Anzia Yezierska Bread Givers Essay

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    In Bread Givers by Anzia Yezierska Sara is growing up as a Jewish immigrant migrated from Russia. From a young age she has only wanted to support herself and her family. As she grows older she begins to aspire to be “something”. What that something is seems unclear even to Sara. Sara is so unsure of what she hungers for that multiple points can be argued. Some may say she hungers for money because of the way her family has always had to scrape for pennies just to survive. Some may argue she quests

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    In the novel Bread Givers by Anzia Yezierska, the characters have conflicts of family agreement. Members of the Smolinsky family have issues with getting along. Anzia Yezierska bases the Smolinsky family off of the 1920’s in Lower East Side New York. Sara and Reb Smolinsky have many of the same characteristics, but they end up having different causes due to their dissimilar perspectives. Reb and Sara show different perspectives while Shena’s funeral is occurring, when Sara visits her father, or when

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    In the novel Bread Givers by Anzia Yezierska the Smolinsky family immigrate to America for a better life. The Smolinsky sisters are expected to work really long hours and bring in their wages to help pay for food, and house wages while the father, Reb Smolinsky, stays home and studies the Holy Torah instead of working and supporting his family. Throughout the book, Reb Smolinsky’s goal is to marry off his daughters to an ideal man so they can give him money to thank them for all he has done for them

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    primary approach. There are two types of arrange marriages. The first is a traditional marriage where the children can, with strong objections, refuse to marry their soon to be spouse. In a forced marriage, the children have no say in the matter. Bread Givers shows an excellent representation of the pressures on children from their parents to be married against their will. The factors of arranged marriages are chiefly superficial. The most

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    The novel of Anzia Yezierska Bread Givers talks about a Jewish family who immigrated to America and lived in Hester Street in the lower east side of New York. The Smolinsky family lived in starvation, the ones who financially support the family were the daughters rather than the father. As a Jewish father, Reb Smolinsky, does not work because he is focuses all his time on reading his holy books and demanding his daughter’s wages. Shaena Smolinsky is the mother who is always stressed about the poverty

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    Doomed Relationships in the Bread Givers The Bread Givers, written by Anzia Yezierska, revolves around a starving lower east side family whose daughter rebels against her fathers’ strict conception of the role of a Jewish woman. The major theme of this novel is doomed relationships. There are several of these that are thoroughly analyzed in the novel. These include the relationship between Rabbi Smolinksy and the females in his family as well as those in his society, between him and his son-in-laws

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    In Fun Home, Alison’s dynamic with her father is damaged to a certain extent and she finds inspiration in how she wants to not make her life the way that she grew up. Just like Alison, Sara in The Bread Givers, finds inspiration in the dynamic with her own father because she wants to have a life of her own choosing, but she thinks so highly of father and his love for books and knowledge. These two girls both look up to their fathers to a certain extent but at the same time they each find resentment

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    Bread Givers is the story of an orthodox Jewish family who immigrate to the lower east side of New York City. Living in extreme poverty in the early 1900’s Sara Smolinsky, the youngest of the four Smolinsky daughters narrates the story of her struggles against patriarchy, poverty, and restrictive Jewish practice at the turn of the century. Sara’s father, Reb Smolinsky is a Rabbi and Talmudic scholar. While Reb spends all of his time studying the Torah so he can get into heaven someday, his wife

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    their skin color. Even in the Bread Givers the struggle for equality was shown, “‘Cheaters! Robbers!’ I longed to cry out to them. ‘Why do you have flowers on the table and cheat a starving girl from her bite of food’” (Yezierska 169). Sara was starving and needed food so she asked the lunch lady for some more, the lut mre in the gave it to a man. Sara was furious and demanded to have food, a voice in the line shouted, “Don’t you know they always give men more” (Yezierska 169). Since men were more

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    A Realistic Look at Bread Givers and How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents       America is a country that was created and settled by immigrants from many different lands. These immigrants came to America in search of the "American Dream" of freedom and a better way of life, and their narratives have been recorded by various authors in both fiction and non-fiction stories. But can the fiction genre be considered a reliable source for studying the immigrant narrative? If American immigrant

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