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Showing posts with label Keenan Hanley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Keenan Hanley. Show all posts

Thursday, May 26, 2016

College

Hey “teach”.....
I was wondering if I could have
The dream job
I wanted since I could
remember.
The idealized family
That my mom
said i was destined to have.
Me
Get into that esteemed
College,
But Here
I am.


Average at best
Knowing I won't get into the Prestigious College,
Or maybe have the
perfect family,
Which is all contingent On the grades that I receive now
Which molds and sculpts
The future.
Glorified by the ones that look toward
my “Bright” future
In the titanic tunnel
On the verge of crumbling,

But
I still have all the Support
and love
reinforced by everyone who surrounds me
Yet I am so Constricted,
And confined
And here I stand before you
Craving the satisfaction
The completeness
That is still so far away.


I am held like an oreo
In the tall
Cold
Glass of milk.
Dunking me in and out
But When I am pulled out
I either come out whole
Or crumble back into glass divided,
separated


Still, I am
Studying
and striving
as hard as I can
Hoping that one day I can be as successful as my mother and father
Hoping that I can be as good as they want me to be
As you want me to be
But yet, I stand before you
a subject

in a classroom.

Friday, April 1, 2016

Sohrab's Guilt

This image represents the surfacing remorse Sohrab has felt since the fight with Assef. This overarching guilt was made when he injured Assef in the last few moments of the fight when his slingshot took one of Assef's eyes. Since then, his guilt has taken over his entire mood, believing that he had sinned because of the way that he hurt Assef, even if it was justified. The baby flower represents Sohrab, young and just beginning his life. It shows how something that was once so beautiful is now wilting and falling apart; a recollection of its former past. A flower that blooms compares to the amount of confidence Sohrab once had in himself, whereas now the continuous, constant guilt that he has sinned results in the "falling of petals" shown below. Almost as if he were looking down at his hands like he had done so many times in the book (which represented his sadness), the flower seems to hang over in dismay just like Sohrab.
 

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Traditions Lost by Racism

“The plague of racism in insidious, entering our minds as smoothly and quietly and invisibly as floating airborne microbes enter into our bodies to find lifelong purchase in our bloodstream”, by Maya Angelou. The impact of racism is not taken lightly in any part of the world, especially Africa. The black culture that is often made fun of, and mocked in today’s society leads to unprecedented consequences elsewhere. These actions diminish the rights and culture of a once proud Africa.
Starting in the 15th and 16th centuries, the Portuguese started their slave trade which was the first step in eliminating rights for native Africans. This first step of exporting slaves, and colonizing Africa, took away the rights of Africans. These colonies would eventually grow to cities and would then spread their white, European ideals (Lowcountry Digital History Initiative). In addition to the lack of rights that and racism that Africa now has to offer, there is a tremendous amount of influence of white culture amongst the blacks. These blacks have every right to study their own tradition and practice their own culture, but in modern day Africa, the white culture that exists overrules the black culture and pushes it out, soon, ceasing to exist. This white culture is helping the blacks lose touch with  their past. This lack of past influences racism because as Africans move closer towards modernism, they compete with whites, which in turns frightens them, creating a vicious cycle of reignited racism . (Evaluating the Africa).
Transitioning to around 400 years later,  Apartheid, a cruel government that left many Africans with a lack of rights and plenty of discrimination by whites. Even with Apartheid gone, African natives are still feeling the effect of apartheid today. A town in the western cape of Africa, Oralia, consists of all whites. Although the local government states that this is to preserve Afrikaner traditions, the procedures that handle visitation of colored or black people contradicts to what the government asserts. They have to stay in a separate townhouse, cannot stay for extended periods of time, and all actions that this black or colored person takes is to be reported back to the government (RelativityOnline). This stereotype that the whites have created has circled back against them. In the last decade, groups of black Africans have gone around the country and killed white boers, or white farmers of dutch decent. The number of farm murders, or "plaasmoorde" as it is called in Afrikaans, is staggering. Over the last decade, it is estimated that at least 3000 Boers have been killed (Ahlert).

These acts of violence and clear acts of racial discrimination lead to the loss of culture and traditions that were once proud in Africa. This modernism that the whites have implemented amongst the blacks has tormented their souls which an unsettling aura of a country trying to unite itself again. Traditional morals and value, which include “respect, love, marriage, taboos, laws, hard work, kindness and worship” (Sabre) have been taken away, meaning if these are implemented back into society, communities and the nation will bond, and unite as one.
Works Cited 

"Racism Alive And Well in South Africa." Relativity OnLine. 11 Feb. 2011. Web. 08 Mar. 2016.

"The Lost Of African Culture, Values And Morals: Reason For Africa’s Underdevelopment-Part 1." Modern Ghana. Web. 08 Mar. 2016.

"Evaluating the African." Evaluating the African. Web. 08 Mar. 2016.

Monday, October 12, 2015

Behind the Glasses

Dai Sijie uses Four-Eyes’ glasses to represent fear. Four-Eyes constantly lives fear that his secrets will be discovered, and that he will not be able to escape re-education. His glasses are representative of this fear, as they disguise both his physical defects and his hidden s flaws e

"I was sure, however, that he wouldn't allow this interfere with his work, in case his myopia was taken as a sign of physical deficiency by the revolutionary peasants and they thought he was a slacker. He lived in constant terror of the peasant's opinion, for it would be up to them one day to decide whether he had been properly re-educated, and so, in theory at any rate, his future lay in their hands. In these circumstances even the slightest defect, either political or physical, could be disastrous"(53).

“‘The way you keep your suitcase locked up and hidden away is enough to betray your secret: you’ve got a stash of forbidden books.’ A flicker of panic showed in our short-sighted friend’s eyes, then vanished behind his glasses as he composed his features into a smiling mask.”

Friday, October 2, 2015

Tao te ching poem









Water, which is very free 

Has shaped the earth

The Ocean is below the land

Yet rivers flow into them

The strongest buildings,

Will eventually crumble

The tallest tree will eventually fall

And a small seed will blossom in its place

Be cautious of the strong

and they shall become weak

let your weakness be your strength

Immerse yourself in the Tao 

and you will be purified