Sunday, March 22, 2020

Iimmigration Essays - Canadians, Illegal Immigration,

Iimmigration Nikki Bumbacco Ms Harrison ENG OAC July 21, 2000 It is a fact that almost all of the people in Canada are immigrants, or come from immigrant descent. If it were not for the millions of people who have fled to Canada in hope of a better life, Canada would never have prospered into what it is today. As a result of this fact, it is hard to believe that immigrants are still faced with many hardships when they enter Canada. Most immigrants have good intentions in mind when coming to a new country. Immigrants coming to Canada believe that they will be able to keep their culture, become successful and prosper. These misleading hopes set the immigrant up for a life of continuous disappointment. Canadian Literature portrays the immigrant experience in a negative light. The Canadian experience for immigrants appears to be programmed for failure. Immigrants try to adopt a new identity in hope that this will enable them to succeed in the future. Venturing to new lands often compels immigrants to isolate themselves from society, by holding onto their own traditions and disregarding the new culture. Immigrants who seek to become successful in Canada are often let down by what they have found, and are left feeling fearful, desolate and helpless. Immigrant characters in Canadian literature often express a fear of losing their identity and culture. For most immigrants, culture is the only thing that truly belongs to them when they come to a new country. In the novel The Black Madonna by Frank Paci, Assunta Barrone is one of the main characters who has immigrated from Italy to a small town in Northern Ontario. Her refusal to adapt or change herself in any way to become more ?Canadian' exemplifies her desire to keep her Italian heritage. ?It had been a long time since she had stepped off that train with her dowry trunk. And in all that time she had never ceased to puzzle him. He didn't know whether she had purposely refused to adapt to the new ways or if she was incapable of doing so. She was certainly stubborn. She had strange old-country customs that she insisted on maintaining even though they were primitive and embarrassing? (Paci 11). Assunta's desire to keep her customs was what helped to preserve her Italian identity. By keeping her identity Assunta felt like her homeland was somehow constantly with her. The poem ?Alien? by Mary Elizabeth Colman also exemplifies the immigrants fear of losing their identity. ?Dear hills of home, why did I leave your arms?/ How can I love this vast, clamorous land?/ Whose noisy people hold me in contempt (Colman 9-11). This immigrant is in fear of the new land which they have come to, and is afraid of the people around them. Because immigrants hold their culture so close to them when they travel to new lands, they defend it with every ounce of their being. Without culture or identity immigrants are defenceless in a new country. The immigrant in Canadian literature is often regretful of leaving their homeland because of the disappointments they discover about Canada. Most immigrants believe that getting a Canadian passport and citizenship is their key to unlocking ?the good life' In Canadian literature the opposite of this occurs because the ideal of what Canada is does not meet it's reality. This is best exemplified through the short story ?Hunky? by Hugh Garner and the poems ?Land of Opportunity? by F.R. Scott and ?I Fight Back? by Lillian Allen. In the story ?Hunky? the main character Hunky is a German immigrant working in the tobacco fields for a very arrogant employer. Hunky wants nothing more than to become a Canadian citizen because he feels that having his citizenship is the key to obtaining ?the good life'. ?He placed great stress on the fact that he hoped to become a Canadian citizen in the fall. His longing for citizenship was not only gratitude and patriotism towards the country that had given him asylum, but a craving for status as a recognized human being? (Garner 135). The poem ?Land of Opportunity? by F.R. Scott exemplifies the disappointment of the Canadian status. ?Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce/These are privileged names in my country/But I AM ILLEGAL HERE.? (Scott, 2-4). The poem goes on to say ?I come to Canada/And found the Doors/ of Opportunities Well Guarded ? (7-9). This poem expresses the immigrant woman's disappointments found when she came to Canada. In the poem ?I Fight Back? by Lillian Allen,

Thursday, March 5, 2020

Ernest Hemingway Bio essays

Ernest Hemingway Bio essays Ernest Miller Hemingway was born on 21 July, 1899, the first son of Clarence and Grace Hall Hemingway and the second of their six children. Clarence Hemingway was a medical doctor with a small practice in Oak Park, Illinois; his wife was a music teacher with an active interest in church affairs and Christian Science. As a boy, Hemingway seemed to enjoy the best of both worlds. He grew up close to metropolitan center in a suburban or semi-rural community that was also sheltered by distance from the violence and vice of Chicago itself. Moreover, Dr. Hemingway owned a cabin in northern Michigan where his oldest son spent summers developing a life-long passion for hunting and fishing apart from middle-class society. Acting as a counterweight, Hemingway's mother tried to instill conventional values in her children in the designated role of family disciplinarian. She insisted that Hemingway attend church, that he take music lessons, and that he generally embrace the prevalent Protestant work ethic values of mainstream, Anglo-Saxon America during the Progressive era. Hemingway appears to have rankled at the strictures that his mother's sense of moral order imposed upon him. She was forceful if not domineering with Ernest. A major rift arose between them when Hemingway returned to the United States from service with the American Red Cross in World War I. Despite the wounds (physical, psychological, and spiritual) that he had received, Grace Hemingway complained bitterly about the slow pace of his re-adjustment to normal, civilian life. She demanded that he leave the seclusion of recuperating at the family's Michigan retreat for gainful employment. Ultimately, the budding author left his childhood's nest in the wilderness and entered into the domain of Paris in the 1920s, thereby upping the ante while breaking the rules of game. More tragically, Hemingway's father suffered from diabetes, financial misfortunes, and chronic depression. All...