Indigo Girls Essays

  • An Interesting Connection

    717 Words  | 2 Pages

    An Interesting Connection Many times people can be put into a situation that would make them feel uncomfortable. It may be even worse when a situation like that is the way and style that you live. In the two stories A Body Ritual Among the Nacirema, by by Horace M. Miner, and Reclaiming Culture and the Land: Motherhood and the Politics of Sustaining Community by Winona LaDuke, this situation is just that. In both of the stories, the main character or characters are living in a situation where

  • Dear Mr. President by Pink

    658 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Dear Mr. President” I feel his influence shows through Pink’s other songs that have rock and pop tones to them. The song also features the Indigo Girls coming “into prominence as part of the late-‘80s folky singer/songwriter revival” (reference) actively supporting women’s rights, LGBT rights (being lesbians themselves), and many other causes. I feel the Indigo Girls lend their experience producing folk music to create the feel of a modern folk to this song with its simplistic nature and guitar playing

  • Gender Dynamics and Empowerment in Glaspell’s Trifles

    700 Words  | 2 Pages

    Susan Glaspell’s short story Trifles usher’s women to speak up and let their voice be heard, not only in the story but in the real world. Throughout Trifles it is revealed that the men constantly tell the women what they worry about is minute, just like in today’s world. Around the time that Glaspell writes this, women are still attempting to earn their rightful place amongst men, in the world. Glaspell’s short story Trifles concentrates on today’s ideas of women proving that what they think is important

  • History of Blue Jeans

    1780 Words  | 4 Pages

    Blue jeans have been weaving themselves throughout American history since they were created in 1873. In their humble beginnings, jeans started out as the durable work pants used by gold miners and workmen, but over the years jeans has become a word synonymous with America and a world wide marketable fashion that has exploded into many different styles and forms for every generation and gender. Today it would not be unusual to find a women wearing fashionable jeans with high heels, or a gentleman

  • India, the Indigo Plant, and William Carey

    550 Words  | 2 Pages

    India, the Indigo Plant, and William Carey The Indian Indigo trade began to flourish around 1789-1793, about the time Carey arrived in India. The East India Company with large scale commerce set the scene for Indigo cultivation. The Company was constantly in a state of growth and expansion. India became the grounds for a major trading center for goods across the known world. From childhood to the first step on Indian soil, Carey had a variety of knowledge concerning agricultural matters.1 As a

  • The History and Future of Denim

    3336 Words  | 7 Pages

    Introduction As the world revolves, there are a lot of changes that happens in the world. For example, in terms of technology, there are a lot of improvements already. Back then, for example, features of mobile phones were only call and text. But more ideas have been developed and people have started to think about how to improve some things so that they can attract more consumers. The result is there are now more, in this case, high-tech phones with carious incredible features such as access to

  • Choices: a Metaphor for Life, for My Life

    875 Words  | 2 Pages

    The little girl is dragged by her big sister and friend into the forest, stumbling over broken twigs and rugged tree roots concealed beneath the multicoloured leafy ground. Her older sister grasps her hand tightly, so as to prevent her from wandering astray. Rich aromas swirl around the forest; the tantalizing smells of the berries and fruit, teasing them, trying to tempt them to make wrong a turn. The little girl’s hair, tangled with the branches of the undergrowth, which she and her sister have

  • The Handmaid's Tale: A Narrative Fiction

    1130 Words  | 3 Pages

    “What do you plan to do when you get there?” asked a stranger who had heard the girl. “Well, my sister Ettie here has lost her voice. So, we are on a quest to find it!” “Ah, I see,” said the strange woman, “Well, perhaps it is the sprite you seek?” “A sprite? How could that help find my sister’s voice?” the eldest princess inquired. “The sprite in the eastern forest is responsible for many tricks in the village. He could very well have the cure for all of your ailments, little princesses.” The strange

  • American's Overuse of Cell Phones

    1100 Words  | 3 Pages

    From alarm clocks to step counters, price checkers to language teachers, smart phones these days have it all. Add instant connectivity to people across the globe, and it’s no wonder young adults are using their phones almost eight hours a day (qtd. in Spend Your Hour). Ironically, excessive cell phone use has neither increased productivity nor created stronger relationships—quite the contrary, actually. University of Maryland researchers are studying whether cell phones cause selfishness

  • Critique of The Play Foxfire

    680 Words  | 2 Pages

    Critique of The Play Foxfire *Works Cited Not Included The play I saw was called Foxfire. This play was about an old woman named Annie Nations who lived in Raybun County, Georgia. Her husband Hector had died five years earlier leaving her alone in their home in the mountains. However, she did not feel alone because she still saw Hector and spoke to him. Their son Dillard had long been trying to persuade her to come live with him in Florida. Prince Carpenter was a real estate agent who wanted

