"Intersectionality" Essays and Research Papers

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    Oppressed people deal with their oppression in three characteristic ways. One way is acquiescence: the oppressed resign themselves to their doom. They tacitly adjust themselves to oppression and thereby become conditioned to it. In every movement toward freedom some of the oppressed prefer to remain oppressed. Almost 2800 years ago Moses set out to lead the children of Israel from the slavery of Egypt to the freedom of the Promised Land. He soon discovered that slaves do not always welcome their

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    We Wear the Mask

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    Kyle Bigelow Dr. R. Clohessy English 202-203 July 7‚ 2013 An Unfolding of Paul Laurence Dunbar’s: We Wear the Mask The poem is concealing the pain and suffering as an ex-slave. Paul Laurence Dunbar created this masterpiece of literature around the same time former slaves were seeking civil rights and equality in America. He symbolizes the mask as a smile or grin that covered up the true emotions underlying – the unhappiness‚ disparity‚ and hopelessness. He was effective by using that symbol

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    Oppression Oppression is the mistreatment of an individual or group in society by another individual or group in society. Webster’s New World Dictionary defines “oppression” as physical or mental distress. Oppression is the physical or mental abuse of a person or peoples by an individual or group who considers themselves to be superior. It is often socially condoned by the majority or “elite” within society. It restricts the oppressed from having control over their own lives. Oppressed people

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    Bernarda Alba conveys an array of distinctive characteristics‚ however it is her stubborn conservative nature that enables the illustration of the oppression of women created by equivocal Spanish traditions in Lorca’s dramatic play‚ House of Bernarda Alba. The character of Bernarda becomes acquainted with readers through the method of indirect presentation as Lorca gives the reader no analysis or exposition regarding her. Essentially‚ Bernarda’s eccentric traits are thrust upon the reader by means

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    Analysis Of Sylvia Plath

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    Sylvia Plath lived a short‚ disturbed life‚ and much of her misfortune she has traced to her father. After her dad Otto Plath died when she was ten‚ she was able to identify his overwhelming presence in many other experiences she had during the remainder of her life. Coming from a German-born teacher‚ Sylvia Plath uses angry and emphatic language to identify the cruel and emotional experiences that the absence of her father has caused throughout her life‚ and she parallels his oppressive relationship

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    The Theory of Paulo Freire

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    THE THEORY OF PAULO FREIRE by Carien Fritze (a community worker/organizer in London‚ England) WHO IS PAULO FREIRE? Freire is a Brazilian. He was born in the North East in 1921 of middle-class parents‚ better off than most. He then went on to work with the poor and this sharing of their life led him to the discovery of what he describes as the culture of silence‚ of the dispossessed. He came to realise that the ignorance and lethargy of the poor people in his country were the direct product

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    Within Hosseini’s ‘A Thousand Splendid Suns’ and Atwood’s ‘The Year of the Flood’‚ each modern novel’s societies present their central women characters as being enslaved. Whilst each society is entirely different as ‘The Year of the Flood’ is post-apocalyptic and on the other hand ‘A Thousand Splendid Suns’ follows the ever changing political situation in Afghanistan‚ they both suggest that women are enslaved. The term ‘enslaved’ is defined as ‘a state of subjugation’ in which the oppressor has control

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    Alice Walker’s historical novel‚ Meridian‚ explores sexual and racial discrimination through the perspectives of both the oppressors and oppressed. The almost purely negative portrayals of sex challenge the warped power dynamics under a patriarchal rule and emphasize the connection between personal experience of the oppressed and socio-political setting. Distinct perspective’s moral ambivalence underscore Walker’s implied argument about sexual politics via symbolism and irony. The 1950s-conservative

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    Muslim Women Wear Hijab

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    Based on the findings of these investigations‚ it appears as though Muslim women who wear hijabs live much different compared to women who do not wear hijabs. Based on the CNN and NPR articles Muslim women who wear hijabs receive stares from the public‚ both being pitiful stares and angry glares. According to the two girls interviewed by CNN‚ Americans mostly see the hijab as a symbol of oppression and submissiveness. In addition‚ Adamu from the NPR article stated that it was harder to make friends

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    Acquiescence In Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Three Ways of Meeting Oppression” Dr. King gives us three ways in which oppressed people such as African Americans dealt with their oppression. The first one is acquiescence in which individuals let themselves get dragged into their own oppression. If one accepts their oppression it simply means that they are proving to the oppressor that one is inferior. The second way that oppression is dealt with is violence. Violence does not solve any issues within

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