Jimmy Baca A Place To Stand Essay

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    similarity with Jimmy Santiago who also had a hard time reading and writing and he had to teach himself how to read and write. I have a lot of similarity with Jimmy Santiago Baca. Jimmy Santiago was born in poor Mexican Family.His dad was addicted to alcohol and his Mom left him when he was a kid because of the financial problem they were facing and married a rich man. Regardless the struggles that Jimmy Santiago Baca faced he was able to cope with them by teaching himself how to write poems. Jimmy found a

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    them but they won’t be in a room by themselves, they will instead be in a room with other inmates to at least talk to and reflect amongst them together to become a better person outside of prison. Ruano 2 Solitary Confinement has crossed Jimmy Santiago Baca life and has caused a major impact to change his life around. On

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    Like Antonio, Baca also loses pieces of his innocence as he faces difficult experiences and learns more about how harsh the world can be. “His shrill screams raked my nerves like a hacksaw on bone, the desperate protest of his dignity against their inhumanity” (Baca 19). In this quote, Baca is cleaning up in the county jail when he sees detectives beating an old, helpless, drunken man. In a similar way

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    Cloudy Day Essay

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    “Cloudy day,” readers find a speaker very attuned to the outer world while being incarcerated. Born in New Mexico of Indio-Mexican descent, Jimmy Santiago Baca was raised first by his grandmother and later sent to an orphanage. A runaway at age 13, it was after Baca was sentenced to five years in a maximum security prison that he began to turn his life around: Jimmy learned to read and write and unearthed a voracious passion for poetry.  During a fateful

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    are in total isolation. Most would not consider that an illiterate man could embrace education and become a world famous poet in such circumstances. However, in Jimmy Santiago Baca’s case, he describes his five year experience in prison as educational and positive, despite the real horrors he met there. In Baca’s memoir, A Place to Stand, he brings his readers through his journey, of a transformation in life of a man in Florence State Prison in Arizona during the 1970’s. The author reveals his long

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    “COMING INTO LANGUAGE” by Jimmy Santiago Baca portrays how literacy can bring light into life and forever changed a person’s world. Baca, a ninth-grade dropout, before his 18th birthday Baca was arrested for refusing to explain the wound on his forearm. This unfortunate event exposed how powerless he was. In prison, the reading of the prisoners enlightens Baca. The words of different writers influenced his original thought toward reading. Two years later, as Baca was arrested again, he fell deeper

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    Children don’t get much education if the government keeps making more prisons that really isn’t needed. If children don’t get any knowledge, they would become a troubled kid who fails in life causing more prisons to be built. In the book, “ A Place to Stand” by Jimmy Baca, he tells that his father and mother abandoned him and his brother Mieyo. His parents left them hopeless living with strangers because their parents couldn’t even be responsible for their children. Parents that behave badly will show their

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    In “So Mexicans are Taking Jobs from Americans,” Jimmy Santiago Baca defends Mexicans against the opinion many Americans have about them filling in jobs they do not want such as hard-working labor in the fields. However, many Americans don’t realize that these Mexican workers are usually paid less than an American would be paid. In the beginning of the poem Baca addresses the American stereotype of Mexicans taking jobs from Americans in a very sarcastic manner. He continues by saying that Mexicans

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    “So Mexicans Are Taking Jobs from Americans” In “So Mexicans are Taking Jobs from Americans,” Jimmy Santiago Baca defends Mexicans against the opinion many Americans have about them filling in jobs they do not want such as hard-working labor in the fields. However, many Americans don’t realize that these Mexican workers are usually paid less than an American would be paid. In the beginning of the poem Baca addresses the American stereotype of Mexicans taking jobs from Americans in a very sarcastic

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    Jimmy Santiago Baca is a winner of the International Prize for his work in, A Place to Stand. The making of a poet. He writes, “I had no money. There is no way I’m going to make bail” (Baca, 187). In some cases, prisoners are only locked up because they had to get appointed a defense attorney who convinced them to plead to the charges so they would

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