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Help With Book Reports Papers
The Catcher In The Rye Summary And Analysis
... Prep, and of the situations leading to his psychological meltdown.
As the story starts we find that Holden has been expelled from Pencey for academic failure, and is on his way to say good-by to old Spencer, his history teacher. Spencer is a depressing old man suffering from grippe. While talking with Mr. Spencer, Holden shows his first signs of his depression. After an unpleasant evening with his arrogant roommate Stradlater and their pimply faced next-door neighbor, Ackley, he decides to leave Pencey for good and spend a few days alone in New York City before returning to his parents' Manhattan apartment ...
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Critical Essay On Billy Budd
... to murder were beyond
their control; they had been stranded at sea and forced to kill and eat
their fourth companion, who had fallen ill and was about to die anyway. The
Judge, Lord Coleridge, found them guilty because "law cannot follow
nature's principle of self-preservation." In other words, necessity is not
a justification for killing, even when this necessity is beyond human
control. Since Billy is unable to defend himself verbally, he "responds to
pure nature, and the dictates of necessity" by lashing out at Claggart. I
agree with Reich's notion that Vere was correct in hanging Billy, and that
it is societ ...
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Catcher In The Rye Symbolism
... Holden asks the taxi driver about the ducks: "I mean does someone come around in a truck or something and take them away, or do they fly away by themselves-go south or something"(82). Holden's questions of what the ducks do in the winter foreshadow Holden's own plans. Holden wants to know if they either fly away to the south to escape the coldness and the hardships of winter like the way Holden wants to move to the west to get away from the phonies and escape the hardships of adulthood. Or if they are dependent on a parental figure such as the truck that comes to their rescue and takes them away similar ...
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The Autobiography Of Miss Jane Pittman
... greedy. Once Jane and Joe moved away, Jane had a couple of dreams that Joe would be killed by some horse, so she went to a hoo-doo. Sure enough, Joe was killed by a horse. Later, a boy was born, and they called him "The One." His name was Jimmy. They wanted him to become a preacher, but he didn’t want to.
Differences that were highly noticeable were that in the novel, the interviewer was a teacher that wanted her information for his class and in the movie, it was a magazine reporter. When Albert Clevoue died in the novel, the chariots of hell came for him, and in the movie, you don’t even hear of his ...
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Wuthering Heights Summary
... Liverpool, old Mr. Earnshaw returns home to Wuthering Heights with “a dirty, ragged, black-haired child” named Heathcliff. As he grows older, Heathcliff, to the dismay of Hindley Earnshaw, usurps the affections of not only Hindley’s father, but also that of his younger sister Catherine. Thereafter, in part due to his jealous behavior, Hindley is sent away to school. Years later due to old Mr. Earnshaw’s death, a married Hindley returns, now the master of Wuthering Heights. Intent on revenge, Hindley treats Heathcliff as a servant and frequently attempts to break Heathcliff and Catherine ...
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The Theme Of A Doll House
... (1135). Templeton believes that "A Doll House" is still a feminist text because people take it to be one. Templeton finds it to be ironic that "A Doll House" is an icon of the women’s movement, even though it is not about women’s rights.
It is argued by some that Ibsen would not admit "A Doll House" to be a play on women’s rights because he did not want to be associated with the women’s movement since it was not popular at the time. This is however only because as Ibsen said "whenever such a description is felt to be reasonably true, the reader will read his own feelings and sentiments into the work" ( ...
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Silas Marner
... years, Godfrey wants her back to fill a hole in his life and make him happy. He believes that his wealth can replace his missing love. He admits this when speaking to Eppie, “though I haven’t been what a father should ha’ been to you all these years, I wish to do the utmost in my power for you for the rest of my life and provide for you as my only child” (714). However, Eppie “can’t feel as [she’s] got any father but one,” (715) meaning , who cared for and loved her for sixteen years. The lack of love that Godfrey has given Eppie can not be replaced with wealt ...
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Mark Twain's The Adventures Of HuckleBerry Finn
... it would seem that both Huck Finn and Jim are trapped in some way and wishing to escape. For Huck, it is the violence and tyranny of his drunken father. Kept in a veritable prison, Huck wishes desperately to escape. Jim feels the need to escape after hearing that his owner, Miss Watson, wishes to sell him down the river-a change in owners that could only be for the worse. As they escape separately and rejoin by chance at an island along the river, they find themselves drawn to get as far as possible from their home. Their journey down the river sets the stage for most of Mark Twain's comments about man an ...
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The Jungle By Sinclair: A Man Of Many Colors
... also displayed when he tries to make a
good impression on his boss. He proves he is not lazy and “promptly reports for
work in the morning(pg.46) .”
Rudkis is also a caring man. His primary goal is to protect Ona, and
when he reaches America, he has every confidence he can do so. He works in
terrible conditions and endures many hardships merely to keep her happy. When
he lost his job, he earned mony immoraly. He does not do this for himself, but
for the welfare of Ona and the family. Eventhough he inevidably fails, he does
everything in his power to be an ideal husband.
Rudkis, like many other good-hearte ...
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The Catcher In The Rye: Holden Was A Twisted Individual
... the duck and where they go during the winter. Why would a normal individual even care about where these ducks would go in the winter? Another example of how Holden is twisted is how he constantly runs from reality and goes into flash about a person he hates and why he hates them.
Holden is in constant depression and the reason for his depression is that he feels he can’t help in change things. Holden is set on a straight path. Holden gets depressed when he sees something in the world he can’t change. Most young adults don’t think about things like this and get depressed. Most young adults think about ...
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