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Help With Book Reports Papers
Satire At It's Best In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn
... that black people were so different that you could see them a quarter of a mile away." See? He'll be drownded, and won't have nobody to blame for it but his own self. I reckon that's a considerable sight better'n killin' of him. I'm unfavorable to killin' a man as long as you can git aroun' it; it ain't good sense, ain't good morals. Ain't I right?" This is a very good example of Twain satirizing the idiocy and cruelty of society in general. The man is so misguided that he thinks it's a lesser crime to let a man drown than to just plain kill him
Twain a lot of the time makes fun of how whites perceived blacks or h ...
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The Cask Of Amontillado: Lyman
... they see the red Oldsmobile convertible. Lyman (the story is told from his point of view) almost makes the car a living thing when he says, “There it was, parked, large as life. Really as if it were alive.” They used all of the money they had, less the gas to get home, to buy the car.
The car’s main significance in the story is the bond that it creates between the brothers. When reading the story, one is led to believe that these two brothers have very little in common other than their blood. Upon the purchase of the vehicle, however, they are brought together by a common interest: the car. Once the b ...
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Lord Of The Flies: Character Analysis Of Piggy
... building shelters to be protected, and a sundial to know what time it was. There are may other things that Piggy did to attempt to bring order to the island just like a grown-up. When Jack was busy hunting pigs and dancing about in the blood that engulfed him, Piggy just wanted people to listen to him. He yearned for someone to listen to his ideas without asking questions: when he suggested moving the fire to the beach, he just wanted a ship passing by to see them. Piggy mimicked adults, he did not run about in a savage nature, he was good. Being the only boy that wasn't violent, shows how diverse Piggy wa ...
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Yanomamo
... is cross-cultural perspective. marriages are much different from that of American marriages. women are treated as materialistic objects and promised by their father or brother to a man in return for reciprocity. The reciprocity could be another women or political alliances. The trades are often practiced in the culture. Polygamy is also a part of the culture. women are kept in the male’s possession. The man tries to collect as many wives as he possibly can in order to demonstrate his power and masculinity. As polygamy in American Culture is referred to as bigamy which is against the law.
Besides ...
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A Midsummer Nights Dream
... (III ii,line 169-173) Demetrius says, "Lysander, keep thy Hermia; I will none. If e'er I loved her, all that love is gone. My heart to her but as guest- wise sojourned, And now to Helen is it home returned, There to remain." This proves he is a fool, because he is not aware of his changing love for Helena.
Helena is a fool because Demetrius does not love her but she still persists in chasing him. Demetrius shows no love for Helena. (II i,line 227-228) Demetrius says, "I'll run from thee, and hide me in the brakes, And leave thee to the mercy of wild beasts." (II i,line 199-201) "Do I entice you? Do I speak you fa ...
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The Sun Also Rises : Moral And Social Values
... surroundings and seeks escape and
refuge in the arms of these men. But her actions seem always to end up
hurting her, and she runs back to Jake. Jake knows that he will never be
able to have her for his own, and he accepts this as fact. This is clear
when the Count asks them ³why don¹t you get married, you two? (68)² To
this question, they give a lame half hearted awnser which implies that it
will never happen. He is tolerant of her behavior because he loves her
unconditionally and is willing to overlook everything she does. Jake¹s
willingness to endure and forgive Brett¹s promiscuity and infidelity is an
indi ...
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Mania Dictator Of Inability Ha
... mania is described as a mood disorder characterized by euphoric states ,extreme physical activity ,excessive talkativeness, distractedness, and sometimes grandiosity. During manic periods a person becomes "high" extremely active , excessively talkative, and easily distracted. During these periods the affected person's self esteem is also often greatly inflated. These people often become aggressive and hostile to others as their self confidence becomes more and more inflated and exaggerated .In extreme cases (like Hamlet's) the manic person may become consistently wild or violent until he or she reaches the poin ...
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Independence And Failure
... is loose. Marriage is like a triangle. Each spouse makes up one of the leaning sides, and marriage the lower side. The three together are very strong, but to stand they all must be united. The longer a marriage is held the longer the bottom stretches, and the more dependent each person becomes on the other. If one side tries to stand on its own then the second will fall on the first as it tries to stand. This metaphor also excellently exemplifies the catastrophe that occurs in Macbeth as both Lady Macbeth and Macbeth try to separate. Macbeth is a eighteenth century play written by William Shakespeare. Using these ...
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Oedipus Rex
... curse upon the head of King Laius’s murderer in the opening scenes of the play :
So will I fight on the gods’ side,
And on the side of the slain man!
But my curse be on the one who did this, whether he is alone
Or conceals his share in it with others.
Let him be free of no misery if he share my house
Or sit at my hearth and I have knowledge of it.
On myself may it fall, as I have called it down!
-Oedipus from Oedipus Rex
When Oedipus pronounces this sentence he has already unwittingly judged himself, and to the excitement of the crowd foreshadowed later events to come. This statement, is a classic e ...
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The Pearl: Evil
... doctor. The pearl's evil did not restrict itself to infecting
Kino's peers; it also affected Kino himself. He wanted to sell the pearl and
use the money to better his family's standard of living. He had dreams and
goals that all depended on the pearl. When Juana wanted to destroy the pearl,
Kino beat her unmercifully:
He struck her in the face and she fell among the boulders, and he
kicked her in the side...He hissed at her like a snake and she
stared at him with wide unfrightened eyes, like a sheep before a
butcher. (742)
Juana saw through the outer beauty of the pearl and k ...
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