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    Barbara Kingsolver takes an interesting approach to voice and perspective while writing The Poisonwood Bible. The book is divided by narration, switching from Ruth May, Leah, Adah, Rachel, and Orleanna. The different perspectives allow Kingsolver to compare and contrast the book’s main characters. Through this design, the reader learns more about the situations because they receive a more well-rounded view of the entire story. Kingsolver differentiates between the four sisters through their individual

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    The Poisonwood Bible 1998 Historical Fiction Characteristics: Unique location, Primitivism, different ways of speaking and racial views Barbara Kingsolver Barbara Kingsolver, born in 1955, grew up in Kentucky and lived in many different countries such as : England, France, and Canary Islands. She attended Debauw University and University of Arizona where she earned a biology degree. Kingsolver now is a beloved author of eleven books and has been named the most important author of the twentieth century

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    Nickel and Dimed Analysis 1. What is the topic? Nickel and Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich is the autobiography of when Barbara went undercover to find out more about the life of a medium wage worker. She first goes to work in Key West, Florida at the restaurant “Hearthside”. She had worked there for a couple of weeks realizing how incredibly strenuous it was being a waitress especially when under a boss named Phillip that is constantly bickering and ranting on how poor of a job she is doing by having

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    the journey others do not. The journey to the United States is very dangerous, but when the families arrive their journey is not over. Families face immigration and border services which are the last barrier to their new life. In The Bean Trees, Barbara Kingsolver addresses the different views on immigration through her many characters. Taylor is young and moved away from her home in Pittman County, she left to start a new life as a new person and was given a child on her journey to find a new home

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    Nickel and Dimed, by Barbara Ehrenreich, is a book that can be appropriately described as a piece of investigative journalism. While eating an expensive lunch with the editor of Harper’s, Lewis Lapham, Ehrenreich’s sociological interest is piqued. She is perplexed at how low wage workers manage to pay their expenses with seemingly almost no financial resources. Because of the recent welfare reform at the time (2001), one of her main interests was how women that were used to receiving welfare would

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    The article “Nickel and Dimed On (Not) Getting By In America” written by Barbara Ehrenreich, who has a PHD in biology, informs the reader about the struggle a low-wage worker in America has to go through. Ehrenreich goes undercover and takes low-wage jobs to experience how a person with minimum wage of $6-$7/hour survives. During her experiment Ehrenreich only uses the money she earns from her job to pay rent, buy groceries,do laundry, pay for phone, and car. Throughout the article Ehrenreich’s purpose

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    In the novel The Poisonwood Bible, written by Barbara Kingsolver, the reader is introduced to the Price family, Baptist missionaries who are attempting to “Christianize” the country of Congo, more specifically the village of Kilanga. As the story progresses, the family realizes that they are not changing the Congo; instead, the Congo is changing them. The development of the characters within the novel is due to the instrument of cruelty. Although distasteful to regard it as such, cruelty motivates

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    Barbara Kingsolver introduces us with the character Taylor Greer. Taylor starts off in a small town called Pittman county in Kentucky, which she'll later start to want more than what Pittman can offer; she decides to go as far as her car will take her. This decision has led Taylor through various situations that she’s not used to. Kingsolver illustrates throughout this novel that Taylor will learn about real agony,until she meets Estevan and Esperanza , she’ll experience love for the first time when

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    and present known society, women have not been treated as the full equals of men. A woman 's main value is to support a man, bear children, and housekeeping duties. This is how it has always been in most cultures. The novel, The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver, shows the paternalistic society in which the Price family lives in. In 1959 an obstinate Baptist minister named Nathan Price drags his wife and four daughters deep into the heart of the Congo on a mission to save the unenlightened souls

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    Although the author of “Serving in Florida,” Barbara Ehrenreich has similarities of how life is like below the poverty line with Lars Eighner’s essay, “On Dumpster Diving,” both texts include differences on how they were barely surviving and the reasoning behind why they chose to live that particular way. Throughout Ehrenreich’s writing, she developed her essay around the story of her going undercover as a minimum wage worker to understand what the lifestyle of a low wage income is like for people

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