In the story “Sonny’s Blues,” Harlem was the home and place where Sonny grew up. In Harlem most people lived very poor lives and were consumed by drugs and addictions. In this place the people lived life struggling socially and economically. Sonny felt trapped within his neighborhood, this was a place where people did not have much of a chance to succeed. Sonny proclaimed to his brother from his heart how he did not want to live in Harlem anymore. He did not want to stay and live in this place where he would be tempted to do drugs. He felt that he would find temptation with drugs in his life because he was constantly surrounded by people who were doing drugs and had become addicted to them. The political system brought upon Sonny lots of frustration and anger which prevented him from…
poem is about someone who he respects. One quote that he said was "It's my honor…
The segment of ‘The Godfather’ portrays many ideas of belonging. The scene involves the climax of the movie, where Michael Corleone is revealed as the next “godfather”, by shows another side of Corleone. There are many signs that suggest that Michael Corleone fits in and belongs in the mafia just like his father. The double life of the mafia shows the sense of belonging. The scene shows a montage of many plots of murders. The double life of Michael Corleone, the mafia and his family shows the hypocrisy of people who kill go to church. The differences between the two groups are joined together at the climax where Michael kills his brother-in-law. The juxtaposition between the family and mafia is shows when there is a montage of the christening of the baby and the plots of murders occurring. The vows that Michael Corleone to protect the baby shows irony as he plots to murder at the same time.…
The movie fast-forwards eight years to when Calogero is 17 and he is seen hanging out with Sonny and his crew and is given the name C. C is part of a little local gang of Italian boys from his childhood although Sonny tries to persuade him from staying away and focusing on his schoolwork instead and preaches to him about receiving a dual education from the streets and school. C soon sees a black girl named Jane in school and begins to like her despite what his family and friends would say. He walks her back to her neighborhood but stops on the outskirts knowing he would not be allowed in. He asks her out on a date and she agrees to go. At the same time, C’s gang beats up a group of black cyclists but C does not take part in it. Sonny allows C to use his car to pick Jane up but when he arrives she has her brother with her and says that C was one of the boys who beat him up. C says a racial slur and Jane and Willie drive off. C returns with the car and his father admonishes him before he storms out of the apartment. Sonny confronts C and accuses him of planting a bomb in the car in an attempted assassination, but realizes C is telling the truth…
The narrator is a responsible person. He was able to avoid all the bad elements of Harlem. Doing his civic duty by joining the army. Choosing to get educated, married, and have children he fit the mold of an upstanding citizen. He followed the rules and life rewarded him with success. A teacher by profession he was able to pass on his knowledge to another generation, a whole room full of kids he was responsible for. Reading about Sonny being arrested for drugs reignited the emotions that the narrator had buried about his brother. That same day Sonny’s…
By the time many of the children of the inner city have hit adolescence, they have witnessed and experienced many tragedies that even an adult would find disturbing. They have sold drugs, joined a gang, have seen their best friend shot, or even killed their neighbor. "By season's end, the police would record that one person every three days had been beaten, shot at, or stabbed at Horner. In just one week, they confiscated twenty-two guns and 330 grams of cocaine. Most of the violence here that summer was related to drugs." (32) There events seriously impact the childhoods of the youth, and rob these children of their innocence by showing them events that are not healthy for a child's growing mind to see. Pharaoh and Lafayette, like most all of the other children in the ghettos, are faced with a hard choice: stand up for yourself and succeed by refusing to accept the cities violence, or succumb to the pressure that pushes down on you from…
