What made the narrator double up and shriek with him the story in all its comic detail. in the story of we too are human beings.
Answers
Sociology is the study of groups and group interactions, societies and social interactions, from small and personal groups to very large groups. A group of people who live in a defined geographic area, who interact with one another, and who share a common culture is what sociologists call a society.
Answer:
Memories of Childhood by Zitkala Sa and Bama is a biographical collection of two people who lived in two continents and became victims of social discrimination. The story of Zitkala Sa and Bama portray the evil face of society that fails to treat everyone equal. They had to suffer social discrimination because one was a Red Indian and the other an untouchable Indian. A new student of Carlisle Indian School, Zitkala Sa cannot adapt to the European manners while Bama cannot agree with the landlords who considered her people as untouchables. Both rebelled
This extract is a painful revelation of a particular period of the life which the writer had to suffer during her hostel days. It was the first day of her boarding school situated in the land of apples. The children were given the task of apple picking in the bitter and biting cold. They were taken to the breakfast hall and the girl was feeling stressed. She did not know the table manners. According to her it was an ‘eating by formula’. She was being watched very carefully by a strange pale-faced woman. The girl felt very fearful and insulted.
Her friend who could understand some English, told her that the pale strange woman intended to cut her long hair. Zitkala-Sa learned from her mother that hair would be shingled only for the unskilled warrior, cowards and mourners. She decided to fight back and got herself hidden in a dim room under the bed. Everybody looked for her and called her name but eventually she got caught. Her long hair was cut, although she resisted a lot. She spent her rest of the life there like a small animal being a part of a herd, which was driven by a herder.