Own Experiences Essays

  • The Maturation of Siddhartha

    816 Words  | 2 Pages

    yearned to unwind the complexities of his existence.  He ends as an old sage who has found peace within himself and his surroundings.  Throughout the book, Hesse allows the reader to trace Siddhartha's maturation process both through his experiences, and people with whom he comes in contact.  During his journey, he makes a number of choices, "turns", that put him on a path of his maturation which is marked by self discovery and independence. Siddhartha's maturation is developed by three

  • Reader Response Essay - Joyce Carol Oates's Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    reading “Where are you going, where have you been?” by Joyce Carol Oates I found myself relating the experiences of Connie, the girl in the story, to my own personal experiences. She spoke of going to a friend’s house and having her friend’s father drive them to the shopping mall so that they could walk around and socialize or go see a movie. I found that this related very closely with my own experiences of being fifteen years old because it was always someone else’s parents driving my friends and I

  • Free Siddhartha Essays: Significance of the River

    824 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Significance of the River in Siddhartha In the book Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse the significance of the river is displayed throughout the experiences that Siddhartha has next to the river and the things that by listening to the sound he comes to understand. Siddhartha is learning something from the moment he rides the ferry to the time when Govinda lays on the ground with tears flowing uncontrollably. Siddhartha admits to having no money to pay for the voyage, but the Ferryman says that

  • The Sense of Scents, the Sense of Self

    2427 Words  | 5 Pages

    brain; for this paper I would like to trace that path (as much as possible) through to my experience of smell and then to see if my experience matches the proposed models. From this perspective, I'd like to take a last look at the "brain = behavior" equation and the notion of the "I - function" and see if I can't make some final sense of it all in a way which is not utterly dissonant with my own experiences. Let's look at smell again, then. My last paper left off with the following conclusions

  • Use of Reflexivity in Ethnographic Research

    991 Words  | 2 Pages

    been telling me about their losses through my own loss, and not through any systematic preparation for field research” (Rosaldo, 8). Renato Rosaldo’s own experiences had helped him to understand and empathize with the Ilongots, who fourteen years earlier, he was not able to understand that the Ilongot’s statement that “Rage, born of grief, impels him to kill his fellow human beings.” (Rosaldo, 1)Rosaldo’s writings point out that having similar experiences allows the anthropologist to understand and

  • Conrad’s Congo Journey

    798 Words  | 2 Pages

    Conrad’s Congo Journey Joseph Conrad’s own experiences during his trip through the Congo helped him provide a foundation for the writing of Heart of Darkness. In 1890, Conrad took a job as a captain on the river steamer Kinshasa. Before Conrad took this job, he had worked for the French merchant navy as a way to escape Russian military service and also to escape the emotional troubles that had plagued him. Conrad had been in a financial crisis that was resolved with help from his uncle. After

  • Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness

    582 Words  | 2 Pages

    Heart of Darkness Joseph Conrad, like many authors, used his own experiences for the basis of his novels. Specifically, Conrad’s journey on the Congo River as captain of a West African river steamer formed the basis for his novel Heart of Darkness. In this novel, the narrator of the story, Marlow, Conrad's protagonist, travels up the Congo in search of Kurtz, an ivory trader, and eventually ends up in the “heart of darkness.” Conrad also used his pessimistic view of life for the basis of Heart

  • Why Is Race A Big Issue

    588 Words  | 2 Pages

    has upset many African-Americans. I believe that the word can be obscene, but in this book it is not. It only shows the reality of that time. I consider this book to be one of the greatest books I have read. It is actually inspired by Twain’s own experiences living on the Mississippi River. Many people consider Twain to have been a racist. Although he uses the word “nigger,” it does not mean that he was racist. If people would look past the word and actually see the story, they would realize that

  • The end of the road

    1116 Words  | 3 Pages

    face it, my non-fiction was pretty bad. I had never really written before or had any “coaching,” so I think my shortcomings were understandable. I found it easy to write because I was drawing from my own experiences, but I found it hard to write well. It felt forced to write about my own experiences. Of all the pieces I wrote, there was one that I liked – my Knowledge Tree. I think that this piece worked better than the othe... ... middle of paper ... ... And it worked. Writing – done. Once I

  • Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and Charles Dickens' Great Expectations

    1857 Words  | 4 Pages

    works of literature like Jane Eyre and Great Expectations. BOTH NOVELS CONVEY THE SAME VICTORIAN IDEOLOGIES COMMON FOR THE TIME PERIOD IN, WHICH THEY WERE WRITTEN. Brontë displays many of her experiences and beliefs through the main character, Jane, in her novel. As does Dickens, he portrays his own experiences and thoughts through Pip, the main character of Great Expectations. Dickens and Brontë use setting as an important role in the search for domesticity. Great Expectations is a circular book

