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Help With Book Reports Papers
Lord Of The Flies - Character
... cap. His face was crumpled and freckled, and ugly without silliness. Out of this face stared two light blue eyes, frustrated now, and turning, or ready to turn, to anger.” Jack’s eyes are always used in the novel to depict his emotions, as they are in the quote above. When the boys land on the island they are all wearing their school uniforms, but Jack and his choir are wearing cloaks and caps. Oddly enough, Jack is one of the only boys whose last name is learned. I think the author does this to make Jack stand out. He is a very important character because throughout this whole novel, Golding ...
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Native Son
... sells houses to blacks in certain areas, and charges them more money than whites for dirties places. Bigger Thomas is going to be caught. The authorities will not let him escape. By leaving the house after the bones were located, Bigger basically announced his guilt to all of Chicago. The fact that he is black will not help either. That just makes him that much worse and that much guiltier. The white society already has him condemned and sentenced for life. What he did certainly was wrong, but it was accidental. He cannot run like this, because running makes him look worse. Right now he is trapped by his own inner ...
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Catcher In The Rye - The Conte
... Buddhism on different levels in Catcher in the Rye?
The main character in the book is Holden Caulfield. He attends a rich prep school called Prency prep. It is a school that typifies the idealistic American school, where the dirt and grind does not have a space, at least not on the surface. Holden is then expelled from the school, and starts to venture out the world on his own. He goes back down to New York, the dirt and grind capital of the world. He gets more and more sickened by the fakeness, and cruelty of the world. An example of this would be in the Catcher in the Rye, when he goes in to the museum “he ...
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Edna's Suicide
... categories: she can be with her lover (in any manner she wishes), she can be married (to a man of her choice), she can live alone. Each of the first two hypothetical endings would betray the point of the novel. Edna does not awaken to sex. She is liberated and does become a very sensual woman, but it is not to sexual expression that she wakens. Therefore, all options involving a lover fall short of fulfilling the meaning of her awakening. If she remains married or marries another, this would put her back (in terms of Webb) at the start of her circle: all the learning and struggling would be for naught. She would o ...
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Thier Eyes Were Watching God
... she did not want to. Janie married him to fulfill her grandmother’s dreams. Even though Janie did not love him she struggled till she could not stand it and left with Joe.” It had always been his wish and desire to be a big voice and he had to live nearly thirty years to find a chance.” (28) While, Janie was with Joe in Eaton Vile she had a higher status then the rest of the towns people. Janie tried to interact with them, but Joe would not let her. He thought of Janie as being better then all of them. This led to the way she was treated in society. All of the women in the town thought Janie had everything, bu ...
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House Made Of Dawn: Religious Names
... says, "Later she gave birth to his brother Abel. In the course of time … Cain was very angry, and … Cain said to his brother Abel, 'Let's go out to the field.' And while they were in the field, Cain attacked his brother Abel and killed him" (Genesis 4:2-3,5,8). This image of Abel as the helpless victim can be applied to Momaday's character as well. First, it is interesting to note the altercation between Cain and Abel in comparison to Abel's killing of the white man. While the Bible portrays Abel as the sympathetic victim of a vicious crime of jealousy, in Momaday's story, Abel seems at first to have taken ...
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The Storm Within
... those barriers could be and were broken. Just like
the storm beating down the barriers of the house trying to expose them to
the outside elements, the barriers between Calixta and Alcee were
diminishing with first contact as shown in the excerpt, “The rain beat upon
the low, shingled roof with a force and clatter that threatened to break an
entrance and deluge them there.” This refers to the storm outside and their
emotional state. They were feeling this need and desire for each other and
it was beating down all the barriers they had set up within themselves to
resist this temptation. Their feelings were so dan ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Symbolism In The Forest
... of
the evil that lingers within the darkness of the forest. As Hester and
Pearl are leaving governor Bellinghams estate they are confronted by
mistress Hibbins who explains that the witches are meeting in the forest,
and she then invites Hester to become more deeply involved with her evil
ways. "Wilt thou go with us tonight"(113) asked mistress Hibbins, yet
Hester refused to sign her name in the black mans book on that night. She
explains that the only reason she does not sign is because Pearl is still
in her life. At this time the forest itself is a open door to another
world, a wicked world that would take ...
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Escape From El-Ashaq
... Ruth shifts the emphasis of the story onto human interactions, focusing on the lives of Ruth and Naomi. The non-existence of God in the Book of Ruth exposes the adherence to God and patriarchy as the actual root of the female characters’ problems.
The unique nature of the Book of Ruth gives rise to its debatable intent, as well as promotes further analyses of the text. Aside from Job, Ruth is the only book in the Biblical canon named after a non-Israelite, as well as the only other book, aside from Esther, with a titular female character . The rare similarities encourage the comparison to Job, a non-Israelite, ...
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Lord Jim
... forever punish him for the unspeakable act he committed when he left the Patna to sink. As so, Jim was destined to live the rest of his life in misery when he left the eight hundred passengers to die. The Patna incident caused a chain of self hatred and self loathing that would go on until Jim’s death. Jim’s ever churning soul made him very unhappy. Fighting constantly within himself made Jim experience extreme guilt and anguish. The way Jim struggled on the inside caused Jim to seem lack luster and lazy on the outside. If Jim would have been more at peace with his soul he would not have been in such pain. B ...
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