Toni Braxton Essays

  • Toni Braxton : Unbreak My Heart

    1456 Words  | 3 Pages

    after her recent relocation to L.A., I had a chance to chat with her about life, the acting profession, and of course, her upcoming works. What can you tell us about your recently released Lifetime film “Toni Braxton: Unbreak My Heart”? Because I have features and a skin tone very similar to Toni Braxton’s, I am often called upon to be her photo double. So when this film came about, her manager and producer decided I should play a part in the film. I was quite happy to do so, and they agreed to

  • Music Essay - An Analysis of the Rap Song, Put it On

    1421 Words  | 3 Pages

    guns go boom-boom, and your guns go pow-pow. I'm known to have a hottie open, I keep the shottie smokin,’ Front and get half the bones in your body broken. And when it comes to getting’ nookie I'm not a rookie- I got girls that make that chick Toni Braxton look like Whoopie. I run with sturdy cliques, I'm never hittin’ dirty chicks, Got thirty-five bodies, buddy, don't make it thirty-six. Step to this, you're good as gone. Word is bond. I leave mics torn when I put it on. Summary: This

  • I Love Those Lips, But Those Lips Belong to Another

    2293 Words  | 5 Pages

    Recently I came across two arches. They were alive and in constant motion. First they told me life might get interesting. Then they showed me that life was going to get really good. Then after leaving me with an odd sense of power, they said bye, now life is sad. Its movements resembled that of a shape-shifter: causing the creation of circles, ellipses, and a mixture of feelings. These were the actions of a pair of lips belonging to a vision of beauty. When I first saw them they were in their

  • Tachelle And Tamar Braxton Analysis

    882 Words  | 2 Pages

    artists are hands down K.Michelle and Tamar Braxton. These ladies are so Similar but yet so different and have achieved great things in life. Kimberly Michelle A.K.A K.Michelle and Tamar Braxton are similar in so many ways it’s quite interesting and one way they are interesting is that they have similar

  • Chickamauga Bierce Theme

    1108 Words  | 3 Pages

    Chickamauga Analysis The Civil War forced citizens across the United States to face the realities and understand the consequences of war forcefully, due to the presence of the highest American casualties in any war, happening to be fought on the homefront. Ambrose Bierce showcases his personal experience in battle through the events of “Chickamauga”, including gore, personal loss, and shock. This story tells of a young child that ends up in the aftermath of the second most costly battle of the Civil

  • Sam R. Watkins' Story

    946 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sam R. Watkins was a Confederate soldier from Columbia, Tennessee. At age twenty-one, Watkins joined the First Tennessee Regiment along with one hundred and nineteen other young men and boys. He was one of only seven men to survive every one of its battles. He writes a memoir twenty years after being in the war about his experience as a private. Watkins juxtaposes stories of horror and gruesome death with humorous memories throughout his four years in the war. Though morale became very low toward

  • The Battle of Shiloh

    1756 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Battle of Shiloh was an extraordinary event in the civil war timeline and would be a great deal as to when the war was fought at its hardest. The sources I have researched and collected will help me better understand this battle and many other facts I have yet to discover. The Battle of Shiloh is not the most well known battle during the Civil war, but it gives us an idea on how gruesome the fighting was during this time. I view this battle as a turning point for the Union and the continuing

  • Use of Color in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye

    1492 Words  | 3 Pages

    Pauline saw the beauty of life through the colors of her childhood down South.  Her fondest memories were of purple berries, yellow lemonade, and "that streak of green them june bugs made on the trees the night we left down home.  All them colors was in me"1.  Pauline and Cholly left the colors of the South when they moved North to Ohio to begin their life together.  Through Cholly, Pauline hoped to find those colors of beauty that she left "down home". For a while she did find her colors, her

  • Narrative Voice in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye

    1114 Words  | 3 Pages

    The narration of Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye is actually a compilation of many different voices. The novel shifts between Claudia MacTeer's first person narrative and an omniscient narrator. At the end of the novel, the omniscient voice and Claudia's narrative merge, and the reader realizes this is an older Claudia looking back on her childhood (Peach 25). Morrison uses multiple narrators in order to gain greater validity for her story. According to Philip Page, even though the voices are divided

  • Essay on Toni Morrison's Beloved - Freedom and Independence

    1508 Words  | 4 Pages

    Freedom and Independence in Beloved Toni Morrison’s important novel Beloved is a forceful picture of the black American experience.  By exploring the impact slavery had on the community, Beloved evolves around issues of race, gender, and the supernatural.  By revealing the story of slavery and its components, Morrison declares the importance of independence as best depicted by Sixo.  The combination of an individual amongst a community sets forth the central theme of moving from slavery to freedom