  • In In Total Remission

    996 Words  | 2 Pages

    learning to live anew, I comforted a mother coping with death. My conversation with the mother compelled me to re-confront my journey with cancer. By reflecting on my own anxieties, still real and familiar, I empathized with the mother on an equal plan rather than that of victim and volunteer. Through service, I now probe my own experiences to assist and empower others. I have confronted and challenged myself in other realms of my life. Last spring, in Harvard's Agassiz Theater, the lights were dim

  • Freedom is Not Free in Bread Givers

    2199 Words  | 5 Pages

    separation from the Jewish people when she rose above poverty. "I am alone because I left my own world" (Ebest 8). She explores this issue repeatedly in her work trying to find a solution to a problem with no easy answer. In order to obtain religious, social, political, and equality 23 million Jews immigrated to America during the years between 1880 and 1920 (Chametzky, 5). Anzia Yezierska wrote about her experiences as a poor immigrant in her fictional work becoming a voice of the Jewish people in the1920s

  • Formalistic Approach to Broumas' Little Red Riding Hood

    924 Words  | 2 Pages

    sentence leaves no limit on place or time.  This allows the reader to fill in the gaps with their own experiences.  From the very beginning, repetition plays an important role.  Faint echoes of pain are heard as the words "old" are repeated, hinting to the reader that there may be some emotional point to this. The second sentence, while graphic in detail, presents a reason for the pain.  The birthing experience, however gory and painful, is a unique bonding process that brings mother and daughter together

  • The Maturity of Men

    949 Words  | 2 Pages

    things they do. Although sometimes it may seem impossible for men to finally grow up, they eventually do because they realize from their own experiences what is proper and what is not. Many Hollywood films, including American Wedding and School of Rock, view men with an immature mentality but are able to explore a plot where they grow through their experiences. In the film American Wedding, directed by Jesse Dylan, the plot follows the same theme as the first two in the American Pie trilogy.

  • Discrimination of Women In The Workplace

    507 Words  | 2 Pages

    Trooboff writes that women struggle to find an identity in the world. She describes her own experiences, which she encountered as a woman. I also have my own share of experiences. Over the past several decades, women have succeeded in conquering some of the barriers in the workplace. Equal pay has been the law since l963, but women are still paid less then men, even when they have similar education, skills, and experience. In 1998, women were only earning 73 cents for every dollar earned by men. Over a

  • The Highlights of My Teaching Pedagogy

    1902 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Highlights of My Teaching Pedagogy Through my own experiences, and as enforced by others' opinions in the profession, I have found that teaching is one of the most rewarding careers. Not only are you placed in the position of instructing and guiding children and young adults through the life long learning process, but you are able to give back to the schools and communities which have supported your early education and experiences that opened you up to a bright future. In becoming an educator

  • D.h. Lawrence

    767 Words  | 2 Pages

    and emotion he felt. D.H. Lawrence believed in organic writing. 	Most of Lawrence’s writing reflected nature. The nature in his book came from his own experiences he had while traveling abroad with his wife or just on the nature of where he grew up. His most original poetry, published in Birds, Beasts, and Flowers, flowed from his own experience of nature in the southwestern U.S. and the Mediterranean region. Also, the most significant of his early fiction, Sons and Lovers, dealt with life in

  • The Joy of Learning

    713 Words  | 2 Pages

    emotions to work for them. This concept of facilitated learning has been widely discussed in theories. Some of the more popular theories include the behavioral and cognitive learning theories. The theory I will most likely follow once I am in my own classroom will be the cognitive learning theory. The cognitive learning theory is characterized by the focus on covert activities of the mind rather than on overt behaviors like the behavior learning theory. According to Becomin...

  • Free Siddhartha Essays: Finding the Truth

    630 Words  | 2 Pages

    end of suffering, and the middle path. The First Noble Truth is The Truth of Suffering. If people examine their own experiences, or look at the world around them, they will see that life is full of suffering. In the novel, Siddhartha experiences the two forms of suffering - physical and mental. Physical suffering can come in many forms - disease, ageing, injury. Siddhartha experiences physical suffering as a young man when he joins the ascetics or Samanas. As a Samana, Siddhartha learns to fast,

  • ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT

    778 Words  | 2 Pages

    ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque is a first hand experience account of the war. The horror of the war and Remarque's own terrifying experiences and memories would certainly have effected what he wrote. All Quiet on the Western Front was published in March 1929, London. The late publication of the novel may have been due to the grief and trauma that Remarque experienced in the war. All Quite on the Western Front was written for the