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Alvarez Shows Language Is A Tremendous Difference In Everyone's Lives In His Story
... U.S., she was completely naive
when it came to the American culture. Yolanda was raised in the way that the use
of drugs and alcohol were totally unheard of. Pre-marital sex was something that
was taboo, and strictly reinforced. She had grown up with very traditional
values that were adopted from her mother and her father. She was never exposed
to any outside stimuli. Whether or not it was voluntary, she was forced to
conform to the rigid Hispanic values. This conformity kept her at bay. She
couldn't experience the things necessary to become a whole person.
Rudolf B. Elmhurst was a young man from a liberal family ...
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Persuasion--austin Poor Dick
... exploration of usefulness vs. uselessness allows the reader to gain a glimpse of the true purpose of Persuasion. That being that happiness and self-fulfillment can only be achieved when one refuses the shackles of the ineffectual aristocracy.
Austen seems to be expounding on Richard’s uselessness and his failure to live up to the promise of his birth and entitlement. This is a very important point. It seems that in the world of Persuasion, it is the qualities of usefulness, resourcefulness and capability that are attractive to the reader. To the aristocracy, what one does with one’s day is of t ...
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Why Is The Crucible So Called
... sinister force is released. The dancing and the contents of the little pot seem to fuel the rumours, lies and tragedy of Salem. From this point onwards, lies which in turn arouse suspicion ending ultimately in the destruction of the Salem community. Even in the next part of the play we observe Tituba create and elaborate lies which is the first we see of the evil which is unleashed by the witch hunt. There was very little privacy in Salem mainly because the fact that it was a theocracy and crimes were an offence not only against God but also against the community. Therefore there was pressure for neighbours to r ...
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The Bogart By Susan Cooper
... the theater and Maggie owns and runs an antique store. The Volink family were excited and amazed that they inherited a castle. But what the Volink’s did not know was that a spirit called a Boggart lived there.
The Boggart is a sprit that is neither good or bad. He mainly plays practical jokes on people. It is like a little child that can be friendly towards mortals. Boggarts cannot be seen or heard..
The Volink family sold the castle right away because it would be to expensive to keep. Emily and Jessup kept two pieces of furniture to bring home. What they didn’t realize was that a Boggart was sleeping i ...
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The Tragic Love Triangle Of Yonville
... Bovary.
Charles Bovary, the only son of a middle-class family, became a doctor and
set up his practice in a rural village. He then married a women who was
quite older then himself. He was unhappily married to her saying that "Her
dresses barely hung on her bony frame", This coming right before her death.
Upon his wife's death, Charles married an attractive young women named Emma
Roualt, the daughter of one of his patients. Emma married Charles with
overwhelming expectations. She thought marriage would be filled with three
things, "bliss, passion, and ecstasy". Emma had a character that was 1)
dissatisfied 2) a ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Do You Dread Guilt?
... powerful. Some
people after awhile give in to this guilt and confess what they did.
In The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale commit a
great sin. Because of this great sin, it causes them immense guilt and sadness
though out the rest of the book. One of the main character's that is affected
the most is Arthur Dimmesdale. Dimmesdale handles it in a different way though,
to him its more of a "concealed sin." A example of this is, "It may be that
they are kept silent by the very constitution of their nature. Or - can we not
suppose it - guilty as they may be, retaining, nevertheless, a zeal for Go ...
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Milton's Presentation Of The Fallen Angels
... I and II of "Paradise Lost" are so unique, as the alternative, and
less-frequently explored world of the devils, is probed in such a
fascinating manner.
Milton uses the story of the fallen angels to open out on numerous
eras, civilisations, myths and stories, allowing him to convey his own
perception of the world's history, as the reader is guided through various
points in time. Before we are introduced to the individuals, Milton
depicts an enormous army of different species, each of changeable size and
form. The image of a "pitchy cloud / Of locusts" to describe them as they
rise from the burning lake is ...
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A Separate Peace, Symbolism Wi
... on purpose, which causes Finny to fall out of the tree. Gene's peers are beginning to doubt his innocence. Finny has a burst of anger at the end of Gene's trial in the Assembly Hall. During this outburst, Finny says; "I just don't care. Nevermind" (168). Finny's outburst causes his second injury, which is rooted in Gene's spitefulness towards him. Gene's feelings and their effects are linked together by the Assembly Hall. Finny's anger toward the events of the trial eventually leads to his own death as he storms out into the corridor.
As Finny runs down the corridor, the marble staircase that he approaches is symbo ...
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Dr. Jekyll And Mr Hyde
... that would usually be crowded with merchants and children during
the week, Enfield points out an old building without many windows, and only
a basement door.
Enfield tells a story of how, one night at about 3:00 am, he saw a strange,
deformed man round the corner and bump into a young girl. The strange man
did not stop but simply walked right over the young girl, who cried out in
terror. Enfield rushed over and attended the girl along with her family.
Still, the strange man carried on, so Enfield chased him down and urged him
back. A doctor was called and Enfield and the doctor felt an odd hatred of
the man, warnin ...
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The Frame Structure Of Franken
... the different stories at the center and the frames around it.
One of the main suggestions of the article is the functioning of the inner oral narratives as forms of seduction, to be more specific, seductions into a promise. In other words, they try to persuade their listener to promise the satisfaction of a desire that could not be satisfied directly. The two main examples for this are the Monster’s as well as Frankenstein’s story, but the themes of seductive narration and promises can be found also elsewhere in the novel. The Monster’s desire is to be loved by someone. When he realises that not only the ...
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