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Help With Book Reports Papers
1984: Government's Attempt To Control The Mind And Bodies Of Its Citizens
... to their beliefs,
through a variety of methods. The first obvious example arises with the large
posters with the caption of "Big Brother is Watching You" (page 5). These are
the first pieces of evidence that the government is watching over its people.
Shortly afterwards we learn of the "Thought Police", who "snoop in on
conversations, always watching your every move, controlling the minds and
thoughts of the people." (page 6). To the corrupted government, physical
control is not good enough, however. The only way to completely eliminate
physical opposition is to first eliminate any mental opposition. The govern ...
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The Catcher In The Rye: Holden And Modern Teenagers
... failed
four out of five of his classes while I failed none. But instead I received
four "C's" from four out of eight of my classes. Although Holden has problems
with grades, ironically he does well in his English. Holden stated, "I'm quite
illiterate, but I read a lot." (p.18) Reading books improves your grammar and
vocabulary. This was be the reason why Holden does well in his English class. I
do not read much and therefore I have problems in my grammar.
The family background of Holden and I are fairly similar, both of us come from
opulent families. Holden and I are both very lucky to be studying in eminent
i ...
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One Hundred Years Of Solitude
... people whispering and pointing, so after Jose kills a townsman, they decide to retreat into the jungles of South America. With the help of other settlers, they found their own little town, named Macondo, in hope of escaping the wrath of fate. Their family lives through one hundred years in this manner, before their destiny is fulfilled.
This novel is about how a family is able to survive, for a time, in solitude. So, it is appropriate that the setting is a newly settled village, which is deep in the jungle, away from the world that has condemned them. is an almost magical story where the past, present and future s ...
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Black Like Me
... in
the African American society. While in New Orleans, Griffin discussed race
issues with other African Americans. John was harassed by some white
supremacists, while with Negroes, was treated with courtesies, even by strangers.
When Griffin gets news that a white jury rejected a case of a black lynching,
Griffin decides to go to the heart of the deep south, Mississippi to check it
out.
Even with the risk of his life, Griffin decides to take a bus to Hattiesburg
into the deep south to check out the lynching case. At the bus station, Griffin
acquired “hate stares “ from many whites on the benches waiting for ...
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Dawn, By Elie Wiesel
... Since 1949 he has worked as a foreign correspondant and journalist at various times for the French, Jewish, periodical, L’Arche, Tel-Aviv newspaper Yediot Ahronot, and the Jewish daily forward in New York City. Francois mauriac the Roman Catholic Nobelest and Nobel Laureate convinced Wiesel to speak about the Holocaust. Wiesel wrote an 800 page memoir which he later edited into a smaller version called "Night". In the mid 60’s Wiesel spoke out a lot about the Holocaust. Later on Wiesel emerged on as an important moral voice on Religious Issues and the Human Rights. Since 1988 Wiesel has been a professo ...
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Reaching Up For Manhood
... more likely to partake in violence than the average female. In order to prevent violence, it needs to stop before it starts. To do this, we start at childhood. The social, family, and educational environment must change for the better. This is not an easy task and no one is saying that it is going to take place over night. However, it is known that what we are, what we know, and how we act all reflects on the way in which we grow up and develop. Not to state the obvious, but I was raised very different from what the novel describes as an African-American male. Considering I am a Caucasian female, I was not raised wi ...
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The Glass Menagerie: Symbols
... harsh realities of the world.
Symbols are a major part of this play, as Tom, the narrator, is a poet, and
admits he has a weakness for symbols. One major symbol presented in the
story is that of the fire escape, a symbol that has a different meaning and
function for each character. For Tom, it is a means of escape from fire,
not the type of fire that was considered in its building, but “the slow and
implacable fires of human desperation.” This is especially true of Tom's
apartment. His mother, devastated after her daughter Laura's failure to
cope in business college, becomes obsessed with finding her a gentleman ...
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Naturalism In To Build A Fire
... Fire" is a short story that embodies the idea of naturalism and how, if one is not careful, nature will gain the upper hand and they will perish. When the narrator introduced the main character of the story, the man, he made it clear that the man was in a perilous situation involving the elements. The man was faced with weather that was 75 degrees below zero and he was not physically or mentally prepared for survival. London wrote that the cold "did not lead him to meditate upon his frailty as a creature of temperature, and upon man's frailty in general, able only to live within certain narrow limits of heat and col ...
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Simon, Lord Of The Flies
... by himself to that little place among the creepers. The other boys thought he was “queer….funny.” (55) because he was an outcast and rather strange.
Towards the middle of Simon’s stay on the island, he started to realize that he truly was different from the others. Every time he tried to talk to the other children, his “effort fell about him in ruins; the laughter beat him cruelly and he shrank away defenseless to his seat.”(89) Just when he thought he had been accepted he embarrassed himself again, “When he bashed into a tree Ralph looked sideways impatiently and Robert ...
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Antigone
... argue against others
who believe that Creon deserves that honor. They say that
the Gods were against Creon, and that he did not truly love
his country. "His patriotism is to narrow and negative and his
conception of justice is too exclusive... to be dignified by the
name of love for the state" (Hathorn 59). These arguments,
and many others, make many people believe the Antigone is
the rightful protagonist. Many critics argue that Creon is the
tragic hero of Antigone. They say that his noble quality is his
caring for Antigone and Ismene when thier father was
persecuted. Those who stand behind Creon also argue that
A ...
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