All Summer in a Day by Ray Bradbury is a science fiction story about a young girl who lives on Venus who learns to live without the sun. She wants to feel the sun, see the sun but it hasn’t come out in 7 years. In the beginning all of the children on Venus are crowded around the window hoping for the sun to come out, because they have never seen it, only Margot has. In the middle of the story, Margot gets bullied. They lock her in a closet before the teacher comes,because they thought she lied about seeing the sun and remembering it. At the end she was left in the closet, they had forgotten her.So mabey she could be in a coma. Margot could be in a coma because it doesn't say she eats. If they did eat they might run out of food. If they did …show more content…
This dream she is having might just be a way she was trying to make her life better and it just got worse. The bullies aren’t going to stop and it is literally haunting her. The more they bullied her the worse it got. She was dreaming the worse possible thing for them to do. In paragraph 29 it says, “they edged away from her they wouldn’t look at her”. In paragraph 37 “the boy pushed her for the 2nd time”. In paragraphs 26-29 “The boy says ‘what are you looking at?”, “speak when you're spoken to”. He gave her a shove. Then in paragraph 46 the story states“They surged about her bore her, protesting, then pleading,and then crying, back into the tunnel, a room, a closet, where they slammed and locked the door”.This proves the bullying is terribly bad. Margot could be in a coma because the storms knock out the trees and if there are no trees and plants there is no oxygen. If there was no oxygen they couldn’t breath, if they can’t breath they die. NASA wouldn’t be allowed to send them up there with that consequence. So she is most likely dreaming.If they even did keep a little house plant in the underground place it could die and then they would to. In paragraph 9 they say “a thousand forests have been crushed under the rain and grown up a thousand times to be crushed again.” This proves there
Have you ever read “All Summer in a Day”? If you haven’t read the story it is about a group of children who are nine years old and live on planet Venus. It has been raining for seven years and they are waiting for the sun to come out so they can go outside. They mentioned when they went outside that it was better than the sunlamps that they have been using, so for seven years while it has been raining they have been using artificial heat.
The children are painfully jealous of Margot, therefore, hurting her because of their own pain. Since Margot was different than the others and stood apart, one of her classmates shoved her and mocked her while she looked out at the rain. Margot didn’t respond to any of this jealousy, as it says in the text “But she did not move; rather she let herself be moved only by him and nothing else.” The kids kept mocking, shoving and yelling at Margot because she thought that the sun would come out. The problem progressed so much that the children grabbed Margot and locked her in the closet so she wouldn’t see the sun that just came out in seven years. That sentence in the text was “They surged about her, caught her up and bore her, protesting, and then pleading, and then crying back into a tunnel, a room, a closet, where they slammed and locked the door.” This shows how mean her classmates were, they knew that
All Summer In Day by Ray Bradbury shows the reader that jealousy can lead a person to do cruel and mean things to classmates and peers. Kids didn’t believe and criticized her and judged her. No one believed she wrote a poem and when she described the sun no one believed her. One arguments someone could make is that desire could be a larger theme than jealousy. This isn't true because the kids got jealous of Margot and then desired, they can’t desire because they have never seen the sun. Margot was also mistreated by classmates. She was shoved and locked away in a closet. Jealousy can make people do man and cruel things to classmates and peers.
As stated earlier, a main theme in “All Summer in a Day” is isolation. The quote, “So after that, dimly, dimly, she sensed it, she was different and they knew her difference and kept away,”(Bradbury, pg. 2) shows this. The quote literally tells us that she is different, and from this she isolates herself. No other child on Venus can remember a day full of sunshine, so she really can’t relate to any of them. Because of her knowledge of the sun, she is picked on by her classmates. A particular kid, William, is most nasty to her. He, along with other students, threw her into a closet on the day the sun came out. Keep in mind the sun
Many centuries after the first spaceship landed on the moon, a group of brave rocket men and women did the unbelievable. The short story “All summer is a day”, by Ray Bradbury, takes place in the underground city of the planet Venus where tunnels roamed instead of streets. The land above them was submerged with endless pouring rain and deadly jungles. The sight of the sun was a rare miracle that only happened once every seven years. The children spent all their life in the enclosed underground tunnels, well all except for one. Margot was the only child who came to Venus when she was four, and the biggest difference was that she still remembered the times when the glowing sun gave warmth and hope.
One night when Ana had sing the ordinary good night song for the girls and left the room after they had fall asleep, something strange happened. Both Robert and Ana got a feeling that something was wrong with Katie and run up to the bedroom. Emily was sleeping peaceful but Katie doesn't, she was shaking and cried in silence.
The Boys of Summer, a non-fiction book of baseball, written by Roger Kahn. Who tells a wonderful heart aching tale of a simple stick and ball game that helped start the development to push Americans (generally the white population at the time) to change what the country claims to be, a free and fair non-prejudice country that gives “everyone” their own rights/opportunities. Jackie Robinson, America’s first African American to play on a Major Baseball league. He was the first colored-skinned to ever make history not only in the game of baseball. Robinson ignited a spark that sent Americans (mostly the white population) dumbfounded, that a “nigga” a dark colored-skinned individual was more than just a janitor. This book transcends the generation gap as Kahn recaps his boyhood in Brooklyn, his young career as a writer following the Brooklyn Dodgers, and a follow-up of the certain members of the Brooklyn Dodgers during post-playing days. As Kahn nostalgically narrates his story of the transformation of the Brooklyn Dodgers, a dead team who came back to life to make a major impact on the country, to a becoming dead of the last time. Reveals the theme that race play a huge role on American’s reaction to the Brooklyn Dodger, Jackie Robinson, and the aftermath to letting a “Negro” into a white man sport.
