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Help With Book Reports Papers
The Red Badge Of Courage 3
... all have characteristics that makes it easier for us to relate to them.
Physical and emotional pain is what the tattered solider illustrates in the book. The tattered solider's pain comes from all of the horrible things associated with war. Him going crazy brings emotional pain and the physical pain is brought on by the endurance of war. "There was a tattered man, fouled with dust, blood and powder stain from hair to shoes, who trudged quietly at the youths side." (pg 50) The tattered solider also characterizes the toughness people can endear. "... the tattered soldier had two wounds, one in the head and the o ...
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The Fountainhead
... Society dictates that there will be those that follow and those that
will lead the followers. Peter Keating is one that adheres to conformity; a
man of little independent thought, a follower. Howard Roark, on the other
hand, is a man aspiring to achieve a level of complete and utter
independence from traditional principles. One telling passage occurs in a
scene where Keating and Roark are discussing architecture.
Keating: "How do you always manage to decide?"
Roark: "How can you let others decide for you?"
As two men on the extreme sides of conformity and independence, it is hard
for Keating t ...
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Lord Of The Flies: Our Society Suppresses The Evil That Is Presented In All Of Us
... killing and sheer brutality
of the hunters.
Jack is the perfect example of a boy whose dark side took over when
he was no longer bound down to a civil environment. After being unable to
bear killing a pig due to the horrific blood, he became eager to gain
respect, almost redeem himself, by becoming a hunter. He was remarkably
enthusiastic about hunting. He painted his face and got spears. He
eventually cared no more for being rescued, because all he wanted to do was
kill pigs. The number of hunters kept on growing and he began to get other
kids to hunt with him. They soon had a routine (the dance) and whenever ...
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Themes Of Unity In The Grapes
... son in the family, starts the book freshly out of jail and slowly evolves from selfish goals to a sense of an ideal worldly purpose in uniting people against injustice. Jim Casy, an errant preacher who is accepted into the Joad family early into the story, changes his beliefs to include all people in a sort of oversoul, as he helps to organize the workers to battle the extreme injustice done onto them by the farm owners and discriminating locals. Whereas the Joads start out as one family, by the end of the story their family becomes one with other families who are weathering the same plight of starvation and se ...
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1984: The Structure Of The Novel
... Big Brother' in it. At this Point
he is not sure if he wants to keep writing because he is afraid to get
caught. He writes about war and how it affects the children. Winston
does not think the Party should allow the hangings to be public. Winston
writes about when men will be free, when the truth exists and when what is
done cannot be undone. Also, Winston thinks about Goldstein. He says how
Goldstein has a lot of influence on some people. Still, the majority of
the people hate and despise him. He is always the face of hate in the Two
Minute Hate and everywhere else, but for some people like in The
Brotherho ...
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St. Augustin
... different perspective than the one shown by Augustine.
In the writing of e, the reader gets a small glimpse of what life was like in the Roman Empire in the forth century, and more particularly how death was viewed during this period. According to the Confessions, life, though valued, was just a time spent before God chose to bring your soul to heaven; contingent of course on the fact that you were a Christian. “Yet in a moment, before we had reached the end of the first year of a friendship….you took him from this world (Confessions, 75).” “When all hope of saving him was lost, he was b ...
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Different Strokes For Different Folks
... love to see you at my table, Nick. You remind
me of a---rose, an absolute rose. Doesn’t he?’”(Fitzgerald 19). Daisy
says this knowing that it may sound stupid, but she feels that all women
should put on an act. Daisy makes a statement to Nick about when her
daughter was born, “‘ She told me it was a girl, and so I turned my head
away and wept. ‘All right’ I said, ‘I’ m glad it’s a girl. And I hope she’
ll be a fool- that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a
beautiful little fool’” (Fitzgerald 21). These statements explain her
opinion on how females should be, and also shows ...
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Gulliver's Travels
... and
civility. Overall, Swift gives Gulliver a generally negative and cynical
attitude towards the manner in which his current day English counterparts
behaved cleverly disguised in the subtext of his encounters with other nations
that either contrasted the way they lived, or mirrored unflatteringly his
contemporaries lifestyles.
In Gulliver's first voyage to Lilliput, his role as the town giant not
only put into perspective the selfishness and unrelenting need for power of the
human race, but also opened his eyes to the untrusting and ungrateful nature of
those aforementioned. When he first arrived in their l ...
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The Fountainhead: Howard Roark And Objectivism
... by subsisting on one's own canon, never for a moment yielding the
integrity of his/her ego. This idea, in short, is the basis of Objectivism.
In my opinion, I think Ayn Rand's philosophy is completely ridiculous.
According to The Fountainhead our entire society is based upon the unchanging
principles made up and maintained solely by powerful, influential old men
(Elsworth Toohey). Furthermore, Miss Rand dictates that true happiness can only
be found by defying these principles. I would have to say that although Miss
Rand's Objetivism works well with in the realm of the book, I fail to see it in
the "real ...
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Summary Of "A Raisin In The Sun"
... into a white suburban
neighborghood the whites in the community are upset that they have come to
be with them. Their direct neighbors who have a son that is Travis's age no
longer lets her son play with Travis and he become hurt and confused.
Walter has to explain that many people that are white beleive that they are
better then those who are black. Travis who is stay in dismay and is
confused waits at home while Walter goes over to the neighbors house to
talk to them about what has happened. Walter is, in good reason, very angry
and annoyed by the racist whites. He goes over and at first tries his best
to stay c ...
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