Power Of Language Analysis

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The Power of Language:
From the moment that we are born, we are exposed to means of language and communication. Though technically we can not speak as babies; we give our parents small signals to let them know what we need such as, being hungry or needing a diaper change. Language is proven to be essential and an important part of life. In the essays, Homemade Education, by Malcolm X and Spanish Lessons, by Christine Marin both essays give a strong example of why language is important. In Malcolm’s essay, he explains how when he was prison the power of language completely changed his life. In Marin’s essay she talks about her experience with the English and Spanish language and how both languages opened up new doors for her in her life and …show more content…

Language gave him leverage and he was able to gain a sense of power through it. Malcolm’s experience in prison opened up his eyes and through language he was given a whole new world which he never knew existed. None of X’s accomplishments would have been possible without the power of language. Malcolm began to realize the other side of things and eventually became frustrated at the fact that he could not express himself the way that he wanted to. For example, X states in his essay, “I became increasingly frustrated at not being able to express what I wanted to convey in letters that I wrote, especially those to Mr. Elijah Muhammad. In the street, I had been the most articulate hustler out there—I had commanded attention when I said something. But now, trying to write simple English I not only wasn’t articulate, I wasn’t even functional” (143). This comes to show exactly how frustrated he felt. X felt a sense of power and authority when he was out in the streets, but when it came to understanding a simple English word he was small and had no …show more content…

My family is familiar with sports but that was never something that struck my interests. I would be in the stands watching him play and think to myself that I didn’t fit in and questioned what I was even doing there. Everyone else was screaming and cheering at the intense games as I tried to google what the terms they were screaming meant. I was frustrated and most of all ashamed that I had no idea what my boyfriend was doing out there. That frustration motivated me to go to more of his games and actually try to pay attention to what was going on. I started sitting next to his mom, which knows everything there is to know about baseball and ask questions. Eventually I felt the sense of relief, I no longer sat in the stands clueless to what was going on at his games. This experience helped me feel more powerful, I no longer had to sit there mentally torturing myself for not knowing baseball, I had finally learned the baseball language. My experience is similar to the one Malcolm X encountered because he in a way beat himself up for knowing a simple english word in the same way that I beat myself up for not knowing baseball terms. I was eased with knowing this new language and it in a way helped motivate me to get out of my own comfort zone and interests and learn to appreciate my loved one’s interests and hobbies. An

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