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Help With Book Reports Papers
Bram Stokers Dracula
... with the wave of his hand.
Harker escapes but the Count has devised an intricate plan to move to
London and exercise his evil forces on innocent people there. However, a
group of friends, including an open-minded but ingenious professor, a
psychologist, an American, a rich man, as well as Jon an Harker and his
wife Mina, learn of the Count's sinister plan and pledge to destroy him
before he can create an army of un-dead vampires. They systematically
destroy his coffins with holy wafers and chase him out of England back to
Castle Dracula. There they carry out an ultimate plan to destroy Dracula.
Th ...
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Gorbachev: Analysis Of Three Books About Gorbachev
... in 1985 is
Mikhail S. Gorbachev who became General Secretary of the Communist Party of the
Soviet Union Central Committee in March 1985. The three books that concentrate
on the "Gorbachev phenomenon" were all unfortunately written before perestroika
was finished, so they do not analyze the consequences that it had for the Soviet
Union as well as for the whole world . On the other hand, all three of these
books do a good job in explaining the changes that took place in the course of
the first three years after Gorbachev came to power and why were these changes
necessary.
The first book "Gorbachev" was written by Zh ...
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Beloved: Sethe And Her Daughter
... That character of Sethe, is presented as a former slave
woman who chooses to kill her baby girl rather than allowing her to be
exposed to the physical, emotional, and spiritual oppressive horrors of a
life spent in slavery. Sethe's action is indisputable: she has killed her
child. By killing her "Beloved" child, the question arises whether or not
Sethe acted out of true love or selfish pride? The fact that Sethe's act is
irrational can easily be decided upon. Does Sethe kill her baby girl
because she wants to save the baby from slavery or does Sethe end her
daughter's life because of a selfish refusal to reenter a li ...
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Machiavelli's The Prince
... called the Nine of the Militia, in which Machiavelli was chancellor. In 1512, fighting against Pisa, Machiavelli’s troops did not differentiate themselves from the Spanish and where defeated. He held office for fourteen years until the return of the Medici in 1512.
Continuing to follow political affairs, denied participation in them, Machiavelli began to write on paper his displeasure and advice he longed to give politicians. In November of 1512 his actions where restricted and a few months later Machiavelli was imprisoned and tortured, for suspect of conspiring against the new rulers, only later to be ac ...
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Attitudes Toward Marriage In Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales
... of the marriage between Christ and the Church (88). The
Canterbury Tales show many abuses of this sacred bond, as will be discussed
below.
For example, the Miller's Tale is a story of adultery in which a
lecherous clerk, a vain clerk and an old husband, whose outcome shows the
consequences of their abuses of marriage, including Nicholas' interest in
astrology and Absalon's refusal to accept offerings from the ladies, as well as
the behaviors of both with regards to Alison. Still, Alison does what she wants,
she takes Nicholas because she wants to, just as she ignores Absalon because she
wants to. Lines 3290-5 of t ...
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To Kill A Mocking Bird
... was lonely. She got him in trouble, which drove him to his death. In this example, life is definitely not fair because he never should have been accused of something he did not do. I could give several examples of smaller, less important situations that have the same theme as this story does “do not harm people who do not harm you.”
The setting of this book was in Maycomb, Alabama in the 1930’s. Scout, Jem and Dill spend the summer trying to get Boo Radley out of his house. None of them had ever seen him. Scout started to school and on his way there and back, he and Jem would find gifts in a hole in ...
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Cyrano De Bergerac
... figure of
speech. Cyrano actually crossed over enemy lines every day simply to mail love
letters. He also confessed to her, "My mother made it clear that she didn't find
me pleasant to look at. I had no sister. Later, I dreaded the thought of seeing
mockery in the eyes of a mistress. Thanks to you I've at least had a woman's
friendship, a gracious presence to soften the harsh loneliness of my life. "
When Cyrano admits, "My heart always timidly hides its self behind my mind," the
reader can instantly relate to this dilemma but it is the fact that Cyrano is
able to overcome it that makes him a hero.
Not only is Cyran ...
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The Inferno
... suffering. However, it is possible for the creative punishments to inflict both a mental and physical pain upon the sinner.
Several punishments that Dante envisions for the various sinners are borrowed from forms of torture. The first physical punishment Dante borrows from that is his punishment for the heretics. The penalty in the medieval era for heresy was often public humiliation or to burn to death. For Dante, to be a heretic was to follow one’s own opinion and not the beliefs of the Christian Church. Dante’s punishment for the “arch heretics and those who followed them” was that t ...
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The Maturity Of Scout And Jem In To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee
... is a monster and try to tease him. They try to play tricks on Boo. Later in the novel they are no longer afraid of him and are no longer interested in teasing him.
Another example of their maturity is how they view people. When Scout and Jem see how Tom Robinson is treated just because he is black, they begin to understand the meaning of prejudice. No one comes to help Tom Robinson except their father who defends him when Tom is accused of raping a white woman. Scout watches the trial and believes that he will be found innocent. Instead, Tom Robinson is found guilty. Her disappointment in the verdict makes Scout ques ...
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Race Relations With Huck Finn
... we have. These classes of society can really make people talk, and act differently towards some people. In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the novel shows these classes really well. In the beginning of the novel, we see a little bit of the black class, and how they were treated. “Miss. Watson’s big nigger, named Jim, was setting in the kitchen door, we could see him pretty clear” (14). Jim, Miss. Watson’s run away slave in the story, is part of the black class. We see the sub ordinance that blacks were placed in America, because blacks were not allowed to be in the house, because t ...
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