Through many different accounts in a person’s being, they face situations in which higherarchy is tested. Power and Privlege, built on a foundation of innequality, helps us diffentiate congregations of people that are condemed at the expense of another. Composed in both novels, The Scarlet Letter and The Other Wes Moore, the protagonist(s) in both stories teach us about the flawed system of discrimination in our society. In an article from the University of Southern Carolina it states that concepts of culture begin with “The integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief and behavior that depends upon the capacity for learning and transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations….A set of shared attitudes, values, goals and practices that characterizes a group of individuals or an institution or organization.” If we break this up, we can understand amny things about how the perspective of others around the characters in both novels shaped the future of their decisons. Furthermore, this is incorporated in both novels, making it plausible to understand the difference between power and privledge through indirect characterization and tone. Within the bestseller The Other Wes Moore, The author grows up with a loving family who calues good works and integrity. With the death of his father at the age of three, Wes struggles behaviorally and is sent away to Military School. It is assumed thata militrary school saved his life. He was able to immerse himself in a new life with
Wes Moore, the author of the autobiography, begins his story about his parents, and eventually the loss of his father. Which leads to his mother moving him the family to New York to help raise the children while she tries to pull her own life together. After this event, you can see the slow change in Wes Moore as he begins to skip school and commit petty crime, like tagging the neighborhood where he lived. His mother eventually fed up with this ships him to Military school in hopes it will shape him up. After a rough begging, a distinct change is seen in the author.
In the novel, The Other Wes Moore, Moore discovers the way people shape our lives and influence our future by examining the effects of family support, influence from peers, and his experience with authoritative figures in his life. He sees this through the story of the other Wes Moore. A young man who grew up a product of his environment, single mother, and a brother who was to involved with the bad life to be of any help to him. With this Wes Moore's life was sentenced to where he is now. The author is astonished by the fact that although their paths significantly differed they weren't always so different.
Every single event or incident a person commits is driven by some kind of motivation whether good or bad. Regardless of the intention there are two types of motivation: Intrinsic and Extrinsic motivation, intrinsic is being motivated by self-satisfaction and extrinsic is motivated by en external reward. In the memoir The Other Wes Moore by Wes Moore, there are a series of events or incidents in the second half of the book that display that variety of motivation that exists. Having read the book one may argue that the author Wes Moore was motivated by more intrinsic drive whereas the other Wes was motivated more by extrinsic drive.
In the book, The Other Wes Moore it is difficult to believe the great similarities in the lives of the two Moores, who share a name and other aspects of life. The two were raised fatherless and were born in the late 1970’s in the neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland. They also happen to have encountered similar experiences when growing up, but at one point one of them became a criminal and the other a scholar (the author of the book). The author of the book seems to be interested in the similarities of the two boys as opposed to their different experiences. The story is interesting and makes one imagine what would have become of the writer if he did not by any chance come across the people who guided him to become what
Is everything in life based off of decisions, morales, or your environment surrounding you? Who's there for you and who isn't? In the book The Other Wes Moore each Wes Moore’s mother affected both Wes’ lives by trying to be role models and not making poor life decisions by teaching them the value of education, not turning to crime and drugs, and making large sacrifices. Both mothers had a huge part to play in the book in all spectrums trying to leave them on the right path through life and turn to wrong of the world.
It is on a daily basis that people are forced to make decisions as to whether or not they will chose to rise above their challenges and it is these decisions that affect the outcomes of many lives. Each person is presented with their own difficulties and they are given the option to either overcome these difficulties, or let them stand in the way of success. Whether presented by society, certain individuals, or even oneself, the conquering of challenges is what leads many people to their greatest achievements. The main characters in both The Other Wes Moore and The Scarlet Letter learn to overcome their difficulties and it is because of this that they are bettered as individuals. In The Other Wes Moore, written by Wes Moore, Wes is forced to overcome his challenges presented by racist teenagers and his prestigious military school. Wes Moore captivates the importance of overcoming his challenges by using direct characterization and tone. Nathaniel Hawthorne also uses these literary devices to express Hester Prynne’s ability to conquer challenges put forth by her Puritan society in The Scarlet Letter. Through the use of tone and direct characterization, the authors of The Other Wes Moore and The Scarlet Letter are able to exemplify their theme of the importance of one’s ability to rise above their challenges.
