Dumpster Diving Lars Eighner Essay

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    In “On Compassion,” an essay written by Barbara Lazear Ascher, compassion is observed through the eyes of someone who seems to be more fortunate. “Dumpster Diving,” a personal narrative written by Lars Eighner, features the adventures and tribulations of someone who does not easily survive in the hectic world that is the modern day. Through these two essays, the perspectives of the privileged and unfortunate. Each essay provides detail through personal experiences each author has had through their

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    we walk past several dumpsters – even though we may not see them. In the cities (mostly big and populated states) like the following: Los Angles, Boston, Chicago, Seattle, and New York City, there are over thousands of dumpsters in the alley-ways. As humans we walk by smelling the odor coming from the trash, and continue walking. In Lars Eighner’s “On Dumpster Diving” he will inform us about what he thinks and believes on the subject of dumpster diving. The message that Eighner wrote for the audience

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    book Walden by Henry David Thoreau we see a man who has looked past social norms and blazed his own path towards individual enlightenment. This is again illustrated in Lars Eighner’s essay, On Dumpster Diving. Here we see an individual that practices something that most

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    story “On Dumpster Diving” written by Lars Eighner, he explains what he has to go through to get a meal. Dumpster diving does not mean standing on the edge and driving in like you would a pool. Dumpster diving is more like a scavenger hunt . . . hunting for food. The people, who have to do this, do it to survive. “Yes, we ate from them. Except for jeans, all my clothes came from Dumpsters.” It is not just about finding food; additionally they have to find all of their goods from the dumpsters. Eighner

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    “Consider a Lobster” analyzes the morality of consuming the lobsters. His main purpose was toward Maine Lobster Festival and to address both arguments of animal cruelty and to explain that we would never understand an animal’s pain. Lars Eighner in his story “On The Dumpster Diving”, Ralph Waldo Emerson in “ Self- Reliance” and Henry David Thoreau in “Where I lived and what I lived for” use symbolism, pathos, and logos to discuss immorality of animal cruelty. In the beginning of DFW’s story, “Consider

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    Summary and Response Essay “On Dumpster Diving” In the essay “On Dumpster Diving” Lars Eighner describes the wastefulness of Americans, how they view the poor, and how to stay safe while living the life of a scavenger. As he travels the streets with his companion Lizbeth he scavenges through dumpsters in search of the necessities of life. There are many people that are homeless in need of food. The poor do not have the money to get food. In some cases the higher class poor are is one of the supporters

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    ” has only become much more apparent in the news and in everyday life. Two essays, On Compassion by Barbara Lazear Ascher and On Dumpster Diving by Lars Eighner, can be evaluated as discussing two different aspects of the homeless situation in America. After close reading, On Compassion more effectively achieves its purpose of defining compassion than On Dumpster Diving, which describes the wasteful nature of mankind. On Compassion begins by describing the appearance and thoughts of a homeless man

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    “On Dumpster Diving” by Lars Eighner is an eye opening piece, which shows how even the most minimally simplistic lifestyle can have a sense of home. While many people do not see life as meaningful without riches, Eighner shows us otherwise. In effect, Eighner gives me a different perspective on how much our society takes for granted by having a first person view, seeing the arrogance of our actions, and noticing a pleasant life does not have to include riches. Seeing it from the other side of the

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    that she lived like she belonged to the lower class. On the other hand, Lars gives an account of his life while in the street and how he exercised dumpster diving. In his account, Lars reminded the careless people in the society that what they found with no value could be a lot helpful to another person. The paper will illustrate the similarities and the differences in the two accounts on the view of poverty in America. Both Lars and Barbara gives account on their experience on poverty while in America

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    Poverty Essay

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    Poverty?,” Lars Eighners’ “On Dumpster Diving,” Peter Singers’ “The Singer Solution to World Poverty” and Barbara Ehrenreich's’ “A Step Back to the Workhouse, ” each author expands on personal experiences and situations that depict various viewpoints on how poverty is perceived by society. These scenarios and experiences provide an accurate portrayal of the crushing effects from those who face poverty daily in order to illustrate its brutal

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