In this Italian neighborhood, where Calogero grew up, there were many different dynamics. His father was a bus driver for the city, and always looked out for his son not to get into trouble. One of the main deviant influences in the film was an Italian mafia that operated in a bar across the street. Every day as a young boy, Calogero mimicked what the mobsters were doing, especially Sonny. Sonny was the mafia boss in the neighborhood; Calogero saw how everyone respected him. One day Calogero witnessed Sonny kill a guy in front of his house, which seemed to be over a parking space. When the police came upstairs to ask the boy who did it, he did not “rat.” After the questioning, Calogero said to his father “I did a good thing right? I didn’t rat.” His father responded and said “yes you did a good thing for a bad man.” Calogero didn’t understand why his father said that. The next day Sonny took Calogero under his wing, when this happened he noticed that he was treated differently. And Calogero liked how this new found of respect he got from people in the neighborhood. A couple of mafia guys even offered Calogero’s father a job, but he denied their offer. Calogero’s father chose to live a straight life as a conformist he did not want to affiliate himself with the mafia. No matter how much the family was struggling, no matter how much his wife told him that they can use the extra money. He still did not give in to any of these deviant behaviors. During this time, when he was young, Calogero was…
Donald Murray, in “Complicated and Simple”, talks about how the author is emphasizing “man's need to find his identity” as the main issue society as well as Sonny and his brother are dealing with throughout the story. The area of Harlem with all its negative influences tend to affect its children's upcoming. Either to take the difficult route of finding one's self or to fall in the drug trap of Harlem “ it's simpler to submerge oneself, at the most dismal level, the limbo of drug addiction, rather than to truly find oneself” ( Murray 353).…
Both men, the Father Lorenzo and Sunny the mob boss have their significant influence on young Calogero. I certainly like the way Lorenzo treats his son. He is very patient with C. He tells him that the saddest thing in life is wasted talent, and apparently young C just like every other kid has dreams. Sonny, on the other hand, doesn't have a kid and when he gets to know C better he starts to like this little boy. C, of course, enjoys the attention he gets from Sunny. He doesn't want C to be like him. He wants him to stay clean out of trouble. But also unconsciously Sonny influences C to want money, be liked, and to have a good status on the street.…
McCourt encourages the reader to reexamine his/her relationships with others through his portrayal of Frankie. Although his father, Malachy, “drinks the dole money” forcing his mother “to beg … and ask for credit” (McCourt 208), Frankie is able to forgive his father and appreciate the positive aspects of Malachy’s character. With the justification that his “father is like the Holy Trinity with three people in him, the one in the morning with the prayer, the one at night with the stories, and the one who does the bad things” (210), the boy enables himself to evaluate the good in his father and ignore the disagreeable aspects of their relationship. As a result, Frankie is able to love his father for the time that they spend together, especially in the mornings…
The Catcher in the Rye Maggie Michaels, Benson High School Keith Higbee, Wilson High School Amy Botula, Wilson High School Tammy Lite-O’Neill, Wilson High School 2007 DRAFT PPS Funding Table of Contents Introduction 1 Calendar 3 Criteria and Standards Table 4 Parent Opt-Out Letter 5 Journals 6 Pre-Reading: Teens Reflecting on the Teen Experience 9 Teens Overhead 10 Setting the Stage: Viewing “Dead Poet’s Society” 11 Anthropological Wheel, Student Handout 12 Post-Viewing Discussion Questions, Student Handout 13 Imaginative Writing: Four Days in Holden’s Shoes 14 Four Days of Freedom Journal, Student Handout 15 Observation Notebook 16 Observation Notebook, Student Handout Cover 17 Observation Notebook, Point of View Chart 18 Possible Template to Support Narrative Notes, Student Handout 19 Chapter 5: The Sibling Connection 20 Chapter 5/The Sibling Connection, Transparency 21 The Line Up 22 The Line Up, Student Handout 23…
In this essay I will discuss technical, stylistic, and storytelling from one of the great American noir films of all time, Chinatown. The storyline is unparalleled and the portrayal of the characters by Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway are brilliant. Director Roman Polanski and writer Robert Towne created a masterpiece, and it doesn’t go unnoticed. The duo captures everything that is film noir from the World War II times while tweaking the rules along the way.…
The oldest brother in the family has strong values but can't understand how his brother could get himself into so much trouble like this. He explains in the story that he and his family were trying so hard to be a model middle-class family in the Harlem 1950's. The brother, Sonny, had just returned from the military and didn't seem to be much of a hero, more of a rebel, kind of like he stuck out to the family. He starts to get into things that his family would never imagine him doing, drugs and trouble.…
“Gulp Gulp” that's the sound of you drowning, you think your dieing. Then a miracle happens but soon after you realize there's a guy laying half dead. What happened? As a class we read the “The Outsiders” by S.E. Hinton. Some of us think we should read the story, others not so much. Here's why!…
Significant passage: “Life is a game boy. Life is a game that one plays according to the rules” (8).…