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Help With Book Reports Papers
Streetcar Named Desire
... is
evident at the poker night when he gets so angry and throws the radio
out the window. Another example of his brutality is displayed when he
beats his wife, Stella. Lastly, his arrogance and ferocious actions
are most apparent when he rapes Blanche, while his wife is in labor in
the hospital.
Stanley Kowalski’s first exhibition of his brutal actions
occurs at poker night. Blanche turns on the radio, but Stanley
demands her to turn it off. Blanche refuses and so Stanley gets up
himself and turns it off himself. When Stanley’s friend, Mitch, drops
out of the game to talk to Blanch ...
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Lord Of The Flies 2
... The littluns are basically the younger boys and ride the bandwagon. The two boys Ralph and Piggy meet each other in a thick jungle and discover that they crashed in an airplane and are stranded. They also learn that there are no adults present on the island and that none of the adults survived the crash. As they approach a beach, they find an enormous conch shell. Piggy gives the conch a little toot and summons the rest of the boys on the island to the beach. The boys assemble and elect Ralph as the leader. Ralph then assigns the Choir, led by Jack, to be the hunters. Then Jack, Ralph, and Simon set out to exp ...
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Cheever's "The Nanny Dilemma": Personal Reflection
... our children's kids to act in
the same manner.
Another interesting point I received from this reading was
regarding the nannies themselves. As described in the story, many nannies
come from other countries/cultures trying to make a living for their
families and themselves. What I found interesting was that nannies take
care of their obligations, then they come into our homes just like yours
and mine, and they take care of ours. Many of these people are
uncompensated for the amount of work done, some are treated like servants
and yet others are treated with respect. There is no certain job security
for ...
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In Search Of Our Mothers' Gardens And Everyday Use: Honoring Heritage
... there are two conflicting ideas about how to honor one’s heritage as exemplified by Dee on the one hand and Maggie on the other. The first idea is from Dee’s point of view. She believes that heritage is something that is physical. When Dee (Wangero) and Hakim-a-barber came to dinner at her mother’s house Dee wanted specific thing that had been in her family for years. She wanted part of the butter churn and the butter dish from her grandmother. She thought that these things were so amazing because they were old and the churn top and dasher were hand whittled. When Dee went into the chest and pulled out t ...
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Of Mice And Men And The Pearl: Characterization
... Ernst Steinbeck, in The Pearl, Of
Mice and Men, and The Grapes of Wrath describes many of his main characters in
great depth. In Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men, a story of two traveling laborers
who are on their way to a job loading barley at a California ranch. The two most
important characters in the novel are George Milton and Lennie Small. They are
ordinary workmen, moving from town to town and job to job, but they symbolize
much more than that. Their names give us our first hints about them. One of
Steinbeck's favorite books when he was growing up was Paradise Lost by John
Milton. In this long poem, Milton describe ...
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Robinson Crusoe
... and picked up by another boat. The captain owned a plantation. Soon after this Crusoe bought his own plantation. When other plantation owners needed slaves to work their farms they asked Crusoe to sail to Africa. Crusoe agreed and set sail. On the way there they ran into many storms. Three men were killed very soon. The twelfth day was a hard one. The biggest storm hit. Its waves were giant. The ship was in very bad shape and Crusoe had to abandon it. He and the other sailors loaded into the small boat and paddled to land. All of the sudden a titanic wave crashed onto the boat. It drowned everyone but Crusoe. He wa ...
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Character Analysis Of Arthur Dimmesdale In "The Scarlet Letter"
... to give Dimmesdale great strength, it is also
his largest flaw. His body refuses to do what his heart says is right.
Dimmesdale instructs Hester to reveal the truth, but when she refuses he doesnÿt
have the willpower to confess himself. Therefore, his sin becomes even larger
than hers, because while hers is an exposed sin. He continues to lie to himself
and his followers by keeping his secret hidden, so his is a concealed sin. Here
Hawthorne shows us just how strong Dimmesdale actually is, by allowing him to
hide his sin and bear the weight of it, he creates an extremely interesting and
tremendously strong charac ...
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Huckleberry Finn: Review
... their possessions. Huck is
impressed by all of the Grangerfords' belongings and liberally offers
compliments. The books are piled on the table "perfectly exact"(111), the
table had a cover made from "beautiful oilcloth"(111), and a book was
filled with "beautiful stuff and poetry"(111). He even appraises the chairs,
noting they are "nice split-bottom chairs, and perfectly sound, too-not
bagged down in the middle and busted, like an old basket"(111). It is
apparent Huck is more familar with busted chairs than sound ones, and he
appreciates the distinction.
Huck is also more familiar with flawed families than loving ...
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Hemingway's "In Our Time": Lost Generation
... "messages" bring the reader to an understanding of a generation, the
"lost generation" that appears to result from Hemingway's novel.
Ernest Hemingway uses intense short stories to leave a feeling of awe
and wonder in the reader of In Our Time. One begins to become emotionally
involved and attached to Hemingway's many stories, just as he himself appears to
hold some personal attachment and emotion to each story. One could even
speculate that In Our Time's main character Nick, is in fact, Hemingway himself.
It seems as though no matter what age this novel is read at, it could be
discussed as a representation of the ...
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20,000 Leagues Under The Sea: Overview
... stream of water shoots hundreds of feet into
the air, causing the boat to back off. Once in a while the monster will
disappear from sight for hours. While reading this part of the book the reader
feels like he is on the boat chasing the monster also. A lot of times the boat
gets close enough to the monster to catch it and thoughts of what you think the
monster could be run through your head like crazy. When they finally make an
attempt to capture it, it disappears beneath the depths of the ocean.
One of the most suspenseful and mysterious parts of the book was when
the characters were thrown into a big r ...
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