Another Brooklyn Essay

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Another Brooklyn by Jacqueline Woodson is a novel that explores the coming of age story of August, a young black girl growing up in the 1970s in Brooklyn. The novel focuses on August’s journey of self discovery, identity formation, and belonging as she navigates the complexities of self. The novel delves into August’s relationships with her family, friends, and community, highlighting the ways that these relationships shape her sense of self and her understanding of the world around her. This paper examines the identities of August, Sylvia, Angela and Gigi. It explores how their relationships and childhood experiences shape their senses of self and belonging as an adult. August's family dynamics go a long way in contributing to her identity. …show more content…

The fact that she has a mother who is emotionally distant and critical, as witnessed by remarks such as "You're not even pretty" (Woodson 100), is enough to make her feel like nothing, a failure in beauty, intelligence, and value. Lack of emotional support and validation of her existence by parents makes Sylvia feel unloved and unaccepted, which in itself lays a foundation for deeper insecurities and self-doubt. Because of this reason, Sylvia is unable to develop any sense of self, as she goes out searching for approval and validation from other people to counteract the absence of love and acceptance from her parents. According to McAlpine and Lucas (2011), doctoral student identities are perpetually under construction and reconstruction within the dynamic context of the research and the university. The authors claim that doctoral students' sense of self is constructed in interactions with their supervisors, peers, and the academic community. Those friendships that she shares with August, Angela, and Gigi become an important source of comfort and support in her search for identity, esteem, and the search for somebody to love and accept her to fill up the emptiness caused by her parents' emotional absence. Through her friendships, Sylvia slowly finds her strength and resilience and starts to break through the damaging effect of her parents' neglect and criticism as she discovers herself and rises in power. Gigi's childhood experiences hugely inform her self-identity as an adult in the novel. Growing up, Gigi was constantly criticized by her mother for her dark skin, instilling in her a kind of internalized racism and self-doubt. The fact that her mother was hung up on beauty and perceived dark skin as not beautiful contributed to Gigi's feelings of not enough and unworthiness. "My mother's eyes would scan me,

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