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The Achievement Of Desire Summary

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The Spread of negative stereotypes Many people consider negative stereotypes can inspire us for the good just because they have been created by us. We have allowed ourselves to live with these misconceptions that impact all of us in a certain way. In fact, these beliefs interfere with our education, we experience the fear to fail which make us want to flip the situation and not be how stereotypes say we are . We have contributed to those beliefs that say that social status, income class and ethnicity define our identity. Educational fears such as not belonging, failure and lack of ability can motivate students to integrate themselves into this society.
People can feel motivated by the sense of belonging to a splendid society. In fact, in “The Achievement of Desire” by Richard Rodriguez, he wanted to feel accepted by the society he lived in. The feeling of …show more content…

For example, Rodriguez states “He cannot afford to admire his parents. (How could he and still pursue such a contrary life?) He permits himself embarrassment at their lack of education” (page ***). He now makes reference to his fear to fail in life like “his parents did” just because they didn't speak English at home and he felt he wouldn't be able to speak the language fluently, he felt motivated to get his education done and so he did.
Likewise, Barbara Ehrenreich agrees in “ How I Discovered The Truth About Poverty” the poor were categorized as irresponsible people who would either fail at school, at their work place or in life as a whole. The author states “ The poor were dissolute, promiscuous, prone to addiction and crime, or possibly even set an alarm clock”. Ehrenreich refuses to think that this negatives stereotypes are truth at all because those ideas are the same ideas that most people, at a stage of lack of money, fear to go through and instead motivate themselves to work hard and prevent any type of

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