The short sci-fi story All Summer in A Day by Ray Bradbury is about being treated as an outcast and reveals the alienating effects that it may have. Sometimes this treatment is brought on by others. In this case, Margot is treated in this harsh manner because she isn’t the same as her classmates and they desire to have the life experiences that she has. Being outcast may not be the only main theme for this story in each reader’s mind. All Summer in A Day provides a multitude of possible themes. This may be the case, however, the children’s physical and emotional abuse of Margot is extreme and justifies this theme. As the time draws nearer for the sun to rise, Margot’s classmates become more brash and crue and at that moment, Margot is exponentially different from the other children in hr class. This concept of being outcast and
Not only did they exclude her but they also hater her for her differences, for the absence of colour on “…her pale snow face, her waiting silence, her thinness and her possible future.” They acted on this hate and “…put her in a closet…” and caused her to miss the sun coming out. They excluded her from all the fun they had in the sun but more than that, they made her miss the event she had been looking forward to since she came to this planet five years ago. By showing us this, Ray Bradbury successfully explains to us how Margot is different from the rest of the children in the way she acts and because of this difference she is ostracised and hated.
Try conceptualizing a world with perpetual rain. This is the world that Bradbury creates in his short story, “All Summer In a Day. A group of scientists and their children live on Venus, a planet that only sees the sun for an hour every seven years. The kids that immigrated here are only 9 years old. They do not remember the sun, as they have only seen the sun once, 7 years ago. But, there is a girl named Margot. Unlike the other kids, she was born on earth and moved to Venus 5 years ago. She has distinct memories of the sun. This causes her to stand out from the other kids. The loss of the sun causes her to grieve. The children living on Venus treat Margot mercilessly in jealousy due to her prior knowledge and experiences. This causes Margot to be a victim of depression, harassment, and denial.
In the short story, “All Summer in a Day,” by Ray Bradbury, our protagonist, Margot, gets harassed by her classmates for several reasons. On Venus, there is a 2 hour period every 7 years of constant rain where the sun comes out. Since Margot moved to Venus 5 years ago, she can remember the sun and has full memories of it. Margot is tormented by her classmates, the antagonists, simply because of their jealousy. This emotion empowers the behavior of Margot’s classmates, leading them to regret their actions.
Margot gets treated cruelly by those in her class because they are envious of where she’s from and her knowledge, or experience. Margot is nine years old, living on the planet Venus, where she moved from Earth, when she was four years old. Margot is the only kid in her class the remembers the sun and this makes all the other kids envious of her because when the other kids saw the sun they were only two years old but Margot was four which makes them jealous. When Margot was talking about the scientist predicting the sun would come out one of the boys said, “‘All a joke… let’s put her in a closet before the teacher comes back!’” (Bradbury 3). The kids are so envious or jealous of Margot that they want to lock her in a closet, right before the sun is supposed to come out because they don’t believe it is. When the sun finally came out the children rush outside to enjoy nature and the sun,
“It has been raining for seven years; thousands upon thousands of days compounded and filled from one end to the other with rain, with the drum and gush of water, with the sweet crystal fall of showers and the concussion of storms so heavy they were tidal waves come over the islands.” (Bradbury, 1954) In the dystopian story, “All Summer In A Day” by Ray Bradbury, it takes place on the planet, Venus. A group of children, along with scientists get to live there, while being educated at the underground school. Margot, who is only 9 years old, wasn't born on Venus like the other children, but instead on Earth. She’s the only one who remembers how the sun felt through her skin and how beautiful it shined. On the contrary, the other children are jealous of her because she has some memory of the sun, while they don’t. Jealousy caused the children to harass, isolate, and make her depressed.
Imagine living on a different planet, but being isolated and friendless. This happens to a girl named Margot in the short story, “All Summer in a Day” by Ray Bradbury. Margot is treated poorly by her classmates throughout the story. In the story, several scientists, along with their children, occupy underground tunnels on Venus. It seems perfect-minus one problem. It is constantly raining, for seven years in a row. The sun is said to come out on the day the story takes place, and Margot can’t wait. She is the only one of her classmates who remembers the sun, since she moved to Venus when she was five. However, the envious children grab Margot and shove her in a closet. The sun comes out, and they play and delight in its warmth. When it goes away, they remember Margot, and, heads hung low, they let her out of the closet. The children of Venus are harsh towards Margot because they are jealous of her. Because of this, she becomes isolated, depressed, and is constantly harassed by her peers.
The other children aren’t able to connect with Margot on a personal level, which eliminates the possibility for friendship, and the simple idea of a civil conversation. “Margot stood apart from them, from these children who could ever remember a time when there wasn’t rain and rain and rain.” This proves that since the other children can’t connect with Margot on a personal level because they can never experience what she has. This stems from the fact that Margot used to live on Earth and would see the sun every day, while the other children only saw rain outside their windows.