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The Glass Menagerie: Internal War
... turning out to be like his father. He calls himself “a bastard son of a bastard” (6.125). The only thing keeping Tom from leaving his family is that he feels he needs to take care of his mother and sister. Every time his mother tries to take control of his life, Tom thinks about how his father left and how much better life could be if he did the same thing. Tom doesn’t want to be stuck at home all his life with the responsibility of his mother and sister. In the end, Tom walks down the fire escape for the last time “following in [his] father’s footsteps” (7). No matter how much he tries to be better ...
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The Adventures Of Huklebery Fi
... find many dissimilarities. Many of the classic scenes have been switched around and combined in the 1993 version. There are a few scenes in particular that I will focus and comment on. The major difference between the movie and the book is an important character named Tom Sawyer, who is not present or mentioned in the film. It is evident from reading the story that Tom was a dominant influence on Huck, who obviously adores him. Tom can be seen as Huck's leader and role model. He has a good family life, but yet has the free will to run off and have fun. Tom is intelligent, creative, and imaginative, which is everythi ...
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Eliot's Views Of Sexuality As Revealed In The Behavior Of Prufrock And Sweeney
... monotonous routines and is frustrated, "I
have measured out my life with coffee spoons":. He contemplates the
aimless pattern of his divided and solitary self. He is a lover, yet he is
unable to declare his love. Should a middle-aged man even think of making
a proposal of love? "Do I dare/Disturb the universe?" he asks.
Prufrock knows the women in the saloons "known them all" and he
presumes how they classify him and he feels he deserves the classification,
because he has put on a face other than his own. "To prepare a face to meet
the faces that you meet." He has always done what he was socially supposed
to ...
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Essay On Pride And Prejudice: Theme
... disgusted at his
behavior and formed a prejudice against him. Even after he fell in love with her
and proposed to Elizabeth, he completely debased her family. Darcy realized
eventually that he was going to have to change. He tried to look at his behavior
and analyze why he acted as he did. In the end, he fought his intense pride so
that he and Elizabeth could be happy together.
Prejudice was also an issue for Darcy in that he disliked Elizabeth in
the beginning because of her low social status, poverty, and socially inept
family. Darcy was forced to deal with his prejudice when he fell in love with
Elizabeth. Thi ...
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Appearances Are Deceptive In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn
... woman should not own slaves, even though society views nothing wrong with it. No where does it say in the bible that it is right for one man to own another. So, to the reader, the widow Douglas in some ways comes off as a hypocrite. In how she tells Huck to live a good life so he can get to heaven, by doing good for others, but at the same time she own slaves.
The Grangerfords and the Shepherdsons are examples of aristocrats that are not as they appear. Like a stereotype of an aristocrat they live in nice big houses, wear nice clothes, and own nice things. On the other hand they could be considered exactly t ...
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The Jungle: The Appeal Of Socialism
... would be the complete antithesis of what they dreamed
of.
The enormous rush of European immigrants encountered a lack of jobs.
Those who were lucky enough to find employment wound up in factories, steel
mills, or in the meat packing industry. Jurgis Rudkus was one fo these
dissapointed immigrants. A sweeper in slaughter house, he experienced the
horrendous conditions which laborers encountered Along with these nightmarish
working conditions, they worked for nominal wages, inflexible and long hours, in
an atmosphere where worker safety had no persuasion. Early on, there was no one
for these immigrant ...
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Comparison Of Conroy's "Prince Of Tides" And "The Great Santini"
... and always thinking
that he was the problem in his family, and that he was the trouble maker.
In the Prince of Tides novel the author uses a first-person style
narration, which adds depth and gives the reader more insight into the
character's world. In the Prince of Tides Conroy has the main character
describe to the reader through flashbacks, and memories, all of the events
of his life from when he was just a young boy all the way up to the present.
" I betray the integrity of my family's history by turning everything, even
sadness into romance. There is no romance in this story; just a story"
(p.75).
The ...
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Themes In The Great Gatsby
... young man that listens to everyone's problems and is "inclined to reserve all judgements." He then introduces the reader to the other main characters in the novel, his cousin Daisy and her husband Tom Buchanan, as well as the namesake of The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby himself. The story unfolds, and we discover Gatsby's background and his relationship with Daisy. His estrangement from her all these years has been spent with him building his fortune so that he can one day have a life with her, despite her marriage to Tom. Thus, we are introduced to the American Dream, as seen in the eyes of Jay Gatsby. A surpr ...
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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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A Scarlet Letter: Honesty Heals A Guilty Heart
... it had direct influence on every person in the novel. His characters lived interchangeable but distinct lives with different joys, loves, sins, and morals. “Be true, be true, be true!” rings out throughout the entire novel, and this justifies that perhaps the greatest theme emphasized by Nathaniel Hawthorne is that which is founded on honesty. There were several honest and dishonest people in The Scarlet Letter, and each of their lives ere changed due to their ethics. Throughout the entirety of The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne proved to be more honest than Roger Chillingworth in that she revealed her sin rather ...
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