Certain words mean more than what is set down on paper. It’s the background of the words that is important. The reason of why the term is being used in the text is the true meaning of the word. In the Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary E. Pearson, there are several definitions throughout the book. The words curious, lost, hate, empty, human, identity, and forever are all defined throughout the duration of the story. All of the words are being defined for a reason, all of the words have significance to the story. They are all connected in different ways and all mean more than just what the definition says. The words human, identity, and forever are each defined at some point during the story, and they are interconnected and important to the text …show more content…
because they each are connected to Jenna and affect her life, and her family’s life in some way. One of the definitions in the book is “human”. It is placed in the section of the book where Matthew and Claire try to explain to Jenna what she is made up of and what they did to save her life. It’s placed here because Jenna thinks that she is not human, due to the fact that she is made up of Biogel. “How many definitions for human can one person find? And how do you know which one is correct?” (Pearson, 134). When Jenna finds out that only ten percent of her body is the real her, she questions the fact that she is human because ninety percent of her body is made up of Biogel. The definition of human in the text is important to the story, because it lets the human know the real definition of human. When Jenna questions the fact whether she is human or not, the reader knows the accurate definition of the term. On page 129, Jenna says to her father, “I’m illegal. No matter how you play with the words… I’m illegal. I don’t even know if I’m human” (Pearson, 129). Jenna’s parents tell her the story of how they saved her life after the accident and it scares Jenna because technically she is only ten percent human. Meaning that way more than half of her is not a real human. “No stomach, but an intestine of sorts. It explains my infrequent trips to the restroom and unusual constitution” (Pearson, 135). A normal human has a stomach and two intestines. In this quote, Jenna compares and contrasts herself to the definition of a human. The definition given in the book helps the reader understand the difference between Jenna and a human not made up of Biogel. The definition of human is important to the text because Jenna does not believe that she is human, and the definition shows the reader the actual meaning of the word. The book also has the definition of the word identity because since Jenna is only ten percent human, Jenna doesn’t understand the true meaning of her self, otherwise known as her identity. The definition of identity is “the qualities of a person that make them different from others” and “separate or distinct existence”.
(Pearson, 190). This definition is important to the story because Jenna has many qualities that a very different from others, both mentally and physically. “The dictionary says my identity should be all about being separate or distinct, and yet it feels like it is so wrapped up in others” (Pearson, 190). This quote made by Jenna is extremely important to the text because it shows that Jenna realizes the number of people that have put their time into her existence, and the number of people that could be affected. It also shows that Jenna wants to know the true meaning of identity because she doesn’t even understand her true identity. “Lily says percentages and politicians can define identity, but they’ve defined mine: illegal lab creation” (Pearson, 190). This quote proves that the definitions of identity and human are interconnected because Jenna doesn’t think that she is human because she is a lab creation that only contains ten percent of the real Jenna, and because ninety percent is made from Biogel she is considered illegal. Lily states that just because the law shows that Jenna is illegal, it doesn’t mean that just doesn’t have feelings, or a personality. Jenna says, “Would I have wanted this, Lilly? Would the Jenna you knew have wanted what I am now?” (Pearson, 189). Jenna is asking Lily would the old her have wanted to survive and go through the hell that she is experiencing now. This is because after the recreation of Jenna, the old Jenna’s identity was lost, and the new Jenna basically didn’t have one. Jenna has no recollection of what her old identity or personality was like, so she is relying on Lily to find out. Just like the word identity was interconnected with the word human, “identity” is also connected with the last word defined in the book,
“forever”. With thirty pages left in the book, the author adds in the definition of forever. This is because Jenna realizes that when her parents saved her, they saved her “forever” because she will live anywhere from two to two-hundred years. The term forever, is connected to “human” and “identity”. “I was forever her baby. Forever her miracle. How long is forever?” (Pearson, 235). While Jenna thinks back to the day she was in the hospital after the accident, she thinks about how her mom would never let her go. Then Jenna begins to think how long is forever? How long would she be her moms baby? When the definition of forever appears in the book, the reader realizes how long “forever” actually is which is very important to the story. “There are many words and definitions I have never lost. But some I am only just now beginning to truly understand” (Pearson, 235). Jenna is saying that she only now understands the meaning of “forever” because she is experiencing it. She is experiencing living forever. The definition of forever is connected to “human” and “identity” because all three of the terms affect Jenna’s life in drastic ways, because all three change her view on life. In the book, Jenna learns that Kara and Locke’s minds are trapped in a box as witnesses of the car accident. Jenna says, “How bad could it be to exist in a box forever?” (Pearson, 227). It’s horrible for Kara and Locke because even though there bodies are gone, there identity and soul still exists, and it will forever. At the time, Jenna didn’t understand the true meaning of forever, but once she looks up the definition she realizes how horrible it might actually be for Kara and Locke. The terms human, identity, and forever are each interconnected and are each very important parts to the story because they each have major impacts on Jenna and her family’s lives. From the midpoint of the story to almost the end, Jenna keeps repeating and thinking of the words human, identity, and forever, although she doesn’t exactly understand why and what the words mean. When she looks up the definitions she learns the technical meaning of the words but also realizes that her life is very connected to each one because of her accident and recreation. Each word has a very important impact on the story and they are all connected with each other because of the recreation and new life of Jenna Fox. All words have definitions and all are chosen to be spoken or written for different reasons, but it’s what is written between the lines that is important. It’s what the significance of the word that counts.