  • Fight for Freedom in Toni Morrison's The Song of Solomon

    876 Words  | 2 Pages

    Fight for Freedom in Toni Morrison's The Song of Solomon "The scream that boomed down the cave tunnel and woke the bats came just when Macon thought that he had taken his last living breath. The bleeding man turned toward the direction of the scream and looked at the colored girl long enough for Macon to pull out his knife and bring it down the old man's back. He crashed forward, then turned his head to look at them. His mouth moved and he mumbles something that sounds like 'What for?' Macon

  • Toni Morrison's Sula - Unhealthy Relationship of Sula and Nel

    1391 Words  | 3 Pages

    nature rely on one another for their well being.  However, sometimes those organisms become greedy and decide to take in the relationship, instead of sharing with their symbiotic partner.  Through this action, it takes on parasitic characteristics.  In Toni Morrison's work, Sula, Sula Peace and Nel Wright demonstrate how a symbiotic relationship goes awry.  When one partner betrays the other, by taking instead of giving, the other partner suffers.  Nel and Sula's relationship suffers because Sula unfortunately

  • Communicating Through Numbers in Toni Morrison's Beloved

    2325 Words  | 5 Pages

    way to communicate beyond words, evoking ideas more readily than words alone are able to. All religions and cultures have significant numbers that communicate an essence or idea more quickly and completely than words can. It is in this manner that Toni Morrison uses numbers in Beloved. Significant numbers occur starting with the first symbols of the text and the words on the pages before the body of the text starts. 124. The first thing to appear, and we already have a significant number.

  • Response to the Injustice System in Toni Morrison's Sula

    2685 Words  | 6 Pages

    The language, the imagery, the themes, the characters, everything in Toni Morrison's Sula, touches my heart. I want these people to win, to know goodness in their lives, to stop being small. I want the loud and long cry of rage which has no bottom or top with "circles and circles of sorrow" to end (Sula 174).  Morrison embraces the political aspects of her work without apology and freely admits to desiring to emote a reader response. She maintains, "the best art is political and you ought to be able

  • Toni Morrison's Beloved - Symbol and Symbolism of Color

    974 Words  | 2 Pages

    The symbolic Use of Color in Beloved In the novel, Beloved, Toni Morrison uses color to show the reactions of some of the main characters. Color represents many things in the book. Freedom is an example because once the slaves were free, they noticed the beautiful colors all over. They see that the world is not just black and white and two different races, there are many beautiful things that were unnoticed. When Baby Suggs was free, she was able to spread happiness and joy to the community. When

  • Maternal Bond in Toni Morrison's Beloved

    1606 Words  | 4 Pages

    Maternal Bond in Toni Morrison's Beloved The maternal bond between mother and kin is valued and important in all cultures.  Mothers and children are linked together and joined: physically, by womb and breast; and emotionally, by a sense of self and possession.  Once that bond is established, a mother will do anything for her child.  In the novel Beloved, the author, Toni Morrison, describes a woman, Sethe, who's bond is so strong she goes to great lengths to keep her children safe and protected

  • Milkman's Transformation in Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon

    689 Words  | 2 Pages

    Milkman's Transformation in Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon Milkman experiences many changes in behavior throughout the novel Song of Solomon. Until his early thirties most would consider him self centered, or even self-loathing. Until his maturity he is spoiled by his mother Ruth and sisters Lena and Corinthian because he is a male. He is considered wealthy for the neighborhood he grew up in and he doesn't socialize because of this. As a result of his spoiled childhood Milkman takes women

  • Tragedy and Redemption in Toni Morrison's Beloved

    2239 Words  | 5 Pages

    Tragedy and Redemption in Beloved "This is not a story to pass on."(1) With these enigmatic words, Toni Morrison brings to a conclusion a very rich, very complicated novel, in which slavery and its repercussions are brought into focus, examined, and reassembled to yield a story of tragedy and redemption. The "peculiar institution" of slavery has been the basis for many literary works from Roots to Beloved, with particular emphasis

  • Toni Morrison's Sula - Female Struggle for Identity

    2167 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Female Struggle for Identity in Sula The novel Sula by Toni Morrison exemplifies the new feminist literature described by Helene Cixous in "The Laugh of the Medusa" because of the final portrayal of the two main characters Nel and Sula.  However, it is clear throughout the novel that both Cixous's and Gilbert and Gubar's descriptions of women characters are evident within this novel.  The traditional submissive woman figure paradoxically is set against the new woman throughout the novel

  • Toni Morrison's Sula - Sula and Nel as Soulmates

    2111 Words  | 5 Pages

    Sula and Nel as Soulmates in Toni Morrison's Sula In examining the two distinct characters of Nel (Wright) Greene and Sula Peace from Toni Morrison's Sula, a unique individual soul emerges from the two women. This soul takes into account good, bad, and gray area qualities. They gray area qualities are needed because, while Nel exhibits more of the stereotypical "good" qualities than Sula, the stereotypes of good and bad don't fit the definition completely. Nel and Sula combined create a type