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Help With Book Reports Papers
Joy Luck Club: Symbols
... with high hopes, similar to the other mothers, and a swan in anticipation that she could teach her child to strive only for the best opportunities that America can offer. Jing-Mei states "America was were all my mother's hopes lay (141)." Suyuan fled to America after she had lost all her possessions; however, she does not lose hope. When the swan is ripped from her arms she is only left with a single swan's feather to symbolize all her hopes and dream for the future. When June was a child her mother encouraged her to pursue many different activities especially the piano. Suyuan was obsessed with June becomin ...
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Catcher In The Ryes Holden Cau
... of the complex teenage mind allows an insight of how an average 15-17 year old thinks. Holden is troubled by the perplexed ways society is working around him. Take for example, his obsession with the ducks in the pond, and his constant worry for them, and constant want to protect them. What is this telling us? Holden doesn't like the way society works, and wants to be the "catcher in the rye," protecting society's children from it's evilness and corruption, keeping them safe. Holden has an ephiphany during the novel as he passes the elementary school halls and notices the obscenities scribbled on the walls. His ...
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Another Antigone
... play
about obeying a higher law, it is a comical, rhyming poem
about what happened. This may cause it to lose the impact it
had. Sargoff reduces important and pivotal points in the
story to a sentence such as, "Creon wilts, and tries to bang a
U-ee." This sentence does not tell of Creon's attempt to
repent for what he! has done by burrying Polynices and then
going to free Antigone. Even if Sargoff gets all of the plot
across, that is not enough to tell the whole story. Aristotelian
Unities Yes, Antigone does follow the Aristotelian Unities.
The play occurs in the same place and roughly the same
time. Things tha ...
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Building Blocks Of A Family
... he wore it longer - past his collar even" (Schwiebert 286). Danny is having some problems at school. It seems that he does not concentrate, or put forth the right amount of effort. Daisy learns from Donny's principal that"… Donny was noisy, lazy, and disruptive…" (Schwiebert 287). Daisy explains to the principal that her and her husband, Matt, have tried what they can. "We don't let him watch TV on school nights. We don't let him talk on the phone till he's finished his homework. But he tells us that he doesn't have any homework or he did it all in study hall. How are we to know what to believe?" (Schwiebert 287 ...
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Their Eyes Were Watching God 4
... just like any other heroes, at the end, she returns to her home with a victory on her hands.
Janie who continually finds her being defined by other people rather than by herself never feels loved, either by her parents or by anybody else. Her mother abandoned her shortly after giving birth to her. All she had was her grandmother, Nanny, who protected and looked after her when she was a child. But that was it. She was even unaware that she is black until, at age six, she saw a photograph of herself. Her Nanny who was enslaved most of her lifetime only told her that a woman can only be happy when she marr ...
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A Century Of Dishonor, A Triumph Or Tragedy?
... What law have I broken? Is it wrong for me to love my own? Is it wicked in me because my skin is red; because I am a Sioux; because I was born where my fathers lived; because I would die for my people and my country” (qtd. in Carruth and Ehrlich 56).
To write about the author, one must first understand why she felt so strongly for this sensitive issue. “Helen Hunt Jackson began writing professionally at age 35. She first became involved with the plight of the American Indian in 1879 after attending a lecture illuminating the poor living conditions and mistreatment the Ponca tribe was undergoing. Jackson ...
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The House On Mango Street: Esperanza
... acceptance of an unjust cultural fate. For
example, Minerva is a young girl ( about Esperanza’s age ) who constantly
prays for better luck, and a happier life, but enables her husband to take
advantage of her, and therefore sets the path for her unsatisfactory life.
“ One day she is through and lets him know enough is enough. Out the door
he goes. Clothes, records, shoes. Out the window and the door locked.
But that night he comes back and sends a big rock through the window.
Then he is sorry and she opens the door again. Same story ” ( pg. 85 ).
Minerva finds herself forgiving without truly seeing that ...
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The Grapes Of Wrath: Symbols
... and willingness to work.
The Grapes of Wrath combines Steinbeck adoration of the land, his simple
hatred of corruption resulting from materialism (money) and his abiding faith in
the common people to overcome the hostile environment. The novel opens with a
retaining picture of nature on rampage. The novel shows the men and women that
are unbroken by nature. The theme is one of man verses a hostile environment.
His body destroyed but his spirit is not broken. The method used to develop the
theme of the novel is through the use of symbolism. There are several uses of
symbols in the novel from the turt ...
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The Significance Of Food In "Like Water For Chocolate"
... agitated person is
said to be "like water for chocolate," so is a person in a state of sexual
arousal.
A recurring symbol in Like Water for Chocolate is food (the title is a
good tip-off of that). Hardly a scene goes by without someone eating or
preparing a meal and some of the more hilarious sequences surround a pair of
banquets. Each of these scenes has a meaning beyond the obvious, however. Food
is equated with life and excitement, two subjects into which this story pursues.
Sex, food and magic are mixed in sparingly in the story, which revolves about
Tita, third daughter of a Elena.
The time is the ea ...
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Machiavelli's View Of Human Nature
... and immoral one must remember that these views were derived out of concern
Italy's unstable political condition.3
Though humanists of Machiavelli's time believed that an individual had much to
offer to the well being of the state, Machiavelli was quick to mock human nature.
Humanists believed that "An individual only 'grows to maturity- both
intellectually and morally-through participation' in the life of the state."4
Machiavelli generally distrusted citizens, stating that "...in time of adversity,
when the state is in need of it's citizens there are few to be found."5
Machiavelli further goes on to questio ...
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