389 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2021
    1. Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,

      Shes offering a place for the outcasts of other countries. Maybe they are oppressed in other countries so shes offering peace in America?

    1. Invented by mill-owners inspired by the hoax of Ossian

      The writer of Ossian was questioned of his authenticity of this poem because phrases seemed to be stolen by different famous figures.

    2. Like Hart Crane’s Bedlamite, “shrill shirt ballooning.”

      Allusion to her story, compares this jump to the insane (more likely depressed) character committing suicide.

    3. And then another. As if he were helping them up

      More and more people jumped out the window in order to escape the fire. The way he was helping them up was casual, not like they were about to jump from the 9th floor.

    4. Turned in a sweatshop by Koreans or Malaysians

      Talking about a sweatshop factory that makes shirts and they feel like they are being treated like working farm animals.

    1. perhaps. Their clothes are still on the hangers

      Even though they ran away, their belongings are where they normally are, which is usually a sign that they did not intend to runaway.

    1. we also need to accept that there will be consequences. Some good, some disastrous, but none neat or simple.

      No matter who it is, there will be sort of consequences.

    2. context is always likely to be more powerful and resonant than any speaker's intent.

      The context you say it in is more important than if you were trying to cause harm or not.

    3. Russell Simmons, Paltrow's friend, rushed to her defense, saying that the actress "didn't mean any harm."

      Even if you didn't mean any harm, is word still has a history of hatred and oppression.

    4. Anyone can say it — but that doesn't mean there won't be fallout for doing so.

      The conversation is more about who should receive social punishment for saying it.

    5. But we treat it as if there should be clear, simple rules around its usage, so that we might point out transgressors (and avoid transgressing ourselves). There shouldn't be a double standard, the arguments go. Just one standard.

      He believes there should be one rule for all, instead of different depending if you are part of the community or not.

    1. Does it stink like rotten meat?

      Does the hope of the dream linger in the air? Even though the dream is being postponed and less achievable, does the hope still linger?

    2. like a raisin in the sun?

      Simile. This is interesting because a grape is a dried up raisin. Even though it is no longer a grape, it is still a food people eat. Even though the dream is postponed, is he still following it?

    3. Does it dry up

      When someone refers to an abstract thing such as a dream/goal as drying up, means it loses it's traction. It's asking if the dream is still being followed even though it has been put aside/postponed.

    1. The city never sleeps, full of villains and creeps

      Does a new take on "the city that never sleeps" (NYC). Instead of because of all the lights, its because of the crime.

    2. And be prosperous, though we live dangerous, cops could just

      Brings up how police are racist. Even though he is doing these things, he doesn't have to be in order for cops to look at him different.

    3. The fiends fight to get drugs I just max, I dream I can sit back

      Everyone is fighting over drugs and the hierarchy while he is relaxing and dreaming about his fantasy life.

    4. But just a negro walking with his finger on the trigger

      This probably has to do with police brutality. Police don't see him as this huge gangster, and instead as just a threatening black man.

    5. New York state of mindNew York state of mindNew York state of mindNew York state of mindNew York state of mind

      He repeats the "New York State of Mind" which means it is important. His state of mind has been greatly affected due to how he grew up.