Identity is defined as being oneself and not acting or being something else. The identity that one forms throughout their life time is a slow and tedious process, each and every event in one’s life whether it’s larger or small scale has an effect on developing ones overall identity. In the play Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth by Drew Hayden Taylor, Janice it caught between two identities and struggles to find a happy medium. Being adopted into a white family at a young age, Janice has become accustom to many of the white traditions and ways. Janice’s native family has recently gotten in touch with her and has put a great deal of pressure on her to regain some of the native culture she was born into. With pressure building Janice begins to question her identity and begins to show signs that she wants nothing to do with her native roots. Drew Hayden Taylor does an excellent job in this play showing how stereotypes and pre-conceived notions affect ones identity and their relationships within society. Each character within the play shows how their identity has been shaped through the relationships they have acquired throughout their lives; Tonto’s identity is heavily influenced by his father and best friend Rodney, Barb is influenced by the customs and traditional ways of her mother, and Janice after being adopted at a young age has formed an identity revolving around that of her adopted parents but she faces a great deal of pressure from her native birth family.
True identity is something people must create for themselves by making choices that are significant and that require a courageous commitment in the face of challenges. Identity means having ideas and values that one lives by” (Merton). Concurring with Merton, a person is not given their identity at birth or while developing as an embryo, rather it is something that you create for yourselves over the course of life through decisions and actions made by the individual. Identity is something that one may not be fully aware of or discover until the last breath. Identity can be influenced through associations with others, and environmental factors.
According to the Merriam Webster, identity is the “sameness of essential or generic character in different instances” (Merriam Webster). An identity can be the qualities or beliefs that make a person different from another, but it is also the thing that connects them. A man’s identity stays with him “for the rest of his life” and is something that “[can] not change much” (O’Hara 202, 193). Identity is who one is born to, what one thinks, what one says, and what one does; John O’Hara and F. Scott Fitzgerald both utilize the theme of identity in describing the lives and actions of the central characters Julian English and Dick Diver in their novels, Appointment in Samarra and Tender is the Night. Discovering their individual identities is a journey for both men, and on their journey to self-discovery the men believe that by fixing their lives they will discover their identity. Both Julian and Dick struggle to maintain perfect order in their lives by controlling fate, but their ancestral obligations lead to self-destruction and inevitable downfall. While Diver commits social suicide, English commits actual suicide, and the two seal their fates the second they try to change their journey. Sigmund Freud’s Oedipus complex is a feeling of sexual attracting of a child toward their parent; the fixation towards one’s father or mother can lead to choices of sexual partners or spouses that resemble the parent. The wives of Julian English and Dick Diver, Caroline and Nicole, marry their husbands because of their fatherly personas, and Caroline and Nicole’s own incestuous pasts shape and control their relationships with Julian and Dick. The superficiality of English and Diver and their inability to realize who they are lead to a need to contro...
The American Dictionary defines identity as the distinct personality of an individual. Many factors make up one's identity, such as race, one's relationship with society, and religion. People seek other people who with they can identify. One must interact with others and learn from his interests and their responses to find a suitable group. The process of finding a group allows one to discover his or her own identity. Through The Color of Water, James McBride demonstrates that one perceives his identity through feedback from others as well as through his own thoughts and emotions.
Jenna has a past and memories that make up who she is regardless of the Jenna before the accident. Memories are vital because they make up an identity and every human has an identity. After waking up from a coma, Jenna doesn’t know her identity which leads her to think that she is not human. When Jenna started remembering who she once was, Jenna shaped into her old personality. Jenna shows this when she goes to Lily for help and Lily says, “Why are you telling me this and not your parents? I’m surprised she would ask. Is she testing me? We both know the answer. Because I always have” (Pearson 186). Jenna’s identity makes her who she is. She remembered the close bond she once had with Lily and regained a small part of Jenna Fox’s identity. More importantly Jenna realizes that she still has the same memories she did befor...
Although the concept of identity is recurrent in our daily lives, it has interpreted in various ways.
Identity is a group of characteristics, data or information that belongs exactly to one person or a group of people and that make it possible to establish differences between them. The consciousness that people have about themselves is part of their identity as well as what makes them unique. According to psychologists, identity is a consistent definition of one’s self as a unique individual, in terms of role, attitudes, beliefs and aspirations. Identity tries to define who people are, what they are, where they go or what they want to be or to do. Identity could depend on self-knowledge, self-esteem, or the ability of individuals to achieve their goals. Through self-analysis people can define who they are and who the people around them are. The most interesting point about identity is that some people know what they want and who they are, while it takes forever for others to figure out the factors mentioned before. Many of the individuals analyzed in this essay are confused about the different possible roles or positions they can adopt, and that’s exactly the reason they look for some professional help.
