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Help With Book Reports Papers
The Last Of The Mohicans: Summary
... Munro (Madeleine Stowe),
eldest daughter to a proud British Colonel. The romance between these to
escalates throughout the course of the film. Chingachgook, the adopting
father of Hawkeye, and Hawkeye's Mohican brother Uncas, is one the last
members of his tribe, the Mohicans. Chingachgook is a wise and much
respected man. The British officer named Duncan is also very much in love
with Cora Munro. He fights under command of her father, and despite her
fathers initial dislike for Hawkeye, and his great liking for Duncan, Cora
does not feel the same love for Duncan that he feels for her. Magua is a
member of the ...
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The Great Gatsby: Structure Of Novel Influenced By Foreshadowing And Flashback
... During the chapter, Nick uses a flashback to tell about Gatsby's
funeral for the readers to know what happen the day Gatsby was shot. Flashback
in The Great Gatsby also helps to give the reader background information about
the characters. In The Great Gatsby, the structure of the novel is influenced
by foreshadowing and flashback.
Fitzgerald utilizes foreshadowing to the best of its ability to help
organize the novel. "Luckily the clock took this moment to tilt dangerously at
the pressure of his head, whereupon he turned and caught it with trembling
fingers and set it back in place. 'I'm sorry about ...
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Crucible Term Paper
... is perhaps the one thing that Proctor was afraid of becoming. He was a kind man who could not refuse support to partisans without drawing their deepest anger. In his presence a fool felt his foolishness instantly, consequently, a Proctor is always marked for slander and defamation(Miller, “The Crucible” 20). Although he may come across as a steady mannered individual, Proctor is not an untroubled man. His was a sinner against his wife, a sinner against his community, a sinner against his own morals, and a sinner against his Puritanical society. He was so troubled by this sin of adultery, that he c ...
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Black Like Me
... to determine its symbolism and recognize its themes. It was assumed that if this book was intended to be read as a story, isolation would be the symbolic theme. In the following quote, Griffin has completed the process of darkening his skin and sees himself in the mirror for the first time as a black man. "The transformation was total and shocking. I had expected to see myself disguised, but this was something else. I was imprisoned in the flesh of an utter stranger, an unsympathetic one with whom I felt no kinship. All traces of the John Griffin I had been were wiped from existence. Even the senses underwent a chan ...
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The Pearl By Steinbeck
... so he could have things that others take for granted such as a treatment from a doctor and be accepted in the eyes of others. When Kino finds an huge pearl in the ocean he feels that him and his family will prosper from this.
Kino realizes that this won't be as easy as he thought when he tries to sell the pearl. The pearl buyers were very conniving characters when they all tried to buy the pearl for much less than it is worth so they could sell it for a big profit. Kino now realized that this pearl was becoming a problem but he didn't care. His motives revovled around greed which was shown throughout the ...
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Lord Of The Flies: The Theme Of Religious Persecution
... persecution that proves
his grim outlook on the nature of man.
Golding's use of religious elements allows for the plausibility of
the religious persecution theme. The island the boys find themselves on is
pristine and untouched - like the Garden of Eden - until they arrive.
However, once the boys arrived, they left a scar on the island, in much the
same way Adam and Eve left a scar in the Garden of Eden. Another religious
element Golding uses is in the title of the book. ‘Lord of the Flies'
translates into ‘Beelzebub' in Greek - a name for the Devil. This suggests
the entire book is about the epitome of ...
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An Analysis Of The Wretched Of The Earth
... at first was a assimilationist thinking colonists and colonized
should try to build a future together. But quickly Fanon's assimilationist
illusions were destroyed by the gaze of metropolitan racism both in France
and in the colonized world. He responded to the shattering of his neo-
colonial identity, his white mask, with his first book, Black Skin, White
Mask, written in 1952 at the age of twenty-seven and originally titled "An
Essay for the Disalienation of Blacks." Fanon defined the colonial
relationship as one of the non recognition of the colonized's humanity, his
subjecthood, by the colonizer in order ...
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The Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglas, An American Slave
... as he was born into it, yet even in his bias he is able to detect and detail the differences in the slave holders cruelty and that to which he was subjected. From being whipped and humiliated daily, "a very severe whipping… for being awkward" (101), to being able to find his own work and save some money, "I was able to command the highest wages given to the most experienced calkers" (134), he is able to give the reader a more true picture of slavery. His poignant speeches raised the ire of many Northerners, yet many still felt the slaves deserved their position in life. Douglass, for his own safety, was urged to ...
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A Study Of The Negro Policeman: Book Review
... society. He drawn heavily on the
reflections of forty-one Negro policemen who made plain to me the difficulties
involved in being black in blue. Alex was concerned with the ways in which the
men were recruited into the police, the nature of their relations in regard to
their immediate clientele, their counterparts, and the rest of society. In the
broadest terms, the book examines the special problems that Negro policemen face
in their efforts to reconcile their race with their work in the present
framework of American values and beliefs.
The research for the study was based on intensive interview ...
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Common Human Experiences In To Kill A Mockingbird
... a doubt that Tom is innocent. But in a all white jury guilt or
innocence is not important to them the only thing that is important to
them is that Tom Robinson is black. Even if the jurors wanted to say that
they beleived Tom was innocent they would have to face the people of
Maycomb and then they would be shunned for letting a black man go free.
Boo Radley was also the victim of prejudice. The people of Maycomb
county did not understand Boo, he was not seen outside of his house and
people did not know what to think. They made up their own ideas of what
he was like and made him out to be some sort of monste ...
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