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Help With Book Reports Papers
The Lottery
... let out for summer break, letting the reader infer that the time of year is early summer. The setting of the town is described by the author as that of any normal rural community. Furthermore, she describes the grass as "richly green" and that "the flowers were blooming profusely" (196). These descriptions of the surroundings give the reader a serene felling about the town. Also, these descriptions make the reader feel comfortable about the surroundings as if there was nothing wrong in this quaint town.
Upon reading the first paragraph, Shirley Jackson describes the town in general. The town is first mentioned ...
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The Hobbit By J.r.r. Tolken
... burglar. But a part of him does yearn for adventure, and so one spring morning he finds himself setting out for Lonely Mountain with Gandalf and the thirteen dwarves. He does not prove very helpful at first. But then something happens that changes Bilbo's life. He finds a magic ring that makes him invisible, and has several opportunities to use it to rescue the dwarves from danger and imprisonment. They become quite impressed by him, and even rely on him, just as Gandalf foretold. Bilbo and the dwarves finally reach Lonely Mountain, the home of Smaug the dragon. The dwarves send Bilbo down a secret passage to the ...
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The Jungle
... starts with the marriage of Ona Lukoszaite and Jurgis
Rudkus in America, which was organized by Ona's cousin Marija. The
novel then flashes back to their lives in a rural Lithuanian town, and
how their families, Ona's stepmother Elzbieta, and her five children,
Jurgis' father, and four other adults, thought that America would be such
a great place to live in and decided to move to America. The day after
the wedding is over, everyone was back to work and Jurgis and Ona's
married life was cheerless. The pressures of work, poverty and illness
stifles the families spirits and then Dede Antanas, Jurgis' dad, dies. ...
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The Yellow Wallpaper: Male Opression Of Women In Society
... of the
physically confining elements surrounding her. The story is cast in an isolated
hereditary estate, set back from the road and located three miles from town.
The property boasts protective hedges that surround the garden, walls that
surround the estate, and locked gates which guarantee seclusion. Even the
connecting garden represents confinement, with box-bordered paths and grape-
covered arbors. This isolation motif continues within the mansion itself.
Although she preferred the downstairs room with roses all over the windows that
opened on the piazza, the narrator finds herself relegated to an out of the wa ...
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The Picture Of Dorian Gray: Evil
... His beauty charmed the
world. Basil was inspired to draw his portrait in order to preserve his
beauty and youth. Dorian recognised that as long as he remained young he
would be handsome. He dreaded the day that he would age slightly and start
to form wrinkles and such ugly (in Dorian's opinion) ugly things. He
believed that that day would deprive him of triumphs that would result in
him being miserable.
The degree of evil within Dorian increases as the plot develops.
By trading his soul for his youth, Dorian rids of the good inside of
himself. The plot proves to us that evil does actually lie within an
in ...
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Morrison's Beloved: A Review
... come into question. People (white) started to realize
this travesty and begin to speak up and act towards the abolition of
slavery. The abolitionists begin a process which will eventually end in the
60's where blacks will attain complete freedom. They begin a legacy of
freedom fighters that will not stop till blacks receive the right they so
deserved. Future leaders of known fame will be Malcolm X and Martin Luther
King which will carry on this battle begun by the abolitionists.
Baby Suggs, is Halle's mother and Sethe's mother - in - law, and is
an important character in the story in that she brings about ...
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Tragedy Of Macbeth From Macbet
... images to hide and yet reveal the character of Macbeth, "Why do you dress me in borrow'd robes?" (I,iii,113-114) And again in Banqou's talk "New honours come upon him, Like our strange garments, cleave not to their mould but with the aid of use." (I,ii,144-147) showing how these images are used to hide the "disgraceful self" of Macbeth. Clothing imagery is also used throughout the play in order to create a that devilish tone in the play "If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me, without my stir. (I,iii,141-143) hides Macbeth's true intentions towards the king and he feelings on what the witches said ...
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Fahrenheit 451: Books - A Part Of Our Past
... not have been our past
anymore, it would have been a made up one. In the time of Shakespeare there
were no televisions, not even close to that technology yet. Who would we study
and learn about, if no one had written things. Man kind would be studying the
man who had invented the television because he would have been able to record
himself, and then everything after that, which is only about fifty years. But
without the recordings of Einstein and all the other famous scientists,
television probably would not be invented that early.
In our day and age people are watching too much television. We figure
that e ...
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Feminism In Jane Eyre
... have been discriminated against because of there
gender. At the beginning of the 19th century, little opportunity existed for
women, and thus many of them felt uncomfortable when attempting to enter many
parts of society. The absence of advanced educational opportunities for women
and their alienation from almost all fields of work gave them little option in
life: either become a house wife or a governess. Although today a tutor may be
considered a fairly high class and intellectual job, in the Victorian era a
governess was little more than a servant who was paid to share her scarce amount
of knowledge in limite ...
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Billy Budd
... that they had on the ship. But there was one person that caught Billy's eye, the man at arms, Claggart. Billy never seen anybody so lonely but still so full of rage. Billy had made many attempts to talk to Claggart, but all had failed. Later on Billy was getting set up by Claggart. Why? Because Claggart was given bad information about Billy. Claggart was told that Billy didn't like Claggart and wanted to kill him later on the ship.
Claggart made his move, telling the captain that a group of sailors on the Ship were going to muteness and that Billy was the leader of this group. Captain Vere asking ...
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