Essay sample library > Raw by Scott Monk, Hard Rock by Etheridge Knight, and Dangerous Minds by John N. Smith

Raw by Scott Monk, Hard Rock by Etheridge Knight, and Dangerous Minds by John N. Smith

2023-05-16 20:53:38

Scott Monk, "Hard Rock" by Etheridge Knight, "Dangerous Thoughts" by John N. Smith. The Dangerous Minds system generates positive images and negative images of Scott Monk's "Raw", Etheridge Knight's "Hard Rock", and John N. Smith's "Dangerous Minds" and how these organizations I understand if I can change. Scott Monk's novel "Raw" is a simple style but brings an interesting and acceptable insight into the concept of "institutional and personal experience."

Hardrock from the hospital of Etheridge Knight to the criminal crazy prison is an excellent poet focusing on one's life in America's greatest leader. Cavaliers made a hard rock between funny and attractive parallel lines, a history of mad violence like Martin Luther King, who had a wonderful accomplishment and likes non-violent demonstrations. Both of these people are involved in a society rejecting their freedom of thought and desire, but they are driven by their will to succeed in achieving their free goals.

William Pain once wrote that "there was neither pain nor palm, throne, courage, glory, no cross, no crown." Because the hero of the hospital, Night Hard Rock also faces a struggle between his wishes to promote position among worshipers and despise their norms. Society In the 1950s and 1960s, our country was overcome by the struggle of human rights and human rights of suffrage. In 1955, Dr. Martin Luther King accepted the leaders of the first contemporary black non-violent demonstrations in the United States, leading the government's unfair treatment of African Americans. His leadership and rebels are the first wave of the nationally expanding civil rights movement.

The second quarter of Etheridge Knight Hard Rock gives readers the opportunity to witness the consequences of Hard Rock hesitating to accept his social conflict. In her second quarter, Etheridge Knight attracted attention to the reader's "WORD" by using text as an importance. The word "WORD" symbolizes rumors and speculation throughout the prison like a snake and is looking for prey overnight. Through rumors of jail cells in the prison, the doctors finally healed him and gave no honor to hard rock as "sneaky nigga". In fact, the author does not use vocabulary to treat hard rock as a sick infectious disease, it is not a human who demands fairness and justice.