  • Creative Writing: The Last Days of Earth

    1226 Words  | 3 Pages

    notch. Daisy wanted to be the best but no-one could beat the weather girl, she was the best. Everybody loved her. Chelsea was a smart, classy but beautiful girl that was down to earth about things in life. Chelsea had come so far in life without any family and was only 25 years old. She was laid back about things but aware of people’s needs and worldwide issues. She was brave and confident to show people she wasn’t a little girl but a fighting woman waiting for the right time to show that. It

  • Teenage Dating in the 1950s

    3472 Words  | 7 Pages

    Hopkins University, 1988. "Cross Country Report on Teens." Seventeen Sept. 1959: 134-135. "Do I have the right to love?" Seventeen May 1959: 136. Gould, Sandra. Always Say Maybe. New York: Golden Press, 1960. "How Much Do Boys Spend on Girls?" Seventeen June 1959: 75, 121. McGinnis, Tom. A Girl's Guide to Dating and Going Steady. New York: Doubleday, 1968. Merrill, Frances E. Courtship and Marriage. New York: William Sloane, 1949. Sadler, William. Courtship and Love. New York:

  • Urban Legend of Vanishing Hitchhiker in Pakistan

    1345 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Vanishing Hitchhiker in Pakistan During my search for stories, I met a sophomore, nineteen year old male student who is majoring in Chemistry and Math. His parents are from Muzaffarabad, Pakistan. Currently, he lives in Maryland. His father is a cardiologist and his mother is a housewife. His parents immigrated to the United States in the 1970's. The source says this story is known by almost three quarters of the people living in Pakistan. His uncle initially told him the story when

  • The Ghost Story of the Banshee

    1080 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Tale of the Banshee On a dark and stormy night it happened. Not too far in the recent past, two teenaged girls were out camping in the woods. There, they sat in their tent while exchanging frightening ghost stories by the flickering candle-light. What began as a normal, cool, summer’s night, took an eerie turn for the worse when, in the middle of one particularly terrifying tale, an ominous howl rang out too close for comfort and a thunderous crash was heard. As they scrambled to be

  • Portrayal of Jane Osborne in Vanity Fair

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Redundant Woman Thackeray’s portrayal of Jane Osborne in Vanity Fair is very troubling to the reader of the twentieth century. Grown to be a woman who is stuck under her tyrannical father’s roof, her life appears to be very confining and menial. Her sister snubs her, her nephew mocks her behind her back, her father mocks her to her face, and her main role in life seems to be as her father’s housekeeper. However, Thackeray’s portrayal would have had a very different effect on the Victorian

  • Forged Under the Sun

    551 Words  | 2 Pages

    called them. Bead work was one of the main things the Indian women did and so the little Indian girl also learned to do bead work by watching her mom. This book also tells of the many Indian myths or beliefs. In one case the little girl and many of the villagers were going to see a young warriors first arrival and their was a great party and during the walk to the center of the camp the little girl tried to grab a plum when her mother told her not to get a plum because the plum bush was growing

  • Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket and Eisenhart's You Cant Hack It Little Girl

    929 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wayne Eisenhart's “You Cant Hack It Little Girl: A Discussion Of The Covert Psychological Agenda of Modern Combat Training,” Stanley Kubrick uses his film, Full Metal Jacket to say that people today are brainwashed products of decades of conditioning. Kubrick strongly encourages us to relish individual thought. He expresses that society’s ideology encourages conformity, which can eventually cause fatality. Also the article “You Cant Hack It Little Girl: A Discussion Of The Covert Psychological Agenda

  • Scout’s Maturity

    845 Words  | 2 Pages

    beginning Scout is a naive little girl but as the story commences she begins to understand what goes on in Maycomb and by the end she may still be young but she has matured. In “To Kill a Mockingbird” author suggests the actions we take lead us to become human beings and what we have done and learned from it leads to mature beings. In the beginning, Scout is an outsider, a tomboy who is not accepted by her brother or his friend. She is known as “the girl” also she announces that she is five

  • Things Not Seen

    527 Words  | 2 Pages

    The book Things Not Seen is very interesting. It talks about a boy named Bobby that is invisible and one day while he is rushing out of the library door he bumps into a girl named Alicia who he is surprised to find out that she isn’t startled by seeing the appearance of an invisible man it isn’t until after he raps himself back up in his disguise that he notices that Alicia is blind. Bobby is a hardcore boy that likes to read. He liked to be like the books he read, hard to break open but after the

  • The House On Mango Street: Seeking Independence

    1001 Words  | 3 Pages

    involve a young girl, named Esperanza, growing up in the Latino section of Chicago. Esperanza Cordero is searching for a release from the low expectations and restrictions that Latino society often imposes on its young women. Cisneros draws on her own background to supply the reader with accurate views of Latino society today. In particular, Cisneros provides the chapters “Boys and Girls” and “Beautiful and Cruel” to portray Esperanza’s stages of growth from a questioning and curious girl to an independent