“Thank you Ma’am” is a short story written by Langston Hughes. It features two main characters, Mrs. Luella Bates Washington Jones, the protagonist, and Roger, the antagonist. This story is an excellent source of social value and the author does a great job connecting to the audience. It takes place at night while Mrs. Jones walks home from work and a boy, Roger, decides to steal her purse and fails. The story takes a unique alteration after Mrs. Jones has roger in her custody. She does not punish him in any way but instead utilizes the situation to her advantage to teach him right from wrong. The main themes that Hughes focuses on with this piece are love and trust, dignity and forgiveness. Even though people make mistakes, everyone is held accountable to fix their own problems for a chance to better themselves for the long run.
There was a balance of emotions that brought this story together which kept readers interested. The fact that Roger was a young boy whose intentions were wrongful, Mrs. Jones took the oath of being a role model for him to establish a sense of compassion so that he could receive the right impression and hopefully change. She takes Roger back to her house to clean him, feed him, and lecture him. The quotes said by Mrs. Jones, “I have done things, too, which I would not tell you, son, neither tell God, if he didn’t already know,” gives readers access to connect with the characters as if we too, need to evaluate how we control the world around us.
A good literary analysis is from the authors point of view. After reading, “Thank you Ma’am,” I found myself questioning poverty. It brought attention to me in several ways that required critical thinking. Why is an older lady
Short Story Analysis “Just Lather, That’s All” The barber was faced with both a moral dilemma and a dilemma as a tradesman. He would love to kill Captain Torres, the man who had killed and tortured so many of his friends. Torres's death would bring an end to the revolutionaries' greatest threat. But the barber is also faced with his most consequential professional ethic and killing Torres would infringe on this code. The author’s use of point of view was made apparent in the second sentence of…
Ice break - English essay Ice Break is a short story written by Astrid Blodgett. The story is told in a first person narrator and is from the main character Dawn's perspective. Dawn are at a ice fishing trip with her dad and her younger sister when the car falls into the water and her dad tries to safe them. The story is about a girl named Dawn and her family. Dawn, her father and her younger sister are going to ice fish with their uncle Rick as a family tradition. Her mother doesn't want go…
deeper meaning of the theme. Irony helps develop the theme of standing up for what one believes in, within the stories “The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses”, “Dead Man’s Path”, and “How Much Land Does A Man Need”. “The Prisoner Who Wore Glasses” displays irony through the characterization of Brille because he is described as scrawny and little but stands up for what he believes in. In the story Brille was characterized as being a very small and weak man, he comes off as very non intimidating. The author…
Her husband, Leon Garfield, was the one of the famous author before she had known as a writer and was her best inspiration during writing her books and stories. In her early age, she didn’t get education in writing but she was in commercial art when she attended the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Arts from 1940 to 1942. However, she left the school to become an ambulance driver for the Auxiliary Territorial…
Short story analysis of Girl by Jamaica Kincaid Have you ever wished that someone had given you a guide on how live the right way? Jamaica Kincaid does just that in her short story, Girl. The narrative is presented as a set of life instructions to a girl by her mother to live properly in Antigua in the 1980’s. While the setting of the story is not expressly stated by the author in the narrative, the reader is able to understand the culture for which Girl was written. Jamaica Kincaid seems to be…
An Analysis of “Floating”: “Floating” by Karen Brennan is a story about a woman who believes she can float or levitate. The authors target audience is people that have had depressing things occur in their lifetime, or even more specifically, women that have gone through miscarriages. The story is told through the perspective of a woman and I think that the author did this to show that if guilt and pain eat at a person this is what can happen. The author uses symbolism to get her point across.…
AMERICAN POLITICAL SYSTEM Short introduction The United States of America is the most powerful nation on earth, politically, economically and militarily, but its political system is in many important respects unlike any other in the world. Americans are proud of their democratic electoral system. Yet, truth be told, few Americans and even fewer observers from other nations understand the American electoral process. The foundation of the American political…
The story under consideration entitled Mabel was written by William Somerset Maugham. William Somerset Maugham is one of the best known English writers of the 20th century. He was not only a novelist but also one of the most successful dramatists and short-story writers. Maugham travelled widely to all parts of the world. He visited Russia, America, Africa, Asia. The technique of short-story writing always interested Maugham. De Maupassant and Chekhov influenced him but he adopted his own unique…
Text analysis of the short story Piano by William Saroyan Piano by William Saroyan Text Analysis Saroyan, William (1908–1981) was a successful playwright. The eccentric, spirited author was born in Fresno, California, where his Armenian parents were fruit farmers and where he worked at odd jobs before gaining fame as a short‐story writer. He came to playgoers' attention with My Heart's in the Highlands but became famous with his much lauded The Time of Your…
This short story begins and ends with a start of a journey. Explain the two journeys and show how they are conveyed (told). As they both embark on their first journey together, the responder is made immediately aware that this is an unwanted journey because they are on different path and bring different perspectives. Wheatley introduces to us in the orientation the young protagonist, Ant, who is filled with despair and hesitation because “he was dreading the thought of five days with his father…