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Help With Book Reports Papers
Uncle Tom's Cabin: An Analysis
... the novel was based on her reading
of abolitionist books and pamphlets, the rest came straight from her own
observations of black Cincinnatians with personal experience of slavery.
She uses the characters to represent popular ideas of her time, a time when
slavery was the biggest issue that people were dealing with. Uncle Tom's
Cabin was an unexpected factor in the dispute between the North and South.
The book sold more than 300,000 copies during the first year of publication,
taking thousands of people, even our nation's leaders, by surprise.
Mr. Shelby is a Kentucky plantation owner who is forced by debt to
sell ...
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1984: The Party Has Many Slogans
... from the wall. It was
one of those pictures which are so contrived that the
eyes follow you about when you move. Big Brother Is
Watching You, the caption beneath it ran (5).
This poster shows Big Brother as having a face. Big Brother was not an
individual person so he did not have a “face”. The face, however, gives Big
Brother a human quality. By doing so, the government puts itself on the same
level of humanity as the citizens that it governs. The people are supposed to
feel more comfortable with a ruling party that is just like them. The billboard
is also fou ...
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Stephen Leasock's "Arcadian Adventures With The Idle Rich": Satire
... offensive into something embarrassing.
Stephen Leacock's Arcadian Adventures with the Idle Rich is a
nonthreatening, humorous, and revealing satire of the moral faults of upper
class society. The satire acts as a moral instrument to expose the effect money
can have on religion, government, and anything within its touch. Writing about
such topics is hard to do without offending people. Leacock's technique combines
money with humour, and accompanies his moral message with ironic characters;
their exaggerated actions, and a constant comical tone to prevent readers from
being offended.
Leacock's utopian ...
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The Fortunate Pilgrim
... Angeluzzi, his friend’s son. Anthony was living and working in New York and would be willing and able to give Lucia Santa a good life. Reluctantly she agreed to marry a man she only knew as a young child. Together they had three children; Lorenzo, Octavia, and Vincenzo. Just as Lucia Santa began to care deeply about her husband, he was killed in an accident at work. After her husbands death she had to raise her two young children alone and give birth to a fatherless child. After her husbands death many of the other women on the street offered Lucia Santa help, but soon after the pity and condolences they turned ...
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To Kill A Mockingbird: Man Versus Society
... a mini-novel by the
author Harper Lee. The story took place in the very deep part of the south
during the 1930's when the country was in a ecomincal depression in a town
called Maycomb. This novel was written in the first person, therefore we
know that the narrator is a character in the story. This story is a
flashback that covered around three years. He father Atticus that treat her
as an invitingly. In the south the tradition and society is more important
which is the individual is more important! He makes them learn everything
by themselves, Therefore she tells us how she is getting educated.
Jim was a very ...
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Bone
... in the story do portray reality of the lives of Chinese immigrants in America, their hardship and difficulty in adapting American lifestyle and culture. For the younger generations, adapting the American culture and lifestyle is much easier than for the older generations. This is shown in the book and it also happens in reality, which is another reason why I like this book. This is a fiction novel, but the story told is like a non-fiction book; giving readers a sense of realism. As a Chinese reading , I understand the narrator’s feelings and predicaments. Although she is an Asian, her thinking lies more on ...
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An Analysis Of Maya Angelou's "I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings"
... very 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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The Scarlet Letter: The Symbol Of The Scarlet Letter
... she believes it
to be.
The scarlet symbol of ignominy may have defiled Hester's public
image, yet it has been a benefit rather than a bane to her soul, for by
admitting her crime to the crowd, her soul is freed from two hells: first,
the fiery pit where she would otherwise go after death, and second, the own
personal hell Hester will create for herself if she had chosen to hide her
sin in her heart. Though it was ordered for Hester to wear the letter, it
was still her own choice to make it in a vivid scarlet, "so fantastically
embroidered and illuminated upon her bosom." Hester chose red as the color
of her bran ...
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Comparison Of Mary Shelly's Frankenstein To Movies And TV Show's Frankenstein
... the world
looking for people to torment. But, in the movie "Frankenstein, with Boris
Karloff, the monster befriended a blind man. I think he had this friend because
the man could not see the face of the monster.
Mary Shelly's Frankenstein was very different from the movies and T.V.
shows. For one thing the monster was not even called Frankenstein. Victor
Frankenstein was the name of the doctor who created the monstrosity. Before the
doctor created the monster he was a work of art.
"I had selected his features as beautiful. Beautiful!," this is what
Victor said when he saw the monster before it was ...
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Lord Of THe Flies: Defects Of Society Due To Nature Of Individuals
... which accounts for the savage nature of the children in the
novel. He said, "The war was unlike any other fought in Europe. It taught us
not fighting, politics, or the follies of nationalism, but about the given
nature of man." After the war he returned to teaching and wrote his first novel,
Lord of the Flies, which was finally accepted for publication in 1954. In 1983,
the novel received the Noble Prize and the statement, "[His] books are very
entertaining and exciting. . . . They have aroused an unusually great interest
in professional literary critics (who find) deep strata of ambiguity and
complication in G ...
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