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Help With Book Reports Papers
An Analysis Of Maya Angelou's "I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings"
... sound of her voice is lethal, consequently, she conceives a six year
silence that, not knowing then, could limit her opportunities and convert
her fate. After returning from St. Louis and entering Stamps, Maya entered
her six year "cocoon." This haven extricated her metamorphic spurt into
reality and womanhood. As with every cocoon, there is always a time when
one must leave and bravely enter the unknown world behind the shell. Mrs.
Flowers encouraged Maya to emerge and assisted her in finding her strongest
defense and force, her love of literature, to open this barrier and allow
Maya to end the silence. By d ...
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Comparison: Journey To The Center Of The Earth & The Time Machine
... file. Henry is the main character and loves mineralogy, and geology. Hans Bjelke, an Icelander, was the guide. The main character in The Time Machine was the Time Traveler. He was a scientist that has built a time machine in which he plans to travel through time.
Second of all, the two books are different in plot patterns. The book Journey to the Center of the Earth uses the plot "The Choice." Professor Hardwigg found a parchment by Arne Saknussemm that tells how to get to the center of the Earth. The professor couldn't resist an adventure and chose to go on it. The Time Machine uses the plot "The Understanding." ...
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The Truth May Be Hidden In Reality, But Expressed In Fiction
... gets a benefactor
B. Changes
1. Dickens finds his talent and works hard at it
2. Pip finds himself and learns many lessons about life
Many novels are based on the author’s life. Some of the novels were influenced by the author’s life. Often in cases like these, one author may write many novels with a similar theme, plot, setting, or characters. This is extremely true in Great Expectations. The main character in the novel, Pip, portrays a life that is similar to the life of Charles Dickens, his creator. It is evident that Charles Dickens drew on personal experiences in Great Expectations.
Pip and ...
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Moby Dick
... he needed to go to sea. He spent
years traveling on a variety of ships, including whaling ships.
C1. Melville's perspective on life is that God created the universe with an
infinite number of meanings and man is always trying to determine one specific
meaning.
D2. The “lessons” that Melville is likely to weave into his writing are 1. An
exposition on whales and the whaling industry. 2. A commentary on the universe
and human destiny. 3. Thoughts about God and Nature.
III. Characters
B. The protagonist in this book is Ishmael, a Christian, schoolteacher and part-
time sailor. Ishmael's role in the hun ...
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Jane Eyre 2
... do. After the death of Jane’s parents, her uncle, Mr. Reed brought Jane into his house. On her uncle’s deathbed Mrs. Reed promises to treat Jane like one of her own children. Jane’s aunt, Mrs. Reed, does not like Jane and has a very hard time doing this. She feels Jane was forced upon her family after the death of her parents. Against her husband’s request, Mrs. Reed does not treat Jane like a human being and is constantly criticizing and punishing her. In one example Jane was keeping to herself, reading a book when her cousin John Reed decided to annoy her. John then grabbed the book ...
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Twelve Angry Men
... into the jury room with him. If it were not for Vance, there would not have been any order in the jury room. He acts as a coach in the jury room as he formed fine lines of respect. He acts as a mediator for all of the arguments that went on in the jury room. Every time, Vance is there to calm everyone down and gain back order in the room. His leadership skills also shine in the jury room as well. He controls and leads every discussion, speaking order, voting, and demonstration. Vance takes on the leading role and handles it well. He also brings organization into the jury room by organizing the juries, ...
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Notes To Myself: Facades
... describe human interaction and what he really
is thinking when exposed to different situations. For instance, he describes a
conversation with a young lady in which she wanted to ‘just be friends' while
he being ‘male' can do nothing about the fact that he may be sexually aroused
by her whether they were ‘just friends' or not. This type of unconventional
expression of human emotion is the color of all of the selections. The author
does not wish to conceal feeling nor put on different faces in different
situations but be himself and be happy being himself at all times.
Interesting stands on happiness are als ...
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The Birthmark, The Minister’s Black Veil, And Young Goodman Brown: Symbolism
... good and evil occurs in The Minister’s Black Veil. The minister’s veil symbolizes the hiding of evil. This suggests that the minister has committed a sin and is trying to shield himself from the townspeople. The townspeople, being ignorant, are frightened of this veil and what may lie underneath. They see it as a symbol of evil.
Aylmer from The Birthmark symbolizes the puritan beliefs and goal of purification. The birthmark on his wife’s cheek is a symbol for perfection. Being the shape of a hand suggests to the townspeople that it is handprint from an angel, which may also mean that it is a symbol f ...
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Accounts Settled: A Review
... of fear as he went into the valley. The, the porcupine stole
his food and Gordon was going to kill it but remembered an old woodsman tale
that it's bad luck to ill a porcupine. Gordon then goes to bed, hungry and it
took him awhile to fall asleep. He later wakes up to find a cougar ready to
pounce on him. The cougar dose not strike yet because it is waiting for Gordon
to move. Gordon knows better and stayed in the same position for what seemed
like hours. Suddenly, the porcupine returns to look for more food and this
disrupts the cougar. The climax is when Gordon quickly reaches for his gun and
shoots the coug ...
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Flannery O’Conner And Grotesque Characters
... O’Conners “The Life You Save May Be Your Own” the villain is a one armed hobo named Tom T. Shiftlet. Using his gift of gab and the promise of “fixing the place up.” He manages to take up on the remote farm of an old woman named Lucynell Crater and her mentally retarded and completely deaf daughter “Lucynell Crater”. The old woman quickly decides that despite his handicap she would like to make Tom her son in law. His goal soon became, fix up the old car he was sleeping in and hightail it out of there with the car and some of the old womans money in his pocket. On the pretense that he would need ...
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