Jamaica Kincaid's Girl Essay

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    After reading the stories: “Boys” by Rick Moody, “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid, and “Lust” by Susan Minot, I definitely became more open-minded. I began to analyze each story individually and noticed that they are all told from different points of view, but in each story a female was the narrator. “Lust”, “Boy”, and “Girl”, while all three stories are told by a female narrator; each narrator’s voice concerns different stages of life. In Rick Moody’s short story “Boy” his styles of writing was very repetitive

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    Jamaica Kincaid’s “Girl” and Alice Walker’s “Everyday Use” share a common theme of the expectations of ones heritage. For instance “Everyday Use” explores cultural norms of cultural practices. Dee and Mama argue over whether the family heirlooms should be preserved or used. While “Girl” focuses on the strict culture norms of what it means to be a respected women in her environment. The girls’ mother has a set of rules that her daughter must obey so she can be viewed positively. “Everyday Use” and

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    ideal beauty from a long time has been largely depicted as a woman with light complexion and blue eyes mostly. It wasn’t possible for women of colour to be classified as ideal beauty while white women hardly struggled to achieve this ideal. Jamaica Kincaid’s Annie John is a profound inspection of the creation of racialised and gendered identities in fictional texts. In the novel, Kincaid confronts Western standards of beauty and demonstrates that the concept of beauty is socially constructed. The

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    Jamaica Kincaid Girl

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    Jamaica Kincaid’s short story “Girl” is of a compound relationship with her mother that comes out in the mother-daughter vibrant in the story. The mother, clearly a major figure in the young girl’s background, tells the young girl of various duties related to being a young, honorable lady. Her mother gives the daughter guidance to make her the "suitable" woman she should in fact be. What makes a woman? Masculinity and virility have long been distinct and alienated along gender appearances that meant

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    Thesis Statement: Both Jamaica Kincaid’s “Girl” and Langston Hughes’ “Theme for English B” depicts the way society is so stereotypical to a person based on race, gender, sexual preference, cultures, religions, and how some people will never understand a person’s plights because they don’t come from the same environment. Theme for English B: The 22-year old male, black, college student from Winston-Salem, North Carolina questions his professor about his assignment because the assignment required

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    that a culture teaches an individual, how to speak, how to behave, and what to believe, does not conform to any formal education. So, formal education can often invalidate or ostracize those who receive it. The writings of Amy Tan, Lori Alvord, and Jamaica Kincaid serve to illustrate these problems. In Amy Tan’s Mother Tongue, Tan writes about her troubles with personal relationships and the English language. Her piece details the cultural invalidation one might experience from a formal education’s

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    Jamaica Kincaid

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    A Short Story That Is Not So Short After All Jamaica Kincaid wrote a short story called “Girl” that had many powerful meanings to it. She spoke with honesty and with a format that was eye opening and different from others. She made the girl come to life by allowing the mind to fill in the blanks for anything she left out. Kincaid also wrote in a way that made each time reading it, a new thing to infer or connect to as a reader. She allowed so much emotion to take place and grasped the reader’s

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    Wallpaper” (1892) both demonstrate women being trapped by men in a patriarchal society in the nineteenth century. However, Joyce Carol Oates’ “Where are you going, where have you been?”(1974), Jamaica Kincaid’s short story “Girl” (1978) and Marjane Satrapi’s graphic novel Persepolis (2005) are about social norms and girls being sexualized at a young age in the 20th century. In A Dolls House, Torvald has a very narrow definition of women 's roles. He believes that it’s a woman duty to be a mother and

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    Annie John Gender Roles

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    In Annie John the author, Jamaica Kincaid, transforms the novel from a piece of fiction to a lucid, convincing story of a young girl all can relate to. The main character Annie is depicted as fiery, free-spirit being torn apart by both ambiguous love from her mother and the constraining expectations surrounding her. Kincaid’s work addresses the wrenching, communal struggles shared by a large demographic. The novel Annie John explores the prevalent themes of the double standard of Antiguan gender

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    freedom and power that men have? Ever since humanity existed, society viewed women as inferior both physically and mentally. Several sources, including the bible portrays women as people who are made to serve men. In Josh Harris’s book “Boy Meets Girl” he states that ,God made Eve for Adam and her role was “...to complement, nourish, and help her husband.”. Even in the end, Eve was the first to give in to her temptation to take the first bite of the apple. That is how society has always viewed

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