lead. Notably, I glean the importance of caring for others during personal troubles or conflicts. Likewise, this article reminds me of a time in my life that I was broken and there was a (Mary Faulkner) who pulled me through. Not to mention, Mary lived in foreign country 25 years protecting girls from prostitution, even as she struggled in her own personal life. Ordinarily, in my opinion, most women going through the struggles with her husband as Mary wouldn’t have anything else on her mind. God allowed…

    • 210 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    depend on her parents at the time she is given birth and becomes independent when she grows up.…

    • 1013 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Good Essays