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Help With Book Reports Papers
SALEM
... the witch hunt. Throughout the witch hunt the abuses of power are prevalent. The abuse was broad spectrum and everyone from the accusing girls to the judge are involved. Abigail Williams is the leader of the girls. She begins this charade in order to save herself and the other girls from the punishment that they would have been handed down for them dancing in the woods. Abigail being a conniving girl sees the opportunity to save herself and seek revenge on people from the town who she feels "hate her and are trying to blacken her name in the community"(p.24 ). Abigail forces the other girls to go along with her plan ...
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The Subtle Humor Of Pride And Prejudice
... for
the reader to laugh at themselves. She introduces caricatures and character
foils to further show how ridiculous a character may be. Pride and Prejudice
has many character foils to exaggerate a characters faults or traits. Austen
also uses irony quite often to inform the readers on her own personal opinions.
The comic techniques caricatures, irony, and satire, not only helped to provide
humor for Austen's readers, but they also helped Austen to give her own personal
opinion on public matters.
When an action is exaggerated on stage by an actor, it becomes all the
more noticeable to the audience. An author c ...
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Character Study Of Blance Dubo
... appearance in the first scene "suggests a moth" (Williams 96). In literature a moth represents the soul. So it is possible to see her entire voyage as the journey of her soul (Quirino 63). Later in the same scene she describes her voyage: "They told me to take a streetcar named Desire, and then transfer to one called Cemeteries and ride six blocks and get off at Elysian Fields" (Quirino 63). Taken literally this does not seem to add much to the story. However, if one investigates Blanche's past one can truly understand what this quotation symbolizes. Blanche left her home to join her sister, because her life was a wr ...
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Hamlets Problem
... about his problems. An example of this is when Hamlet has his knife over the head of Claudius, and is prepared to murder him. He talks himself out of it. Instead, Hamlet writes a play in which the actors play out the same story that the ghost told Hamlet. His plan is to study Claudius’s reaction to the play to determine his guilt. Even after Hamlet decides his uncle is guilty, he doesn’t do anything. This would have been a great time to confront Claudius, but Hamlet seems more interested in taking credit for what he did instead of seeking revenge.
Throughout the play Hamlet is deeply hurt by his ...
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Book Analysis, Uncle Toms Cabi
... accepted a job in Maine, Stowe began writing a novel using the information and visions she had brought with her from Ohio. After some time, she submitted it to the National Era, which published the novel as a serial. When it was published, Uncle Tom’s Cabin reached immediate success. Many publishing companies from around the world published her novel in 20 different languages. Stowe found herself speaking around the world, especially in England. A play blossomed from the novel, which also was successful.
Stowe did not stop writing after Uncle Tom’s Cabin, but her other novels never had quite the imp ...
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Conflict In "The Child By Tiger"
... him
as an equal. This becomes evident when the auto collision occurs, and the
drunk man proceeds to assault Dick without cause, and without fear of
retaliation. This is because he knows that a black man is powerless in the
society of the time.
Society brings us to the second conflict, which is Prosser's
conflict with society. One night, without warning, he begins a killing
spree which spans the better part of a day, and spawns a fatal manhunt. His
conflict with the society in general is characterized by his indiscriminate
choice of victims. These victims range from a police officer to an innocent
black man looking ...
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Crime Of Passion By Barbara Hu
... the hospital then scolded her. She was labeled a murderer.
The author’s use of description was very detailed and very real. Reading this essay was like watching it on television. Every sentence was described with so much depth; there was no need to imagine the scenery or the excitement of the hospital. The healthy police officer was described as a young, witty macho cop with thirty-two pounds of attack equipment. When reading this, the vision of a man in a blue uniform with his gun and walkie-talkie enters the mind. When the man had been diagnosed with lung cancer he was described as a sixty pound skeleton being ...
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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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One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest: McMurphy
... with psychedelic drugs. After living at Perry Lane for a while,
Kesey's friend, Vik Lovell, informed him about experiments at a local V.A.
hospital in which volunteers were paid to take mind-altering drugs (Wolfe 321).
Kesey's experiences at the hospital were his first step towards writing Cuckoo's
Nest. Upon testing the effects of the then little-known drug, LSD, "…he was in
a realm of consciousness he had never dreamed of before and it was not a dream
or delirium but part of his awareness (322)." This awareness caused him to
believe that these psychedelic drugs could enable him to see things the way they ...
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The Necklace: The Downfall Of Mathilde Loisel
... is a stereotypical "rich man, poor
man" quality as Mme. Loisel longs for the material things that her old
schoolmate Mme. Forester has. The physical appearance of the characters as well
as their actions, thought, and emotions are very detailed throughout the story.
The main character's life, as well as her husband's, takes a dramatic turn and
the author describes the physical and emotional changes in great detail.
The story's title does not signify the theme however, the theme of the
story is reiterated throughout the story. "She had no dresses, no jewels,
nothing. And she loved nothing but that; she felt ...
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