Who encouraged Joy to pursue her inventing ambitions and become a strong successful woman?
The women who encouraged Joy to pursue her inventing ambition was her grandmother, her past self, and her daughter. Her grandmother encouraged her to pursue her inventing ambitions and become a strong successful woman when everyone gave up on her idea. Her daughter also encouraged her to pursue her ambitions when she was drawing sketches with Joy about the prototype. This helped Joy go through the risks/troubles of inventing and selling the prototype of the mop and encouraged her to also believe in what she wanted and as a result, Joy became very successful in life because of these people who encouraged her.
What situation had moved Joy to create a prototype
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In that moment, she dropped a red wine glass and the main struggle she had was the ringing of her mop. Once when Joy was forced to clean up glass shards, she went to wring her mop and got cuts all over her hands. She started having flashbacks about the things she used to invent. After struggling with this chore every day, she decided to create a product called “The Miracle Mop”. This is a self-wringing mop that includes a handmade head that is machine washable. The purpose of the mop is to make sure that it is the last mop that you ever buy. As a result, she was moved to create the prototype of the invention to never have the feeling of picking up glass …show more content…
Using different financial statements can easily depict the standard of life for a family. Statements such as the worksheet can tell a family how much money they make, how much they spend, and if they are in debt. Although these financial statements were not shown throughout the film, viewers can assume that they were used to find out the financial position of Joy’s family. Knowing your financial position can help you depict your standard of living. Using these financial statements can also tell someone what improvements they can make to increase their financial position. These improvements can be as simple as not purchasing on such an often basis, or maybe picking up some extra work hours. Hopefully, I will not have to face similar challenges when I am grown up, however, with some hard work and dedication I know that I can do
O'Connor crafts the story so that the plot does not actually begin until insight into the characters has been provided. The limited omniscience persona of the narrative voice alternates between Joy and her mother, Mrs. Hopewell. The exposition provides an understanding of how the characters have developed the personality traits they possess when the drama begins to take place, which is on a Friday evening during the Spring sometime during the mid-1950s. The exposition demonstrates how Joy develops the social and philosophical assumptions that deeply affect the way she sees herself and relates to others.
For starters, while Joy fights through each of her challenges, Mary pushes them away. In response to the loss of her husband, Joy moves to the Bronx and comes across many barriers. Wes describes her response to these challenges: “But no matter how much the world around us seemed ready to crumble, my mother was determined to see us through
Joy was supposed to be Mrs. Hopewell’s happiness in life, but it didn’t really turn out the way she expected. Everything that Mrs. Hopewell wanted for Joy.... ... middle of paper ... ... Mrs. Hopewell says “All day Joy sat on her neck in a deep chair.she didn’t like dogs, cats, birds, or flowers or nature or nice young men” “She looked at nice young men as if she could smell their stupidity” (Flannery O’Connor).
At the age of twenty one, Joy moved out of the house, went to college, and legally changed her name to Hulga. Hulga most likely changes her name to spite her mother, because Joy is such a beautiful name and Hulga is such an ugly one. ? She [Hulga] had arrived at it first purely on the basis of its ugly sound and then the full genius of its fitness had struck her... She saw it as the name of her highest creative act.?
When Joy attends college she joined an organization to help the students on her camp. It was called the Organization of African and African and American Students. Joy work a lot, but she truly believed in a good education for her own children’s. So when she moves back to New York, after her husband dies. She moved in with her parents in the Bronx. She enroll her kids in a private school at Riverdale High School; this was the same school that President John F Kennedy went too as a kid.
...k that perhaps she should have kept her original name of Joy because it does in fact suit her.
Evidence: The speaker's love and devotion for her husband are demonstrated when she brings up the odd shirt left behind by an old lover and states "If you were to leave me, if I were to fold only my own clothes, the convexes and concaves of my blouses, panties, stockings, bras turned upon themselves, a mountain of unsorted wash could not fill the empty side of the bed." What is essentially stated here is that it is not the laundry that makes her happy, rather the fact that she has her husband’s love and is able to be reminded of it when doing the laundry.
She is fairly new to the work world and has lied on her resume’ to get hired, and realizes that the job is harder than she first thought. All hope is not lost because Violet assures her that she can be trained. She ends up succeeding at the company and telling her husband she will not take him back after he comes back begging for her love again.
Joy is highly educated, with a Ph.D. in philosophy, and yet she appears to have minimal common sense. She goes about all day "in a six-year-old skirt and a yellow sweat shirt with a faded cowboy on a horse embossed on it" that her mother finds idiotic (365). Joy probably does this simply to aggravate her mother. Joy's degrees in philosophy haven't satisfied her hunger for knowledge. It seems that the only thing Joy takes pleasure in is reading all day long in a chair. Her mother picks up one of these books that Joy spends so much time with and opens to a rand...
The passage relies on the setting of the story. It is written in 1955 and women were not seen as equal to men as they are in contemporary times. Women had more of a domestic role, while men were educated and worked to support the family. In that time, a country family had religious valves that Joy did not follow, unlike her mother. Mrs. Hopewell did not appreciate Joy’s success in her education. She believed girls went to school for their enjoyment not as a serious scholar, seeking intellect and a greater understanding of the world. Joy getting a Ph.D. in Philosophy is seen as a disappointment for a woman like Hrs. Hopewell. In an addition to the historical setting, the physical setting of their home on the farm plays a role in this story. For someone who is living in a rural area with wide-open acre...
In the story she is very rude to her mother. She would yell at her mother and tell her to look inside herself and see exactly what she was, which she believed was nothing. The story speaks of her entering rooms with her wooden leg making a hulking sound. In all she was miserable to be around and when she made an entrance it was one of the most disturbing ones of all. Joy also hated any living thing, which included animals, flowers, and especially young men. The only thing that ever made Joy happy in her life was when she went to school and acquired her Ph.D. in philosophy. Because she was older, she had no real reason to go back to school, so she was stuck with nothing to bring her pleasure or personal enrichment. When Joy was twenty-one and away from home she had her name legally changed. She tried to find the most horrible sounding syllables to put together and she thought of the name Hulga....
Joy, on the other hand, seems intent on building barriers around her soul that would make it as rigid and unfeeling as her wooden leg. As did the surgeon who had to perform the prosthetic surgery years before to replace a natural part of her physical body, she is apparently trying to perform this same function with the spiritual side of herself as well. She has taken great care to recreate her « self » into one th...
This time they all work together to clean the rugs. While beating the dust and dirt out of the rugs they all joke around and tell stories. While doing this Tom studies the rugs and claims that he can see things in them. He thinks in the patterns of the rugs he can see all the people that have walked on them and begins telling stories about different things that those people did. The family all finds Tom’s stories very funny and a good way to pass by the time.
The Purpose of Financial Statements The financial statements of a business are used to provide information about the status of the business, set performance targets and impose restrictions on the managers of the firm as well as provide an easier method for financial planning. The financial statements consist of the Profit and Loss Account, Balance Sheet and the Cash Flow Statement. There are four areas of information, which we can collect from a company's financial statements. They are: Ÿ Profitability - This information comes from the Profit and Loss account. Were we can compare this year's profit with the previous years.
She seek shelter in a crowd of people with hopes to sell some flowers. A gentleman named Higgins viewed her in this circumstance. Ms. Doolittle later came to Higgins and Pickering’s office in a request for speaking lessons. She wants to be able to sell flowers in a flower shop. Ms. Doolittle demanded