I've always been so focussed on the racism in this piece that I never noticed that the mom in the piece wasn't acting very momlike ...Maybe all the emphasis on the narrator's age, only 12 years old, was also meant to make us think about how maturity is not just measured in years. The mom may have been older, but maybe she wasn't acting so maturely... Anyway, Jillian's post made me think about that and the memoir in a slightly different way than I have in the past.
Someone else in class ... can't remember who it was... commented on how surprised she was that anyone would move to Alaska, a place she thought of as so "boring" in comparison to California. That struck me... because in the piece, it turns out Alaska isn't much different from California. The family lived in a dangerous neighborhood, riddled with violence... but if a reader doesn't know about that neighborhood, then I suppose she wouldn't understand why anyone would want to get away from it.
Another thing I thought about this time I read this memoir was the significance of the title: "Independence Day ...." The narrator is a twelve year old and twelve year olds are always struggling to assert their autonomy, their independence. They think of themselves as "grown up." This is a kind of "coming of age story," in that the narrator is forced to grow up because of the racism she confronts.
Sunday, October 5, 2008
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1 comment:
hey sandy..i enjoyed reading what you had to say wbout independece day..but i did what to say one thing...on the link page on D2L you spelledmy name wrong...i have two "n's" in my name haha..just a headsup
:)
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