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Help With Book Reports Papers
The Sundiata
... a man of justice.
A great hunter was considered to be an attribute of a ruler. At early ages, the males of the village would go hunting. Though killing animals was the goal of hunting, this activity allowed the young boys to practice for wartime. Not only did they learn the art of hunting; "the medicinal leaves which heal wounds and cure diseases" were revealed (Niane 3). During wartime, a man would have to know how to kill his own food to survive, and knowing which plants would heal the wounds of injured sofas and cure their diseases was important to the survival of the troops. A great hunter would never die ...
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The Ironies In Orwell's 1984
... comes when you learn about the
departments of Government in Oceania. The Ministry of Truth is actually
the maker of lies for the history books, the Ministry of Love discourages
love, and the Ministry of Peace is actually quite violent. The final
example of verbal Irony can be seen in the name of the leader of Oceania,
"Big Brother." The concept of a big brother is one whom is older and wiser
and helps the "littler siblings" -- this not the case with 1984's Big
Brother. The Big Brother in this novel completely watches over every move
a person makes keeping them controlled with fear.
The next type of irony is ...
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Once And Future King Essay
... attempts to achieve Right. This communicates the idea that perhaps Right cannot be obtained, but it is the struggle to obtain it that is, in essence, Right.
Revenge is also a powerful factor in the novel. It is the driving force behind many character's quarrels with the King. Morgause seduced Arthur and produced Mordred out of her desire for revenge on Uther, Arthur's father, for the murder of the Duke of Cornwall, her father, and Uther's marriage to Igraine, her mother. Mordred himself plotted the war against the King because he was the King's illegitimate child. It is evident that characters in the nov ...
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All Quiet On The Western Front
... display the hidden costs of war. The physical aspects of death and wounds did not begin to show the mental anguish that the soldiers experienced during and after the war. He hoped to show the results of war on an entire generation; a loss of innocence in life which those who were once soldiers could never replace. Remarque's message came across very clearly. There were constant tragedies which forced Paul or the other soldiers to question war and become detached from civilian life. After viewing the death of a close friend and a recruit whom he had comforted earlier, Paul went home finding that war had isolated him ...
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Kafka's The Trial: Guilt
... the first of which is a
literal interpretation of a criminal trial. The second level can be seen
as the internal trial that he must go through to cope with his own anxiety.
K and his trial are used to represent the eternal guilt of human beings in
the eyes of a bureaucracy, and in this sense, K is guilty. However, the
question of K's guilt is not important to Kafka's intention to show his
idea that "the innocent and the guilty [are] both executed without
distinction in the end."
In Kafka's beliefs, the courts treat all men as if they were guilty.
Joseph K is a prime example of this treatment. He is never told ...
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Cooper's "Deerslayer": View Of The Native Americans
... about what occurred in
the lives of the American Indians.
Marius Bewley has said that the book shows moral values throughout
the context of it. He says that from the very beginning, this is
symbolically made clear. The plot is a platform for the development of
moral themes. The first contact the reader has with people in the book is
in the passage in which the two hunters find each other. "The calls were
in different tones, evidently proceeding from two men who had lost their
way, and were searching in different directions for their path" (Cooper, p.
5). Bewley states that this meeting is symbolic of l ...
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Brave New World Summary
... to a group of new students who still have only a very limited understanding of what goes on here.
You may find the Director and his Hatchery strange, but you probably know how the students feel as they try to note everything the Director says, even his opening remark, "Begin at the beginning." You know how anxious you can be to make sure you don't miss something a teacher says, something that will be important later on.
In fact, the functions of the Hatchery are hard to understand because Huxley has the Director throw large amounts of "scientific data" at you without giving you time to fi ...
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Beloved: American Experience With Slavery
... experience.
‘Beloved’ is the tale of Sethe, a survivor of slavery, and her family. Sethe is an escaped slave who made the split second decision to kill her daughter, rather than have her return to a life of enslavement. The entire novel revolves around this horrific act; the entire story is slowly unraveled through the remembrances of Sethe and others. These memories and "re-memories" do not follow chronological order. However, when they are all pieced together, the whole picture of slavery, Sethe's act, and its aftermath emerges.
A universal characteristic of the survivor's tale is the subjectivity and inc ...
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Alice In Wonderland
... "...this bottle was
not marked `poison', so Alice ventured to taste it, finding it very nice".
Another instant that shows her curiosity when she looks for the white
rabbits fan and gloves, she finds a bottle, this time there was no table,
"There was no label this time with the words `Drink Me' ... `I know
something interesting is going to happen' ... ` I'll just see what it
does',". Alice is like a little girl that is still exploring the world
around her, but she finds that she is more mature than the creatures in
Wonderland.
Alice is very well mannered in Victorian ways to the creatures of
Wonderland. Alice shows ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Dimmersdale Is A Coward And A Hypocrite
... . While Hester is a relatively constant character, Dimmesdale is
incredibly dynamic. From his fall with Hester, he moves, in steps, toward
his public hint of sinning at the end of the novel. He tries to unburden
himself of his sin by revealing it to his congregation, but somehow can
never quite manage this. He is a typical diagnosis of a "wuss".
To some extent, Dimmesdale's story is one of a single man tempted into the
depths of the hormonal world. This world, however, is a place where the
society treats sexuality with ill grace. But his problem is enormously
complicated by the fact of Hester's marriage (fo ...
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