The Glass Castle Research Paper

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Isabella Garcia Ms. Branda American Literature 12 April 2024 Child Negligence and Abuse in The Glass Castle Child Negligence, defined as a basic form of child abuse, is an act of caregivers resulting in depriving a child of their basic needs, affecting 78 percent of children in the US. Such dilemmas are depicted in Jeannette Walls’ non-fiction memoir, The Glass Castle, highlighting the author’s personal experiences growing up in a difficult household revolving around a nomadic lifestyle, where she first-handily experiences blatant acts of child abuse due to her irresponsible parents. Walls portrays the impactful acts of child abuse by highlighting several internal dilemmas such as alcoholism’s indirect contribution to a parent’s undivided attention, generational …show more content…

When other girls came in and threw away their lunch bags in the garbage pails, I’d go retrieve them’ (Walls 172-173). As a result of Rex and Rose Mary’s reckless and neglectful actions, Jeannette and her siblings are deprived of basic needs and burdened with the need to scavenge for their essentials, such as food. This is frequently shown throughout the memoir in moments that Jeannette describes experiencing overwhelming feelings of despondency and relying on foraging to retrieve necessary means of support. Again, relying on illegal acts to retrieve basic needs, Jeannette finds herself trespassing into the school cafeteria after hours, “I’d find industrial-sized cans of corn that were nearly full and huge containers of cole slaw and tapioca pudding. I no longer had to root through the bathroom waste baskets for food, and I hardly ever went hungry again” (Walls 231-232). Instead of a typical family dynamic of being able to rely on a parental figure to provide, Jeannette and her siblings find themselves being forced to be self-sufficient by seeking their means of

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