The Girl Essay

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    Robbins Nine Girls

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    the world, girls are at a social disadvantage. Facing institutionalized misogyny alongside poverty, arranged marriage, and a variety of other obstacles, some of them aren’t even afforded an education. What would the world be like if girls were valued more in cultures and societies? What would it be like if girls in developing countries had more opportunities to go to school? What would it be like if these oppressive barriers did not exist? Richard E. Robbins asks these questions in Girl Rising. Released

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    Three hundred girls are considered outcasts every year. They’re shipped off into an unknown area to most people. The girls are only eleven and they’re taken away from their families. Their families are the ones that want them gone. I boarded the cruise ship and I walked in the suite. There were a huge group of boys walking around. The cruise ship is very warm and it’s very cozy. The boarding event takes about three hours. The girls have to line up and they have to get a baggage check. I can’t wait

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    No Doubt's 'Just A Girl'

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    “Just a Girl”, written by No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani and Thomas Dumont is an ambiguous take on the role of women in a male dominated society. Stefani and Dumont’s sarcastic lyrics show both the dominant, hegemonic view of women in a patriarchal society and the defiance of the author to this oppressive bourgeoisie system set up to make women subordinate to men. In this piece, Stefani and Dumont tackle the supposition that women must remain infantilized ‘girls’ who never mature into strong, capable women

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    Jamaica Kincaid's Girl

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    in order to be viewed as a good girl? This answer is not easy to answer. It depends on who is answering, the year, and even the culture. “Girl” is a short story written by Jamaica Kincaid, and this short story is full of advice given from an unknown narrator to a girl about how to be a good girl. These advices vary between household chores to loving a man. Some of the advice is scolding the girl, most of it is genuine advice, and some of it even empowers the girl. When the story is told in second

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    Jamaica Kincaid Girl

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    In the story “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid, the speaker, a mother figure, is preoccupied with the girl’s image but indifferent to the girl’s individual personality. The speaker is obsessed with the girl’s becoming a respectable woman rather than any specific issues that the girl might be having. The story consists of the speaker teaching the girl about the skills and behavior that a respectable woman needs. When teaching her daughter how to walk she says, “walk like a lady and not like the slut you are

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    Jamaica Kincaid Girl

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    Girl by Jamaica Kincaid is an excellent piece of text that embraces a coming of age theme. The excerpt is really just a gigantic list of things that the average Jamaican girl needs to learn to do in order to be considered a woman in Jamaican culture. This story was easiest for me to read and even relate to because of the fact that I can relate due to my family’s background. The one part within the story that most greatly emphasizes the coming of age theme is when the author states, “This is how to

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    I’m sure a lot of us have had that “I’m not like other girls” mindset. “I like pizza and fart jokes and drinking tea,” we say to ourselves. We’re real. But what is so wrong with being like other girls? Are women who don’t like pizza or Netflix less “real” or complicated than others? And who determines what “real” means in the first place, and why is it such a desired trait? Just look at the way we talk about female celebrities and you’ll see that there have been endless women who have been lauded

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    Mean Girls In Prison

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    Back in our bedrooms, the girls are busy trying to put together clothes to wear to the prison. Our frantic search for an outfit is interrupted as Ally walks into our bedroom, the one and only bedroom that is shared by ten girls, and starts listing off the rules that the prison has on clothing. “No white, no blue, no black, nor gray clothing.” She says, while scanning her eyes, that interlock with all the girls briefly. Doing so, she verifies that all the girls are in agreement with her, or at the

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    Jamaica Kincaid Girl

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    Society is often seen to have different biases or perspectives on topics such as the role and perception of women. The short story, “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid, consists primarily of a catalog of commands and instructions, the purpose of which is to make sure that the mother’s daughter is constantly in check and not getting into any trouble. Jamaica Kincaid utilizes a wide range of techniques such as symbolism and diction in order to showcase the theme of how the depiction of women rely mainly on how

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    Jamaica Kincaid Girl

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    In the short story, “Girl” by Jamaica Kincaid, the narrator commands a list of orders to her preadolescent daughter in one single sentence. The author includes figurative language to emphasize her points and demands upon her daughter. Although the mother is stern throughout the entire short story, it explains the type of relationship she shares with her daughter and the expectations she holds for her future. Kincaid expresses her expectations for her daughter through strict similes and powerful

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