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    Unit 053 AMANDA FAY

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    UNIT 053 AMANDA FAY OUTCOME 1‚2 POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF DISCRIMINATION Discrimination is one of the most significant barriers to inclusion. This along with prejudice. As people we are all different and unique in one way or another. This often leads to conflicts and division between people and cause predjudice. People experience predjudice and discrimination for many different reasons some of which may include‚ sexualtiy‚ gender‚ race‚ disability‚ religion‚ background‚ age‚ appearance

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    “God kneeled down in the dust Toiling over a lump of clay till he shaped it in his own image.” God and the creation of time and earth are portrayed very differently in James Weldon Johnson’s The Creation‚ and Philip Booth’s the Original Sequence. God as a figure is described differently in these two poem. Both of these poems have two distinctive views on the creation of time‚ earth‚ and everything that exists today. In the Creation the author describes making of the earth‚ step by step from darkness

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    year‚ we are reminded of the one common thing we have in common through a story of creation‚ life‚ and where history ultimately began. One version of the creation story that captures one’s imagination comes from the poem The Creation by James Weldon Johnson. This poem offers an image of a God who not only relates to humans but also looks like a human. Johnson gives God many humanistic qualities like the Southern dialect. He “stepped” with his feet‚ and He creates the world because of a feeling

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    James Weldon Johnson was an American writer and a civil rights activist‚ during the Harlem Renaissance. Poetry served as a powerful way for African Americans to express their experiences‚ struggles‚ and aspirations during a period of racial discrimination. In James Weldon Johnson’s “Sonnet”‚ the poet encourages his heart to stay strong through his brave‚ encouraging‚ and guiding attitude‚ suggesting that despite the challenges of life‚ his heart needs to resist despair and reach for hope. The speaker’s

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    Dr Fay Letters Monologue

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    OVERALL IMPRESSION: It is a really well crafted story that grabs my attention from beginning all the way to the end. You don’t give any time for the “viewers” to be bored as we are thrown right into the thick of things from the get go‚ first the surgery of Freeman and a few scenes after she’s in the war. I also believe that you created a living breathing world of the war‚ or more specifically the hospital in the war. The way the injured soldiers react to Dr. Murdoch all contribute to the feeling

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    In what ways does Fay Welden in Letters to Alice reposition readers in terms of their understanding and appreciation of Pride and Prejudice. Reading Fay Welden’s letters to Alice repositions the readers understanding and appreciation of Pride and Prejudice‚ as Welden explains the context and values of the society in which the book is based. As the book is based in Austens society the Landed Gentry‚ in a small provincial village in the nineteenth century‚ the society values different things to

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    Eisenhower gave a speech delivered to 175‚000 soldiers called‚ “Order of the Day.” In this speech‚ Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower encouraged his soldiers to defeat the Nazis‚ though at this time they were very powerful. In the poem‚ “Sonnet” by James Weldon Johnson‚ who had a vital role in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); Johnson uses his poem to convey a strong feeling of courage and perseverance through the face of despair. Both Johnson and Eisenhower used juxtaposition

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    A Father and Daughter’s Strife There’s one question that every couple asks at some point in their relationship‚ one which could determine its future and fate. This big question? The choice whether or not to have children. Weldon Kees‚ a 19th century poet‚ wrestles with this very question in “For my Daughter.” Kees authored this poem during the tail end of the Great Depression‚ right before America’s entry into the Second World War. This was a time in which people were struggling to survive‚ and

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    Preforming for Freedom In James Weldon Johnson’s The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man‚ the narrator is troubled by the two facets of his racial identity making him incapable of determining his self-identity. Music plays a crucial a role in the determination of the narrator’s self-identity‚ he expresses admiration towards African American culture for its originality and universality‚ while he also reveres European culture for its priority on intellectualism and classical music. It is clear that

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    Abstract The following paper focuses on the two poets of the Harlem Renaissance – Claude McKay and James Weldon Johnson. Their role and importance within the literary movement is identified‚ and the major themes of their poems‚ If We Must Die and The Prodigal Son are highlighted. Harlem Renaissance Poets The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned unofficially form 1919 to the mid 1930’s. The “Negro Movement” as it was then called‚ heralded the zenith of modern African literature

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