Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/english/1483613-essay
https://studentshare.org/english/1483613-essay.
This kind of economic contrast is seen in the two essays, Working at Wendy’s and Dumpster diving, the writers of both the essays are in different sorts of economic conditions and had to do socially unappreciated jobs in order to deal with their own circumstances and conditions and doing these jobs they had to came to know about the social discrimination in different styles which are still existent in the today’s settings. Joey Franklin the writer of Working at Wendy’s believes in the power of positive thinking and appreciates the struggles of people who were his co-workers at Wendy’s which is considered to be a low profile job but in his essay J.
Franklin describes many people with whom he worked and elaborates that all of these people had all kinds of reasons to work there; to stay out of jail, to support their families financially and to pay bills. Working at Wendy’s was something that Franklin had sworn never to do the with the birth of his first child and his wife still studying, the financial conditions became tight and he had to find some night job and in this way, he could spend time with his son in the daytime. In this time of high competition when to get any job one has to beat thousands of other applicants and then gets the job but it was not the case at Wendy’s; there Franklin got the job by only answering two questions i.e. “What hours you want to work?
” and “When you want to start?” and later he learned that even working in this place was not easy. . “What hours you want to work?” and “When you want to start?” and later he learned that even working in this place was not easy. He found himself incompetent in a job where he didn’t think he would be incompetent and he realized it when he was standing in the line of sandwiches and a high school dropout yells at him, “Come on Joe! Get it right!” When he told about this job to his father, he did not approve such a low profile job for his son who was two semesters away from graduating and everyone he knew felt sorry for him that he had to work at such a place and that is how he always had to face the social disparity just because of the type of job he was doing.
He did not like the work himself but he was satisfied that his family loved him and all his hard work was paid off. Later he said, “I learned that what is most important to me is not how the world views me, but how my family views me… and the reality is each of us will make the greatest mark between the four walls of our home.” (Lorimer) Lars Eighner the writer of Dumpster Diving called himself a scavenger rather than someone who picks up anything which could be used from the dumps. As Eighner’s savings started running out he had to suffice on his intermittent income to pay his rents and depend on dumpsters his necessities like food, toilet paper, medicine and other things which found and were usable in any way for him or his dog Lizbeth.
In these conditions of financial breakdown he learnt many things like which things could still be used when those were thrown away in the dump and how the discarded food could be safe to consume. He uses lofty vocabulary in his essay to gain credibility for the processes he used to refine the food he collected from the dumps like he says,
...Download file to see next pages Read More