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Foxfire by Joyce Carol Oates Based on Foxfire by Joyce Carol Oates, the questions that I have about character motivation include: do characters get motivation through group pressure? How do gang relationships influence friendships among members? Does the leadership attributes of a person motivate others to follow him or her?On thematic purpose the questions I have include. Does character attributes contribute to the thematic structure of a text? How does setting contribute to thematic development?
The text provides certain answers to the above questions. With regard to the questions on character motivation, the text provides that group pressure motivate characters to do certain things. It also shows that gang relationships and leadership attributes determine the friendships in the group and how group members follow the leader. Oates emphasizes this where she says, “We so resented that asshole up there talking talking taking up the entire assembly expecting us to believe there isn’t a special creation of God, or of man, to which we didn’t belong, here at the shabby end of Hammond in the worst damn public school in the district, we didn’t belong and never would” (Oates 7).
PredictionsThe author believes that there are many ways of solving problems, and it does not mean that people should always take the obvious actions or actions that are based on critical thought. Sometimes, problems can be solved through simple actions that do not require much thought. For example, in the text, the author states, “Its the same old story. The answer to student boredom and restlessness (manifested in everything from paper airplanes to dope) maybe - just maybe - is not stricter penalties, innumerable suspensions, and bathroom monitors…but by pouring water on the very flames that could make them great?
” (Oates 14). The girls in the text struggle with life at home and at school, and are rude mostly. The means established by the school to deal with them is ineffective. This shows that the solution to such kind of problems could be simple than it seems.Work CitedOates, Joyce Carol. Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang. New York: Plume, 1994. Print
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