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3. Group F - nfournier25 (Replacement D)

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In Phuc Tran’s book, Sigh, Gone, he discusses the difficulty of figuring out his identity as an immigrant in a mostly American neighborhood. From questioning his name to determining where he fits in the social structure of his high school, Tran has to navigate learning who he is with an additional barrier to the average teenager, having a whole other culture as a large part of his life. As he ages, he realizes that he wants nothing to do with his Vietnamese heritage and works hard to present himself as anything but an Asain nerd stereotype. By the time he reaches middle school, his parents have been able to move into a house in a new part of town. Phuc takes this opportunity to reinvent himself into a full punk skater. No matter how hard he tries, however, people often slip back into only focusing on he’s clearly not white. 

This issue seems to fade into his thoughts often, and even when he’s accepted into a new group of friends, all cursing punk skaters, he can’t let go of the fear that he’ll continue to be stereotyped, “I hadn’t consciously chosen to be a nerd but had somehow drawn those numbers in the social lottery of sixth and seventh grade. This never mattered to me until I cared, and the weight fo this sudden awareness suffocated me…I know knew that I wanted to be a skater, but wanting that was not good enough. The group could still deem me a poser…someone who tried too hard to belong.” (Tran 135)

Based on this and what you’ve read in your own book, how difficult is it for an immigrant to become their own person? Are there times where they aren’t defined by their culture or other stereotypes?


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In my book, Internment, by Samira Ahmed the main character, Layla, is a Muslim girl living in future America. America declares Muslims as a threat to the country and decided to put them into an internment camp. Layla and her family have to leave everyone, including Layla's boyfriend David, which puts a lot of stress on her and her family. In my book, it is very difficult for Layla to become her own person because everyone is subject to the stereotype that Muslims are a threat. They don't ever look at backgrounds they just assume that she is a threatening person because she is Muslim. "The thing is, it's not like half this country suddenly became Islamophobes because of any single event. But the lies, the rhetoric calling refugees rapists and criminals, the fake news, the false statistics, all gave those well-meaning people who say they're not bigots cover to vote for a man who openly tweeted his hatred of us on a nearly daily basis" (24-25).

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Hi ndillman25,

Did you book talk about who Layla was before her family was placed into an internment camp? I wonder if she used to be her own person, but then was taken and told who to be. Does she rebel in the camp or does she comply with the people in charge? 

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Protobeing
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Yes, Layla's father had a job at a university and Layla was just a normal girl attending school. She was her own, independent person but America declares her as a threat. She does not comply with the internment camp and actively is trying to escape.

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