Wesley
 
Wesley Harmon

9/22/10

World Lit, 4th period

Nonfiction Success Theme

 

Resilience is Key

A Review of My Forbidden Face by Latifa

 

            What does being successful mean? Does everyone have the same definition of success? This book is about a 16-year-old girl named Latifa growing up in Kabul, Afghanistan. Latifa is living in the time when the Taliban, who are very recalcitrant, are invading provinces to enforce their way of life and strict, inhumane laws around 1995. My Forbidden Face by Latifa teaches readers that success can have other meanings that we may not realize and having resilience and courage is key during the hard times that this young girl faces in the book.

 

            When we here the word “success”, most of the time, we associate it with having money, a big house, and nice cars. Yes, I also believe that being successful is having a job that pays very well and living in a large house, with a nice car, but I also believe that being successful means to be happy with what you are doing with your life and not just having material wants. My goals in life are to become an architect and design my own house, have a nice family with two kids, and to live in comfortable conditions, both financially and physically. Becoming and architect is very tedious because if you are a good architect, you aren’t just discovered, you have to make yourself become discovered by advertising your name everywhere where your name will be found. Nothing in the book can really help me along this path, but that does not mean it is not useful.

 

            My Forbidden Face is an autobiography that is written is chronological order based off of events during the invasion of the Taliban. Within the first couple of pages, the book blasts off into horrific events that would seem like a nightmare to whoever experienced them. The sentence in the book, “they’ve hanged Najibullah and his brother, on Aryana Square,” just automatically let me know that throughout this book I would be entranced by the terrible events that would occur. I thought that this book was very powerful and enlightening because I had no idea about what was going on in the Middle East before September 11 and it brought to conclude that the Taliban are horrible and so are the followers of Osama Bin Laden.

 

            When I read this book, just one thing that I read about was the belligerent attitude towards women. There were so many decrees enforced by the Taliban that prevented women from doing so many things. They had to wear chadris, which were heavy, hot, dull colored cloaks that would have to be worn by any female that wanted to leave their house. There was a little square cut out for your eyes and nose and it greatly impaired your line of vision and movement. I cannot imagine the trepidation that women must have felt during those times.

 

             The article that we read in class about the man that was living in a good family, that was raised to be a good man, just chose to kill and be involved in drugs. The theme of that article is that the environment around you does not affect the person you will be in the future; it is purely based off of the unbiased choices you make during your life. The book My Forbidden Face is the exact opposite; Latifa was forced to live under these unfair and unethical laws because the Taliban would not let any family leave. I do commend Latifa because she showed great bravery and courage throughout the whole book, and did not let the Taliban change her into a scarred and depressed person; she demonstrated great resilience. The definition of being successful that I picked up from reading this book is being free and being able to make your own decisions, no matter what gender or race you are.

 
Many themes were displayed throughout the movie El Postino. This film is about a low class postman the delivers mail. He meets Pablo Narudo, a famous poet, one day, while riding through his route. The postman, Mario, was an aspiring poet and he wanted Narudo to teach how to write poetry.

 

One topic of themes that is demonstrated in the film is love. Love does not depend on what social class you belong to. Mario fell in love with a waitress in the restaurant and while they weren’t total opposites on the social class scale, they still managed to be together, even with all of the complications. Another theme about love is that when Narudo left for Chile, he sort of forgot about Mario and his family. Finally, a few years later, Narudo comes back to Italy, where Mario lived, only to find that Mario was killed in a communist raid. This made Narudo realize that he really did miss Mario. He did not appreciate their friendship until it was no more.

 
Summary: His clothes and himself are one and they live together. If he dies, then they die.
Shifts: The poem shifts from a happy tone to a more sad and dark tone towards the end.
Title: The title is pretty self-explanatory; it is and ode to clothes that we wear.
Theme: Don't treat clothes like they are just some piece of dirty trash.
Imagery: The whole poem is a personification because the poet gives clothes human characteristics throughout the whole poem. For example, he says "extend your arms."
Connotations: In my opinion, this poem explains how clothes aren't something you should treat poorly because they do so much for you.
Conflicts: There aren't really conflicts in the poem, but there are many other aspects of the poem.