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Kitchenette Building and Homecoming exemplify that the authors want to change the way of unjust attitudes of the

stereotypical lies/dreams of todays society. The Kitchenette Building talks about an American Dream that picks its successors, figuratively speaking. Homecoming shows the inequality of those who help the wealthy [The Help]. Both poems explain a similar approach on their claims. In Kitchenette Building in implies, We are things of dry hours and the involuntary plan. The people in the whole apartment are Dry means either boring or not important. Involuntarily they are stationed in the apartment because of their living circumstances. The inner meaning of the poem shows that the American Dream is not for everyone in the United States. Gwendolyn Brooks wants to change the way she lives when she states, Dreams makes a giddy sound, not strong like rent. Dream doesnt even come to mind because of how everyone lives. In Homecoming, Julia Alvarez talks about the maids and fieldworkers working for the wealthy people at her fathers Finc. They are probably all under paid. She implies that it would be years before she understood the concept of how all of them were treated. She felt a sense of sympathy for those workers and says that one all of those workers and maids would leave that Estate and there would be nothing for that finc to thrive from. In all honesty, both poems show a sense of horrible living circumstances, and show that not everyone is equal. We wonder. But not well! Not for a minute.That line in the poem shows that the speaker of the poem is poor and she is wants to change the way she lives in poverty, but the inside message of the poem later deciphers the American Dream as a false advertising sign that displays that all happiness and hope is not promised to everyone. In the end, Homecoming is just like the Kitchenette Building because; they talk about people that are underpaid that help the rich people at a wedding party. This is all yours, says Julias uncle meaning that if she stays home instead of attending college, she can own her fathers Finc. She can own the maids and guard (slavers). She later states, It was too late, or too early, to be wiseWindows, shutters, walls, pillars, doors made from the cane they had cut in the fields. The maids and other workers were eating behind sugar houses, who were the only ones that were not sleep, but it could be that they were too hungry to sleep, so they were probably eating leftovers. All in all, both speakers were two different people with a different wealth of things. Julia was wealthier, and Gwendolyn was less wealthy, but they both still had a voice of reason. A sympathetic view on either themselves, or others, and they wanted to change that way of living for the better.

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