Outcast United was a book filled with emotion, and a culture completely different from anything of which the average American citizen has ever been exposed. Lumas attitude toward the fugees was incredibly positive. No matter what the situation was luma helped anyone on the Fugees team. The most important thing I noticed from was when Luma first thought of the fugee tam. For a while, she had been coaching the team and working at the cafe. However, once she noticed that she could not do both, she had to close the cafe. She said, “You’re worrying if you’re going to have enough people coming in to buy three-dollar lattes when just down the road there are people who can’t afford to eat” (61). She had been trying to take care of the refugee families
In chapter six of Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell persuades that cultural legacies remain for generations and ought to affect how one behaves in certain circumstances. To validate his statement, Gladwell began telling a story of Harlan, Kentucky, a town in a mountainous region where there resides two bickering families; Howard and Turner. The “county was in an uproar” (pg.164) and the families were finishing each other off. Gladwell then began claiming the factor that drove the uproar was the “culture of honor” (pg.166), meaning the culture around highlands are aggressive due to the need to protect their livelihoods. This reveals that future generation in the highlands will be trained similar to their ancestors in order to maintain survival. Also,
The introduction to the book starts with an explanation of the concept it is being written on. The concept is about outliers and the different types that exist in the world. An outlier is something that separates from a particular group or set. The introduction uses an example from the early days in the United States in the small Italian town of Roseto, Pennsylvania that had a very odd phenomena that took place there. When a man in the book goes to visit a friend he knows in the town, since the friend is a doctor he ask him about his work, and he mentions that he has patients from all around but those from the town of Roseto rarely had heart disease.
David Williamson’s, The Removalists, is an Australian play that recognises the “bottled-up aggression” present in the 1970’s. Williamson highlights violence, sexism, abuse of power, corruption and the role of a bystander in a violent situation that sees a confrontation between the sexes. The Removalists highlights different Australian personas, which are accurate representations of Australian society in the 1970’s. Several clashes of personalities take place throughout the play as each character represents a different quality of life.
Luella is very influential. She can give people short-term or long-term influence. She intimidated Roger by angrily interrogating him with "What did you want to do it for?" (page 1, paragraph 4, line 1), he whispers "I'm very sorry, lady, I'm sorry" in page 1, paragraph 11, line 1, which showed how scared he was. She thinks that he might have been living off of stealing, so she grabbed him to teach him a valuable lesson. She used a metaphor to make him realize that he is not only harming others by stealing, but harming himself, too. She explained "...shoes come by devilish like will burn your feet..." in page 3, paragraph 10, line 3, "devilish like" meaning harmful, illegal, or bad actions. She admitted that she had also made some mistakes in the past. Her point is that you can still become a good person with good intentions even though you've made some
St. John says, “When the man caught up with her, he said he and the other parents on his team had heard about the fugees and wanted to know how they could help. They donated soccer balls and cleats” (St. John 78). Luma and her team struggled to obtain equipment and the other teams wanted to know how they could help which is exactly what they did. The donation was a blessing for Luma. Racism was another prominent issue in Clarkston. There were many negative stereotypes toward the immigrants that came to Clarkston. Jordan said, “’It’s you-it’s Africans,’ ‘I have nothing but problems from you guys. Always love to argue. That’s why there’s so much crap going on around here-‘” (84). Many of the people already living in Clarkston complained a lot about Africans that lived here and how they were always causing issues. The bus that picked up the fugees from their apartments would often
Teamwork: Noun; “cooperative or coordinated effort on the part of a group of persons acting together as a team or in the interests of a common cause.” Written by Dictionary.com the word teamwork involves a group or team of people working together, like in the book Outcasts United. In the book Outcasts United by Warren St. John a soccer team was created for and by people all over the world called the “Fugees.” The Fugees weren't a very wealthy team and didn't have very many options because of their living conditions. The fact that they continued with strict practices and harsh conditions shows they believed in commitment and staying together.
In Outcasts United, the story of the Fugees teaches the readers about the importance of belonging and acceptance
While traveling to New York City, Victoria and her sister Tennessee met Cornelius Vanderbilt. He was appreciative of Victoria, so he helped them start the first women-run stock brokerage company. Along with her sister Tennessee, Victoria created a publication called Woodhull and Claflin’s Weekly. With the publication, the sisters were able to give their opinions on women’s suffrage, social reforms and other rights that they thought women deserve. She spoke out publically, and even appointed the issues to congress. Although she tried to raise more awareness by running for president, some of her supporters alienated because of her remarks about sexuality and social
This is where her paternalism leadership style is demonstrated and her intentions of someday establishing a not-for-profit organization to help the low-income communities. Struggles have also shaped her to become transformational; not only for herself but for those who surround her so that they can continue to stay self-motivated and have a vision for themselves or anything they may set their mind
outcast United by st. John is a must read for those who don't understand the current refuge problem and for those who love playing soccer. I would recommend this book to anyone who loves soccer. I personally did not like the way that they talk about teach players background story. It is necessary to know the background of how the team became the fugee. personally I don't think it's necessary to know the background of each individual player. Another thing I didn't like was the Coach Luma. Luma is the type of coach that I would never want to have. I don’t like her coaching style and the way she tries to win games. I like a coach that's to the point but relax. The worst part about this book in my opinion is all the soccer. To me soccer is the
Luma is one of the few people who take responsibility and care for others. However, some people are
Alienation is something we find to be constantly present within our society. This idea is steadily exemplified throughout history whether it be through class, race, or any social unjust. In Kristen Dombek’s piece, she details various accounts of social alienation. The reader follows as Dombek reveals corruption between human relationships and the way we interact with world. She exposes what we are all afraid to admit- modern values and morals. Kristen Dombek presses us with the question of why we do the things we do and live the way we live. Readers are forced to question if they are slaves to the world around them. Do we succumb to the social and economical pressure demanded from us, and if so, will we allow that to happen for the generations after us? Although alienation is something that roots from ourselves as individuals, recognize the factors in our lives that this originates from. Question the relationships people have established in their own neighborhood, or if a prosaic office job is fulfilling. When we serve our economy but it does not do the same for us, the symbiosis or harmony in which live in is disrupted. Will we make a change for the beauty we desire to create and the life we lead in oppression today or tomorrow? In Bank-robbin in Brooklyn Kristen Dombeck explores the ideas of societal alienation by questioning the dynamic of people 's’ lives in their neighborhoods, in the workplace and their roles in society in general.
I picked the theme of self-reliance. As I read the story it was unbelievable to me that she did not give up, even though there were many times when she could have. What she thought was a good idea in the beginning, being just a teenager, she had no idea what the impact she would make on herself and the future Africain American people in.
In chapter seven and chapter eight of Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell effectively claims that acknowledging cultural legacies betters the chance of success. In chapter seven of Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell entices readers on the topic of plane crashes in the aviation world, while commendably and credibly synthesizing the controversy around the question of how and why plane crashes occur. When illustrating the terrible crash of Korean Airlines Flight 801 in 1997, Gladwell intricately describes the language, words, actions, and psychology of the pilots and crew members associated with the plane crash to better the authenticity of his claim. Combining these ideas, Gladwell forms a theory that arguably proves to be true
Lula is a tall Negro woman and was bullet-headed with strange almond-shaped eyes, straight nose, and an Indian-bow mouth who attend the same church