Gentilly, New Orleans Essays

  • History Of The Gentilly Neighborhood

    1048 Words  | 3 Pages

    “The Gentilly Neighborhood” While there are many neighborhoods in New Orleans, Gentilly is a large historical community. It is home to three universities. Dillard University, Southern University at New Orleans, and the University of New Orleans are located throughout the area (The Gentilly Neighborhood 1). Gentilly is a peaceful community which includes parks, historical neighborhoods, and golf courses (The Gentilly Neighborhood 1). The Gentilly neighborhood began in the 1900s (Gentilly 1). The

  • Nicole Cooley's Burning-Missing 'Gone'

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    Labeled as one of the worst disasters in United States history, Hurricane Katrina nearly wiped the city of New Orleans off the map. Yet, many Americans only witnessed the catastrophe through broadcast and newspaper reports. However, Nicole Cooley’s poem “Burning/Missing/Flooded/Gone,” shows the post-apocalyptic aftermath of the hurricane and the lack of disaster relief support. Cooley is able to effectively convey this theme to the reader through her use of poetic form and structure, tone, and figurative

  • Disaster Response For Hurricane Katrina

    1464 Words  | 3 Pages

    acquiesced the next day. These got the ball rolling by enabling FEMA to acquire and disperse funds and equipment necessary as they saw fit. On August 29th, 2005 Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, LA. The initial wave of first responders we a thousand workers from the Homeland of Security give assistance to New Orleans specifically. FEMA also encouraged no emergency personnel such as rescue units as well as firefighters engage in Katrina effected areas prior to being assembled and organized by local

  • A Streetcar Named Desire: Visual, Aural and Spatial

    1262 Words  | 3 Pages

    Blanche gets raped by Stanley, the scene could start with the space room sized and then as he becomes more dominating over her it shrinks to show how trapped she feels. The scenery in the play needs to be relevant to the era and surroundings of New Orleans, realistic enough so that the audience know where they are and are interesting but not so much that it takes the focus of the play away from the actors, the scenery should be life like, for example the flat, if it is flat like then the audience

  • Hip-hop

    1233 Words  | 3 Pages

    definition explains why I know what hip-hop really is and also why I'm bothered when someone thinks hip-hop is the same as rap. I grew up and have lived my entire life in New York City, perhaps the most urban and diverse place to live in on Earth. It's not possible for a teenager to be more exposed to hip-hop than he is in New York City. I'm also a youth, and people in my age group are more exposed to the culture than those of any other age group. Hip-hop is simply more appealing to young people

  • A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams

    1201 Words  | 3 Pages

    named Blanche Dubois. Blanche was a fragile and neurotic woman, desperate for a place to call her own. She had been exiled from her hometown Laurel, Mississippi after seducing a seventeen year old boy. After this incident, she decided to move to New Orleans with her sister Stella. She claimed she had to move, in result of a series of financial calamities which have recently claimed the family plantation, Belle Reve. Her sisters husband, Stanley Kowalski is very suspicious seeing that Blanche seems

  • The History and Tradition of New Orleans

    596 Words  | 2 Pages

    know about the city of New Orleans. This is the biggest city in the state of Louisiana. It is also known for jazz music. It has a basketball team called the New Orleans Hornet and a football team called New Orleans Saints. New Orleans has lots of things to see and to do. Like Mardi Gras it is a parade that’s held in New Orleans. I will be talking about New Orleans early settlement, traditions, culture, weather, lifestyle, closing, and works cited. Early settlement New Orleans was founded May 7, 1718

  • Essay 1

    627 Words  | 2 Pages

    by a sort of spontaneous combustion of Negro’s genius” (125). This mixture of hymns and instrumental instruction took form into one of the most versatile genres known to date, Jazz. 2. Marching Bands: Brass Bands spread through out the area of New Orleans making this the birthplace of this original sound. Many would gather just to hear the smooth melodies that these bands had to play. Many bands were composed of such talented artist that eventually went on to make their own music. These musicians

  • Plessy V Ferguson Essay

    799 Words  | 2 Pages

    seven-eighths white and one-eighth black and had the appearance of a white man. Under Louisiana law Plessy was classified as black, and required to sit in the colored car. On June 7, 1892, Homer Plessy purchased a first-class ticket on a train from New Orleans to Covington, Louisiana and sat in an empty seat in the white-only section. He was then asked to move but refused and got arrested for violating the Separate Car Act. Homer Plessy was convicted of and sentenced to pay a $25 fine. During Plessy’s

  • Mississippi Women

    779 Words  | 2 Pages

    influential woman in the world In 1954 September 8th Ruby Bridges was born in Tylertown, Mississippi to the parents of Lucille and Abon Bridges. At the age of 4 Ruby Bridges and her family relocated to New Orleans, Louisiana. In 1960 Ruby parents volunteer her to participate in the NAACP New Orleans Color System program. The Program was to have blacks integrated into an all-white elementary school which is called William Frantz Elementary school. Ruby father Abon was very hesitant of his daughter