Identity is very important in a person’s life. It can induce pride or shame, provide a community or provide a way to distinguish one’s self from others. But, where does this identity come from? It is easy to assume we are who we are because of who raised us, but this is not the entire case. Andrew Solomon, author of “Far from the Tree” introduced two different forms of identity, vertical and horizontal. He defines vertical identity as the attributes acquired and shared by the people we are raised by and horizontal identity as the attributes different from those who raised us, but are shared and acquired through a peer community. These two types of identities generally do not intersect and, depending on the circumstance, one can greatly impact
What is identity? Identity is an unbound formation which is created by racial construction and gender construction within an individual’s society even though it is often seen as a controlled piece of oneself. In Dr. Beverly Daniel Tatum’s piece, “The Complexity of Identity: ‘Who Am I?’, Tatum asserts that identity is formed by “individual characteristics, family dynamics, historical factors, and social and political contexts” (Tatum 105). Tatum’s piece, “The Complexity of Identity: ‘Who Am I?’” creates a better understanding of how major obstacles such as racism and sexism shape our self identity.
Many philosophers and psychologist from Jean Piaget to William James have theorized what makes a person who they are, their identity. Jean Piaget believed that the identity is formed in the sensorimotor stage and the preoperational stage. This means that a child is forming his identity as late to the age of seven (Schellenberg, 29) However, identity is strongly impacted by society such as school, church, government,and other institutions. Through our interactions with different situations our personality develops (Schellenberg 34). "In most situations there is a more diversified opportunity for the development of social identities, reflecting what the individual wants to put forth to define the self as well as what others want to accept,"(Schellenberg 35). Therefore, humans, much like animals, adapt to different situations based on who they are with. Individuals are always changi...
Identity-“Ones personal qualities.”Identiy is something only he or she can fully define. My uncle says I am affectionate,cheerful, and calm. My grandmother sees me as slim, pretty and sweet. My dad described me as perky, cheerful and happy, my mom says beautiful, gentle, and self-conscious. These adjectives describe me accurately, yet they are only abstract versions of me. Adjectives cannot begin to describe me and I aknowlege these descriptions for what they are, a condensed translation from my outward self to the world. It is impossible for anyone to understand me completely because nobody has experienced the things I have. My mother has never cherished a raggedy doll named Katie and my father never spent hours upon hours making collages and scrap books for his future children. My uncle never hid in the back of a pick-up-truck and traveled four hours to New York and my grandmother has never walked hours in the rain looking for the Queen of England. My identity is something only I can define.
Identity is a state of mind in which someone recognizes/identifies their character traits that leads to finding out who they are and what they do and not that of someone else. In other words it's basically who you are and what you define yourself as being. The theme of identity is often expressed in books/novels or basically any other piece of literature so that the reader can intrigue themselves and relate to the characters and their emotions. It's useful in helping readers understand that a person's state of mind is full of arduous thoughts about who they are and what they want to be. People can try to modify their identity as much as they want but that can never change. The theme of identity is a very strenuous topic to understand but yet very interesting if understood. How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents by Julia Alvarez and Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki are two remarkable books that depict the identity theme. They both have to deal with people that have an identity that they've tried to alter in order to become more at ease in the society they belong to. The families in these books are from a certain country from which they're forced to immigrate into the United States due to certain circumstances. This causes young people in the family trauma and they must try to sometimes change in order to maintain a comfortable life. Both authors: Alvarez and Houston have written their novels Is such an exemplifying matter that identity can be clearly depicted within characters as a way in adjusting to their new lives.
...can go through an entire lifetime and not really know how to define their own identity. In many cases people suffer through a great crisis to discover who they really are. If someone doesn?t know the meaning of their own identity, how can society apply a definition to the word? It leaves people to ponder whether or not there are some feelings and parts of life that simply cannot be explained. When defining the word identity scholars and common men alike must agree to disagree. It is a word so diverse in context that it is seemingly impossible to take it down to a simplified definition. There are some things in life that just aren?t meant to be completely understood, and one?s identity is among these things. Not until a person has a lived out their live could they sit down and tell you how their adventure has shaped them into the person they became in the end.
James Marcia’s theory of identity formation was based on Erik Erikson 's “psychosocial stage theory” (Diessner, 2008) identity versus identity confusion. The foundation of which he used to identify, and divide one’s
Her study starts this analysis by the definition of the word as "the smallest unit which we would expect to possess individual meaning" (Baker, 1992). As Baker herself says this isn't actually true. Linguists have distinguish between the word and the morpheme: the word is the smallest element that can be used by itself, but it can carry more than one elements of meaning.