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Help With Book Reports Papers
Hawthorne's Characters: Pride Of Intellect
... Hooper and
society. After Hooper dawns the veil he can no longer function or act as a
normal person, because of this feeling of superiority. His perception of an
ultimate human isolation leaves him the man most isolated in what Hawthorne
describes as that saddest of all prisons, his own heart . . . "(The Minister's
Black Veil,228). The veil affects all parts of his life, his fiance leaves him
and he can no longer relate to his congregation the same way. "As a result of
wearing the veil, Hooper becomes a man apart, isolated from love and sympathy,
suspected and even feared by his congregation"(Minister's Blac ...
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All Quiet On The Western Front
... or Kat, was soon shown to be a
master scavenger, being able to provide the group with food or virtually
anything else; on this basis Paul and him grew quite close. Paul's unit
was assigned to lay barbed wire on the front line, and a sudden shelling
resulted in the severe wounding of a recruit that Paul had comforted
earlier. Paul and Kat again strongly questioned the War. After Paul's
company were returned to the huts behind the lines, Himmelstoss appeared
and was insulted by some of the members of Paul's unit, who were then only
mildly punished. During a bloody battle, 120 of the men in Paul's unit were ...
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Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man: Vocation Sequence
... one or the other. When Stephen elects to choose his true calling,
he continues on his journey, in search of what it means to really know the
solitude that he faced since his youth.
As the priest talks to Stephen, Stephen remembers details of his
own sins: a delicate and sinful perfume....the brittle texture of a womans
stocking. He also remembers how his masters at Clongowes and Belvedere
taught him christian doctrine and urged him to lead a good life and...led
him back to grace once he fell short of Gods glory. Stephens first calling,
to become a priest, has appeal, but his epiphany lets him know that his ...
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Book Report On "A Dramatic Death"
... was Steve's girlfriend, Steve always treated her like a
sister but she wanted more than that and went to great lengths to achieve.
CHARACTER ANALYSIS
The main characters in my book are Steve and Emma.
Steve was a popular good looking guy who all the girls liked. He didn't like
school that much expect the Dorking Drama Club where he acted in the play, he
had a sister and Steve was very careful to trust anyone during all the murder.
Emma was very fond of Steve but because she was Steve's sister's friend for so
long Steve treated her as a sister, which she didn't like. Emma became so fond
of Steve that she star ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Theme
... poor, sitting at the bedsides of dying people, and helping the sick, she is seen as a kind, good-hearted person who can do the work that other people can not. In people’s minds, the meaning of the “A” changes form “adultery” to “able.” She is finally forgiven of her sin by society, but never forgives herself for it. I believe that God redeems her.
The Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale was Hester’s partner in sin although the public knows not of it and thinks him to be almost a saint. He has mental anguish for the rest of his life and punishes himself by not eating properly, and by beating himself with ...
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The Killing Floor
... first encounters at the packinghouse set the tone for what is to entail. Racial tensions combined with aggressions concerning class associated positions boil just barely beneath the surface on the “killing floor.” Conditions at the meatpacking plant are considerably less then favorable. The hours are long, the work is backbreaking, and the position in which he works does not pay very well. However, Frank’s compensation for these conditions are his relationships with the other men whom he lives near and works around. Spending his evenings playing cards and talking with the men introduces Frank to more the ...
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The Stranger 2
... asked Meursault into his room so that he may ask Meursault’s opinion: “because I was a man, I knew about things, I could help him out, and then we’d be pals.” (Camus, 29) Meursault remains quiet in the conversation, but eventually does speak up: “I didn’t say anything, and he asked me again if I wanted to be pals. I said it was fine with me: he seemed pleased.” (Camus, 29) It really made no difference to Meursault if he was stated as a friend of Raymond’s or not. The way that Meursault does not contribute to the conversation and that it is just “fine with [ ...
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Moby Dick And The Scarlet Letter: Unpardonable Sin
... clear understanding. Furthermore in Moby Dick, considered by some the greatest American novel, the theme of the unpardonable sin can be found. If Hawthorne’s unpardonable sin extends to Moby Dick, then the importance of understanding what Hawthorne intended is of wider importance. Secondly, I believe that the meaning and significance of the unpardonable sin is, derived, in part, from social influences of the industrialization of society. That the theme of the unpardonable sin conveys feelings and attitudes of a pre-industrial society which are carried by individual members of the same society a hundred years lat ...
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Lipset's American Creed
... fit into the national
consciousness. Without a doubt, there is a powerful abnormality in the founding
of America. The documents establishing a country where all men are created
equal neglect to address, or even mention by name, those people whose lives were
"merely the extension of the master's will" (Huggins xiv). Indeed, this
suggests that the Founding Fathers had an "out of sight, out of mind" mentality
towards the issue of slavery.
While Huggins understands why the Founding Fathers may have elected to
ignore the issue, he hardly thinks that it was a good idea. "It encouraged the
belief that American hi ...
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All Quiet On The Western Front
... becomes the Company, his fellow trench soldiers, because that is
a group which does understand the truth as Baumer has experienced it.
Remarque demonstrates Baumer’s disaffiliation from the
traditional by emphasizing the language of Baumer’s
pre- and post-enlistment societies. Baumer either can not, or chooses
not to, communicate truthfully with those representatives of his
pre-enlistment and innocent days. Further, he is repulsed by the banal
and meaningless language that is used by members of that society. As
he becomes alienated from his former, traditional, society, Baumer ...
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