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    Jamaica Kincaid published the nonfiction book, A Small Place, in 1988. A Small Place presents the theoretical story of a traveler going to Antigua, which is Kincaid's residence. Kincaid places the audience in the shoes of the tourists and tells the tourists what they would see through their movements on the island. In this book, Kincaid uses identity factors to represent the tourists. She uses socioeconomic background, which is a coalition of one's income and social background. She also uses culture

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    Maddie Wiersma Dr. Nicole Sheets EL-347: Creative Nonfiction 11 November 2015 The Reader as “You” Jamaica Kincaid immerses the reader into her essay “A Small Place” through the use of second-person point of view, continually referring to the reader as “you.” She characterizes the reader as a tourist from a privileged Western nation and narrates the experiences and thoughts of the reader while visiting Antigua for the first time. By portraying the reader as the tourist through second-person narrative

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    Jamaica Kincaid’s novel “A Small Place” is a novel made up of a series essays that dives into the daily life of the island of Antigua. Antigua is a small beautiful, nine miles wide by 12 miles long, island. Tourism is an industry that makes huge amounts of money. Hotels, beaches, and fun in the sun all come at a price, but where is the money really going? Antigua with its many resort hotels and tourist attractions, seems rich in wealth but what about the native descendants of the island. Are the

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    Is Aging in Place Priceless? Essay

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    of the brick and mortar. Gillsjo, Schwartz-Bardot, & Von Post (2011) suggested that “home was experienced as the place the older adult could not imagine living without, but also as the place one might be forced to leave” (p. 2). Notwithstanding an American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) survey (2010) which showed that the “majority of older adults polled preferred to age in place” (p. 1), the dilemma for many seniors is how to do so when faced with deteriorating housing conditions and “insufficient

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    A Small Place Analytical Essay Jamaica Kincaid’s text A Small Place, is structured in four untitled sections. In the first section, we hear Kincaid’s narration of how the reader would feel going to Antigua, as a hypothetical tourist. She tells us what we she, how we witness the beautiful natural island. She then; proceeds through the text to give us some ‘inside’ information, like how the majority of the cars are imported from Japan, and are expensive and poorly running. She also tells or gives

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    in place is long term care delivery system for older community adults designed to keep them in the environment of their choice as long as possible. This care system includes physicians, nurses and other professionals’ to support older adults’ medical functioning, functional wellbeing and social support to maintain them in their homes (Popejoy, Galambos, Stetzer, Popescu, Hicks, Khalilia, Rantz & Marek, 2015). Aging in place have two folds of benefits: from the perspective of older adults and the

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    wrote the book “Small place” to describe her life as a Caribbean. The book mostly focuses on the personal history of her home located on the island of Antigua. She maintains a bitter and a sarcastic tone throughout the book. In the introductory section of her work, she compares the Island with its former outlook before the bad English men took over the region. She presents the differences between the natives of Antigua and the tourist. It appears that Antigua is a small place surrounded by a big world

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    A Small Place, by Jamaica Kincaid, tells the history of a small postcolonial island called Antigua, which is located in the Caribbean. In this nonfictional text, published in 1988, Kincaid examines the challenges that Antiguans were left to deal with after the English left and in her writing Kincaid reveals how European colonization left Antigua with injustice, corruption, and poverty. The book is sectioned off into four parts. The first part focuses on tourism, the second part studies the colonial

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    “A Small Place” by Jamaica Kincaid is a critical representation of a hypothetical story outlining the adventures of a tourist visiting Antigua which is the hometown of the author. Kincaid in her writing tries to place the reader in the shoes of the tourist telling more of what the tourist would see through his or her travels on the island, Antigua. In this context, Kincaid attempts to paint picturesque scenery of according to the tourist’s view of the Antigua Island. On the other hand, she as well

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    Why does an author write about his/her feelings? Or maybe even why do they express their ideas? Jamaica Kincaid, the author of A Small Place talks about the struggles she experienced through her life. The key concept of her essay was various dealings she had during the British ruling in Antigua. Understanding her point of view may be difficult, but one may get an idea of her thoughts by looking through a Marxist, Postcolonial, and a Psychological lens. Throughout the essay Jamaica Kincaid expresses

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