When Billy Collins wrote “The Names” America was enamored by tragedy. Speaking of tragedy, the pain in his poem is shockingly detailed among few lines. The presentation of his captivating words, paints pictures in the minds of his readers. At least it did for me as I read this piece of his work. The United States monuments Sept. 11, 2001, as the day that will never be forgotten, many would definitively agree. My insight on his work will reflect on the effects this attack had on our communities, lives of Americans and the tightening of the security we hold in the U.S.A. Right off the top communities were hit hard, the effects of this event put citizens in financial binds. Although times were getting difficult it brought civilians, us closer together as a Nation. Offices, businesses, even corporations were put on hold, destroyed or damaged. Many relief funds were set up to help with supporting the victims. The dollar amount of damage done in the wake of this event had a towering number. Wikipedia states, “There was $10 billion dollars of property and infrastructure damage. Moreover, a total of $3 trillion dollars in cost.” In Result, the attacks of 9/11 included a greater focus on home life and time is spent with family. Radio industries responded by playing certain songs over the radio. Others took songs off the radio for less demeaning reasons, point being the main goal was to draw us closer to unity. Billy Collins writes, “A boy on a lake lifts his oars. A woman by a
First, the economy in the United State was affected after 9/11 especially New York and Virginia. The stock markets and financial
If there is one day I dread most upon its arrival, it would be 9/11. Sure there was an immense amount of strength as a nation represented, following the terrorists attacks, but it also brought a great amount of grief and sorrow. I remember watching videos of innocent people jumping from windows in the twin towers hoping to escape the terror. These people believed there was no one to help and no one to help them. They lost hope. In “Remembering a Hero, 15 Years After 9/11” written by Peggy Noonan, published in The Wall Street Journal on September 11th 2016, Alison Crowther—Welles Crowther’s mom—recalls the courageous actions to save the lives of others, made by her son on this horrific day. Noonan utilizes pathos, ethos, asyndeton, and
When the terrorist attacks occurred on 9/11 it did more than just affect the comfort level of American citizens. It had an all around impact on how this country will be run for years to come. The one economic impact that I will concentrate on is that the attacks, arguably, but directly effected the U.S. GDP (Gross Domestic Product) and how the national budget will be handled from that day forward.
September 11, 2001 is a day that shook the United States to its core. Millions of Americans felt the pain, the loss, and the anger that came with the attack on their nation. It was a day of mourning, and when it comes to days of mourning it is difficult putting one’s pain into words. However, Leonard Pitts Jr. was able to move past the emotion. He put into his words, not only his own feelings, but the feelings of an entire nation. Pitts conveys the emotion felt after the terror attacks in his essay “Sept. 12, 2001: We’ll go forward from this moment” through his mournful, angry, and righteous tone.
Tuesday morning, September 11 of 2001, referred to as a day to remember, the twin towers were attacked by terrorists in a hijacked plane. Thousands of lives were lost and it was a day that brought great sorrow to America. George W. Bush, the president at that time, addressed his speech to America as a nation, giving them hope that the events that took place earlier that day would not shake them but that they would come back stronger. In this essay I will evaluate Bush’s formal 9/11 Address to the Nation and discuss the speaker’s appeals to pathos, logos and ethos to convey his message that America can stand tall as one.
Difficult choices come and go from our life. Like trying to understand who you are as a person and where you come from. In the book The Namesake, a boy named Gogol grows up in a cultural Bengali family while living in a different country with different customs. Gogol is special because he is trying to balance the two cultures. Gogol tries to understand and learn his family's culture but tends to pick and choose things from each culture to fit his lifestyle. His response to his cultural collision is very unique. From this cultural collision Gogol question himself and his life decisions.
The attacks of 9/11 affected the United States by increasing discrimination, endangering the health of many Americans, hurting the economy and changing foreign and security policies.
While 9/11 was a very important moment in the lives of many Americans, not many realize the direct impact this tragedy has had on their lives, and their country. For one, 9/11 greatly changed America’s involvement in wars. It also completely changed the way airport security works in America. Finally, 9/11 caused the American government to begin collecting significantly more data from its citizens, something which has been quite unpopular with the American populace. No matter how you look at it, 9/11 has left a permanent mark on America.
In 2001 a new poet laureate was crowned and a new voice; the voice of
This effected the whole culture of the US, and especially New York City, where I am from. In the City, it was personal, everyone knows someone who lost someone, and everyone, including me even though I was only three, claims to remember where they were when they heard. It also significantly increased the police presence in New York, everyone became scared. I’ve heard of countless foiled terrorist plots, or speculation of how safe any big event is going to be. 9/11 made it part of our culture to constantly be talking about the threat of terrorism and taught the kids of my generation to always be afraid there would be
From controversial events to ordinary life stories, Billy Collins writes about various topics in different perspectives just like a chameleon, changing its colors to fit with its surrounding. Collins talks in a gentle, yet humorous way; he illustrates a profound understanding through a clear observation. His writing style blends humor and solemnity in one entity. Throughout his poetry, Collins demonstrates, in a witty and satirical voice, his insightfulness towards the objects, using numerous poetic devices, especially allusions and metaphors to effectively convey his messages, most of which revolves around the theme of death.
The Namesake, written by Jhumpa Lahira, a famous Indian writer who won the Pulitzer Prize for her story collection Interpreter of Maladies, brilliantly illustrates the immigrant experience and the tangled ties between generations. In this novel, the main characters Ashima and her husband, Ashoke, were first generation immigrants in the United States from India. The whole story begins with Ashima's pregnancy and her nostalgia of her hometown, and a sense of melancholy revealed from the first chapter. While Ashima felt insecure and worried about her new life in the United States, her husband Ashoke, rather wanted to settle in and struggle for a new life. All of uncertainty and reluctance of this new-coming couple faded way when their son,
In The Namesake, by Jhumpa Lahiri, the protagonist, Gogol, faces an extreme enigma as he embarks on a journey to discover who he is. Gogol, who is chained by his Bengali parents and culture, wants to break free and makes his own decision. This book made me reflect on my cultural struggles as an Asian-American teenager. However, although culture may play a factor into we become, the power in which our lives are shaped, lies in our own hands. Gogol’s struggles as he attempts to be his own individual, is one where I could understand and relate to.
Do you ever have one of those moments in your life in which you will never forget where you were? I remember waking up early on September 11, 2001, getting ready for school and my dad telling me hurry up to watch the news with him. Being in 8th grade at the time, the news really wasn’t something I would watch in the mornings so I knew it had to be something important. Then I saw it. An airplane crashing into a tower, people panicking, and mayhem ensuing in a city very well known to me. When any tragic event like 9/11 occurs, the effect it will have on a nation is tremendous. It left America in shock, anger, and sadness just to name a few adjectives to describe the insurmountable amount of feelings that we felt on that day.
The main theme surrounding the concluding chapters of Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake is Gogol’s final acceptance and appreciation for both his pet name and his American-Indian identity. Despite the years Gogol has spent in trying to subdue his Indian culture as well as his various attempts to eradicate his odd pet name, Gogol has learned by the end of the novel to cherish his origins and his own identity. His appreciation for his pet name is emphasized at the conclusion of the novel, when Gogol finally begins to read the collection of Nikolai Gogol's short stories that his father had given him for his 14th birthday. He expresses a genuine curiosity as to why he was named Gogol, and therefore begins to read the novel to understand his father’s