  • Jennifer Bonilla Ruby Bridges

    741 Words  | 2 Pages

    people with different races? This is what I think that “If you don’t know me don’t judge me”. My character is Ruby Nell Bridges she was born in Tyler, Mississippi in 9-8-1954 she is still alive for real she is alive her age is 54. Her school was in New, Orleans Louisianan. She was the only black girl who went to a white school but she had 4 more girls who also went to a white school but my character had a lot to do she was bullied and she was treated wrong. That is not good because she wanted to be treated

  • The History of The State of Mississippi

    538 Words  | 2 Pages

    the western coast of Africa where men, women and children were captured and sold into slavery and brought to America as slave laborers to work in Southern plantations. The Mississippi Delta is considered to be the birthplace of the Blues, with the new music coming out of the Blues-Rock and Roll. The earliest blues musicians came from the Mississippi Delta region, where the uniquely form of music was born. These early musicians in turn inspired blues greats like Muddy Waters, B.B. King, Bobby “Blue”

  • The 9th Ward: The African American’s Struggle in The Wake of a Natural Disaster

    2069 Words  | 5 Pages

    disproportionally African-American. August 29th marks the day where North America’s costliest natural disaster veered its way towards the Gulf Coast and New Orleans area. By that time, it had already become a category four hurricane that would eventually claim the lives of 1,833 United States citizens as well as cause $108 billion worth of damage to the city of New Orleans and its residents. Most of the deaths and damages were caused to African-American families. Many died during the hurricane, as well as more

  • The Bias and Suffering after Hurricane Katrina: Trouble The Water, and Zeitoun

    1460 Words  | 3 Pages

    named storm, named Hurricane Katrina, hit the Gulf Coast on the 29th of August and led to the death of 1,836 and millions of dollars’ worth of damage (Waple 2005). The majority of the damage occurred in New Orleans, Louisiana. Waple writes in her article that winds “gusted over 100 mph in New Orleans, just west of the eye” (Waple 2005). Not only was the majority of the damage due to the direct catastrophes of the storm but also city’s levees could no longer hold thus breaking and releasing great masses

  • Race, Hurricane Katrina, and the Aftermath

    1124 Words  | 3 Pages

    country that would lead one to the same conclusion it was the disproportionate suffering and devastation experienced by African Americans in New Orleans not only during Hurricane Katrina but long after the storm had passed that leads many to conclude that the United States does not care for its African American citizens. Long before the storm hit New Orleans there was already a divide in the city. The city seemed to be divided by race with affluent whites living in the cities nicer neighborhoods which

  • Levee Break during Hurricanes in New Orleans

    862 Words  | 2 Pages

    levee design could have been different and that the changes in design could have possibly prevented some, or most of the damage caused by Katrina in 2005. Works Cited http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutsshws.php http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/09/0902_050902_katrina_levees_2.html http://science.howstuffworks.com/engineering/structural/levee1.htm

  • Environmental Causes And Environmental Impacts Of Hurricane Katrina

    733 Words  | 2 Pages

    Environmental Effects of Hurricane Katrina: On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans as a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale with winds up to one-hundred and forty miles per hour. Katrina was one of the costliest and deadliest hurricanes to ever hit the United States. One-thousand eight hundred deaths, seven hundred missing and one-million displaced is evidence of the human toll that Katrina caused and $84 billion in cost makes Katrina the most expensive natural

  • Louis Armstrong And The Jazz Age

    925 Words  | 2 Pages

    ” Jazz was seen as immoral and worried the older generation that their kids would lose interest in classical music. It was also seen as against society because it came about from the African- American culture, but despite all of that, jazz led to a new era of music that still prevails today. Louis Armstrong, “known to be the greatest influence in 1920’s and the first vital jazz soloist to attain worldwide influence as a trumpeter,” led a musical revolution. He was a strong force in spreading the influence

  • Analysis Of Nightlife

    691 Words  | 2 Pages

    issues the world was dealing with. Archibald wanted the world to notice the dynamic and exciting Negro culture. Archibald Motley Jr. was born in 1891 in New Orleans. Ever since, Archibald was a child he had the desire to be an artist. His family moved to a Chicago neighborhood in the 1890’s, but the family would take frequent trips back to New Orleans in the summer. Later we find out that these two similar settings were the determining factor for Archibald’s paintings. He decided to study art at the

  • Hurricane Katrina Essay

    1235 Words  | 3 Pages

    the states of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. The Waterford nuclear plant was shut down for precautionary reasons in the wake of the oncoming storm and mandatory evacuations were issued for large parts of the southeast. Mayor Ray Nagin of New Orleans stated that about 80% of the 480,000 people asked to evacuate heeded warnings. Evacuation orders were also made for areas along the Mississippi coast, low-lying coastal areas in Alabama, as well as the barrier islands in western Florida Panhandle