Malcolm X
In his article Learning
to Read, Malcolm X attempts to explain that just because you didn’t go to
school to get an education doesn’t mean that you can’t learn and become
successful. He argues if you have to right tools, meaning books to read from,
you can accomplish quite a bit through a little dedication. He explains his
story on how he became able to read and understand a text just by being in
prison.
I am able to make a connection between this article and the
Brandt article because both authors speak about learning how to read and write.
Brandt explained the term literacy sponsor which is a person, or thing in
Malcolm X’s case, that teaches you a specific kind of language. Malcolm X did
not have a strong vocabulary nor could he write very well. He found that he
could make use of his time in prison to learn the proper English language
instead of slang words. He became interested in the topic of his history,
African American history. Malcolm’s literacy sponsor was the books he read over
that period of time which taught him general language as well as more
sophisticated terms. The books and dictionaries and articles were Malcolm X’s
literacy sponsors.
I thought this
article was very interesting. I wasn’t very familiar with Malcolm X and how he
became who he was. This article showed me that you do not have to come from a
wealthy or sophisticated white family
to be successful. Rather, you can come from any background if you have the
proper tools and an immense amount of dedication and interest. I think this is
an eye opening article, at least for me, because I think it is amazing to be
able to teach yourself to read and write from a dictionary.
Alexie
In his article The Joy
of Reading and Writing, Sherman Alexie attempts to explain that just
because you are labeled as something in society doesn’t mean you should follow
along with that label for the rest of your life. He argues that it was hard for
him growing up because he was an Indian child and no one expected anything of
Indian children. His teachers and classmates didn’t like the way he read and
answered questions all the time. He learned to read by admiring his father and
he says that no one should take that away from you.
I am able to connect this article to the Malcolm X article
because both authors talk about how their love of reading and writing
developed, although very different stories. Malcolm X had developed his reading
and writing skills by copying a dictionary and practicing the words he learned
by reading books in prison. He was African American therefore he didn’t have
the same education as whites did. In Alexie’s article he explains the
difficulty of being an Indian child and how his father loved reading therefore
he wanted to love reading as well. Alexie was not expected to do well in school
and the other non-Indian people did not like his achievements. Both stories
explain the difficulty of being from a minority and the struggle they went
through to get where they are today.
I believe you have to have an extreme amount of determination
to get through the kind of things Alexie and Malcolm went through. It is
possible, I believe, to become a leader of your minority if you can read and
write because it is a great strength to be able to give speeches to the public.
People tend to pay attention to things that aren’t normal in society. Therefore
when an individual is believed to be uneducated, society is “amazed” that they
can put together a well written speech. This causes people to think differently
about that particular minority and maybe change their opinions. Deborah Brandt
is helpful in this particular question because Malcolm X and Alexie both had to
have at least one literacy sponsor to be successful. The point is that you
can’t become successful on your own, you learn from other sources which make
you into the person you become.
This article was interesting in my opinion because I didn’t
realize that Indian children were not “allowed” to be as smart as non-Indian
people. This amazed me that when Alexie raised his hand in class to answer a
question, he was looked down upon by the other children and the teacher. I also
found it interesting that he was considered an oddity not a prodigy just
because he was Indian, whereas if he were not Indian he would be a prodigy.
Good response, Megan. I especially like the way you managed to situate both these readings into the same conversation with Deborah Brandt and her idea of literacy sponsorship.
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