The Other Wes Moore focuses on two men both named Wes Moore. They have both lead lives that were similar to each other as they grew up in fatherless homes in the inner cities of Baltimore and the Bronx. However, the two ended up taking very different paths and through the book you see a shift for the good in the author Wes’s life path, while the other Wes’s path takes a turn for the worst. Both of the two grew up on the street, dealing drugs, skipping school, and making poor choices. While both Wess’ had figures in their lives that tried to keep them on the right path, such as author Wes’s mom, Joy, or other Wes’s brother ,Tony, they continued down dark paths. These things lead to the author Wes being sent to military school by his mom, who throughout the book is constantly trying to get Wes the best education that she can. The other Wes never got this change and stayed on the street and is now in jail for life for being involved with a robbery gone wrong where a cop ended up getting shot. After attending military school at Valley Forge Military Academy, author Wes improved his grades, became a decorated solider, and a Rhodes Scholar. The two paths split dramatically in the book but the choices and roles easily could have been reversed had the either of the two made a few different choices while they were growing up. Author Wes was able to give up dealing drugs, while the other Wes was never able to afford giving it up, even though he tried several times,
Personal responsibility in each individual 's lives is seen to make all the difference in their "final destinies" as indicated by the book (Moore & Smiley, 2010). The "other Wes Moore" makes the conscious decision of using crime in achieving his end. All the personal decisions he makes as he grows into adulthood, are based on the values he adopts along the way according to Moore and Smiley (2010), reinforcing the need to instill the correct values and attitudes in their lives at early stages of their lives. After making "four attempts to escape from the military school within a period of five days", the "lucky" Wes Moore decides to stay, focusing on performing in his study at the school (Moore & Smiley, 2010). The decision lays the foundation for success in all future endeavors as he learns to accomplish his goals with each challenge (Sragow, 2010). The change of attitude towards his situation in juxtaposition with the "other Wes Moore 's" reaction to
The Other Wes Moore is an autobiographical novel that is told from the heart of author, Wes Moore, while showing an illustrative purpose. One section of his book, in the epilogue, shows Moore diving into a more personal note on the roller coaster of a life he has lived, thus far. He uses his tone and diction to reflect on how the environment people grow up in can influence the ways they act and to explain that the people closest to you can change the opportunities you may have later in life, while using imagery and parallelism to show that no matter who you are or what background you come from, it can’t restrict or confine you from doing extraordinary things.
In “The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates,” by Wes Moore, two boys are living in the same city, with the same name, and are in similar situations. The author of the book turns into a Rhodes Scholar recipient while the other Wes Moore is now serving a life sentence in prison. With similar backgrounds what decisions created the difference between the two boys? A major decision was made by Wes’s mother when she chose to move them out of Maryland and up to New York, “… Three weeks later, Nikki, Shani and I all stood outside our car with something like disbelief at our now empty home. This was it. We were actually leaving Maryland.”(Moore 37) This was probably one of the most influential moments in his life because he got out of the drug and
In The Other Wes Moore, the author Wes Moore displays his life, along with other Wes Moore that compares. They both had similarities with their life, but what ultimately changed their destination was their friends. The author had both his street friends, as well as the support of his private school friends, that influenced his actions early in life. Eventually his peers at the military school also positively influenced Moore’s decisions later on in life. The other Wes, however, had his brother and friends with more negative influences, thus him making worse decisions. With his brother setting a poor example,
The novel, The Other Wes Moore, written by Wes Moore, compares and contrasts the experience of two African American males who were born in Baltimore, Maryland; the novel explores the divergent life paths of these two men who come from similar cultural backgrounds and environments. The author, Wes Moore, begins the novel by explaining about his childhood and the death of his father which impacted his family at a very young age. The author contrasts this with the childhood of the “other” Wes Moore, whose father was not present during his childhood. The novel transitions to the adolescent experience of these boys, describing how schools and the environments of their neighborhoods influenced their transitions from children to adults. The author
The other Wes Moore is a memoir written by Wes Moore about himself and a man with
The novel The Other Wes Moore, written by Wes Moore, is about two boys with the same name who could have had the same fate. The author Wes Moore was born in Baltimore and raised in a single mother home with no male guidance. The Other Wes Moore was also born in Baltimore into the same single mother situation. A few people who effected the life of the author were his mother Mary, his grandparents, and his sisters Nikki and Shani. They all had an impact on his life, which lead him to his future of success. For the other Wes the only person who had a powerful impact on his life was his brother, Tony. Throughout Wes’s life Tony urged him to avert the drug business, but Wes failed to by following his actions rather than his words. The overall message of The Other Wes Moore is your actions effect your future.
Everyone makes mistakes or laments an action they executed in the past. However, what if all of these actions could have been a result of how people were raised? In the novels The Scarlet Letter, and The Other Wes Moore readers are shown how one action can decide your fate and how not often is it one person's fault. The “sins” of the other Wes Moore, and Dimmesdale in both novels proclaim the two different ways of grieving and moving through life, after conspicuous events. Consequences for your actions illustrate your whole future of one event and is portrayed through symbolism and direct characterizations by Nathaniel Hawthorne and the author Wes Moore.