Laguardia Reflection

 Fisk Candau

Dr Ellis

EN376

27 Nov 2023

Laguardia Reflection

    Something I found really interesting about the reading was the depiction of strength, resilience, and resistance. Almost all of the human characters belong to groups typically thought of as weak or lazy like women and pregnant people. However, instead of playing into the tropes that pregnant women need to be protected or that women don't have the strength or will to go out and fight for things like men do, Okorafor has every main character be a part of these groups and still have resilience and strength as one of their main character traits. With this, Okorafor fights against the characterisations/generalisations of these women, especially pregnant women, being weak or having lesser abilities than their male counterparts.

    I especially found interesting how strength and resilience were tied to people's identity as part of their family, like when Future's grandmother says that of course she's coming to the airport because "you are Chukwuebuka." This was really cool to me because it shows the importance of family history and how these attributes are passed down the family line, emphasising history and ancestral knowledge/attributes, something that has been a central theme of this course.

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