Jamaica Kincaid's Girl Essay

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    on how to live the right way? Jamaica Kincaid does exactly that in her short story, “Girl”. “Always eat your food in such a way that it won't turn someone else's stomach-” (Kincaid 40). Jamaica Kincaid’s story “Girl” gives off a powerful message of the demands women feel in today's society. The structure of Kincaid’s story, captures the tone and reveals the great deal of expectations that individuals assume women should portray. From the very beginning of Kincaid’s piece, the mother commands her

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    Hurston and Jamaica Kincaid, both black women writers, give advice to their potential readers. Each writer comes from a different background and time period, yet both writers offer advice for every woman who reads their stories. The stories “Drenched in Light” by Hurston and “Girl” by Kincaid provides advice for the woman who needs to understand how to behave and protect her reputation. The reason for this article is to think about mother/daughter connections in Jamaica Kincaid’s “girl” Zora Neale

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    In the short story, “Girl,” by Jamaica Kincaid, the story’s narrator lectures her daughter with pointed diction and unconventional syntax, both of which affect the development of an overall scathing tone, that the daughter’s perceived behavior will lead to a life of promiscuity that will undermine her future respectability and standing within the community. The narrative voice in Kincaid’s short story comes across to the reader as a stern lecture - which is developed through the use

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    Ernest Hemingway and Jamaica Kincaid both hold similarities and differences in their tone and style. A notable difference between Hemingway’s “A Clean Well-Lighted Place” and Kincaid’s “Girl” is the structure of each literary work. Hemingway writes with short, concise sentences. He heavily relies on dialogue to carry the story of his characters. Kincaid wrote “Girl” in one long sentence, combining ideas with semi colons and commas. In Kincaid’s writing, the narrator is given two lines from their

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    a certain way. In the past women were supposed to act like ladies and be the proper quiet housewife. Women were raised to speak, behave, and perform tasks a certain way that society deemed as right and proper. Jamaica Kincaid’s short story “Girl” shows just that. Her story is about a girl who is basically scolded by her mother on how to act and perform daily tasks. Her mother's belief is that a woman's reputation is everything and if her daughter keeps acting the way she does she will lead a promiscuous

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    According to the article “Jamaica Kincaid”, Jamaica Kincaid is a Caribbean American writer. Although she goes by Jamaica Kincaid, her name is actually Elaine Potter Richardson. She was born on May 25, 1949 at St. John’s hospital in Antigua. “…Caribbean American writer whose essays, stories, and novels are evocative portrayals of family relationships and her native Antigua” (Encyclopaedia Britannica). The article also says that Kincaid left Antigua when she was 16 and traveled to New York City, where

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    Jamaica Kincaid was born Elaine Potter Richardson May 25, 1949 in St. John’s, Antigua (“Jamaica”, Caribbean). A Caribbean writer hailed “A significant voice in contemporary literature,” (qtd. in “Jamaica”, Encyclopedia) she is well known for her personal and honest works of short fiction, novels and essays (“Jamaica”, Encyclopedia). In her work, Kincaid “explores the tenuous relationship between mother and daughter as well as themes of anti-colonialism” (qtd. in “Jamaica”, Encyclopedia) and has been

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    It’s hard to imagine someone’s personal experience without actually being the one enduring it; however, Jamaica Kincaid’s use of language contests other wise.Through intense imagery and emotional response, Jamaica Kincaid utilizes rhetorical appeals such as logos, pathos, and ethos, which successfully convinces her audience by creating a conversation between herself and the reader. Jamaica Kincaid’s A Small Place is an expression of her inner feelings on the transformation her hometown, Antigua, and

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    Lucy by Jamaica Kincaid Essay

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    My Journey into Discovering My True Self Jamaica Kincaid’s success as a writer was not easily attained as she endured struggles of having to often sleep on the floor of her apartment because she could not afford to buy a bed. She described herself as being a struggling writer, who did not know how to write, but sheer determination and a fortunate encounter with the editor of The New Yorker, William Shawn who set the epitome for her writing success. Ms. Kincaid was a West-Indian American writer

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    In Jamaica Kincaid’s, ‘Girl’, the lead character which is assumed to be a mother , gives the daughter advice that she wants her to follow, about how to live as a respectable adult woman. The mother is unnamed and the daughter is assumed to be the “girl.” The mother is attempting to train her adolescent daughter to learn appropriate cultural customs and gives practical, sexual and social advice to the girl. The story reveals a woman’s role, significance and expectations in society and the intense

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