The 57 Bus Dashka Slater Summary

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In Dashka Slater’s The 57 Bus, there are a number of literary techniques used, including many journalistic interviews and scholarly articles, to support the idea of the modern prison system. When Richard was being sentenced, District Attorney Nancy O’Malley noted that Richard seemed to thrive under structure, but, when left to his own devices, he tended to end up in bad situations due to him being very susceptible to peer pressure and not having many good influences. “‘By all accounts he appears to be someone who—unfortunately for him—does well in a structured environment,’” she said. ‘But he’s not going to live in a structured environment forever.’ That was the story as she saw it: Richard did well when he was confined and poorly when he wasn’t. Clearly, then, the …show more content…

Some people can not be fixed, if he behaves like an animal then he should be treated like one,’” one online commenter wrote (Slater 172). “The term hate crime was coined in response to what was described at the time as an ‘epidemic’ of neo-Nazi and skinhead violence, although in retrospect it’s unclear whether any such epidemic existed” (Slater 169). When Slater emphasizes, “although in retrospect it’s unclear whether any such epidemic existed,” she admits that it might have been for nothing. On page 162, Slater quotes John J. Dilulio Jr., a political scientist, saying that “the numbers of these ‘fatherless, Godless, and jobless’ teens were growing.” Many people could take issue with this, seeing it as racially motivated, but despite the quotes that Slater pulled, his article “My Black Crime Problem, and Ours” is actually defending African Americans. The point of “fatherless, Godless, and jobless” is actually very introspective of society. Without fathers, young men (and women) are less likely to have strong male authority figures to influence and direct them in the right direction. And while women can do that, it remains true that men should have

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