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John Jake's Homeland: A Review
... story rivets primary attention on Paul Crown, a young German immigrant.
Paul leaves behind a Germany of cholera, poverty, and political upheaval
only to face problems of equal magnitude in America.
Undaunted by a difficult ocean crossing, Paul arrives at Ellis
Island penniless but naively optimistic about his future. He makes his
weary way to the opulent home of his uncle, Joe Crown, a well-established
brewer in Chicago. Jakes uses the Chicago setting as a backdrop for his
"class struggle" motif which is central to the plot of his story.
Pual's uncle, Joe, and cousin, Joe Jr., are foils in this ...
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Critical Review Of 1984 By Geo
... that he wanted t tell of how
mind control and torture techniques could be used to make an individual or
an entire nation do what the government wanted.
In his novel Orwell used the image of a man who stood in a shadow that
covered his face. This was to make him anamous and unrecognizable. The
figure was called "Big Brother" and this figure was placed on posters and
put all over the place with the saying, "BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU." This
was used to let the people know that no matter where they go the could not
escape the watching eyes of the controling government.
The government itself was very mysterious a ...
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Beloved And Don Quixote: Similarities In Themes And Characters
... is a
precondition for surrendering the "constructed self." For Acker, the woman in
position on the abortion table over whom a team of doctors and nurses work
represents, in an ultimate sense, woman as a constructed object. The only hope
is somehow to take control, to subvert the constructed identity on order to name
oneself: "She had to name herself. When a doctor sticks a steel catheter into
you while you're lying on your back and you to; finally, blessedly, you let go
of your mind. Letting go of your mind is dying. She needed a new life. She
had to be named" (Don Quixote 9-10). And she must name herself ...
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Wuthering Heights: Summary
... a typical Earnshaw, having dark hair, and dark eyes.
While her daughter's characteristics are the exact opposite. Cathy has blonde
hair, fair skin, and irrestibly brilliant eyes.
Catherine and Cathy is emotional aspects also contrast a great deal. Young
Cathy's emotions are calm, while her mother's rage, and are as unpredictable as
a storm. Catherine's emotions are so passionate that she is unable to control
them. To the point of causing her own death. Before she dies, she says that
she wants both Heathcliff and Edgar to suffer-Edgar, because he never understood
heraffection for Heathcliff; and Heathcliff, be ...
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Summary Of Lord Of The Flies
... and Piggy.
Ralph finds a conch (a shell shaped in such a way that when blown it will
sound) and blows it, summoning the rest of the boys, who were on the
aeroplane and survived the crash. Last to arrive are the choir, who are
described as a "black catterpillar moving along the beach."
On closer examination is is found that there is a wide variance in the age
of the boys, from about 6 to 12 years of age. From here on in the book the
younger boys are simply referred to as the "littluns" and the older boys as
"bigguns" although the younger children are referred to more collectively
in the story. Ralph is elected c ...
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Uncle Toms Cabin
... became jealous and demoted George from his factory job to doing hard labor on the plantation. This story takes place throughout the states of Kentucky and Mississippi.
Because his Kentucky plantation was overwhelmed by debt, George Shelby, Sr. makes plans to trade some slaves to a slave dealer named Haley in exchange for debts being canceled. The dealer selects Uncle Tom as payment for the debt. While the two are discussing the possible transaction, Eliza's son, Harry, comes rushing into the room. Haley decides he wants to take Harry also, but Shelby refuses to part with the child. Eliza, overhearing part of th ...
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A Summary Of The Plot Of The Iliad
... him. She, in turn, begs Zeus to avenge Achilles by turning the tide of the war against the Achaeans. After some hesitation Zeus grants her prayer. His wife Hera is furious and argues vehemently with him. Hephaestus, their son, restores harmony between them.
Book II: Zeus sends a dream to Agamemnon to persuade him to lead his army into battle to make him aware of his need of Achilles and his troops. Agamemnon, while hoping to be able to take Troy without Achilles' help, is conscious of the low morale of his army resulting from the plague and from Achilles' defection. He therefore resorts to a stratagem of revers ...
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With And Without The State In
... above them. Christ Stopped at Eboli, by Carlo Levi, exemplifies an age-old repression of
a people without hope because of an outside world that suppresses them.
This eyewitness account demonstrates how the outside world does not
provide resolutions their desolate existence and to help alleviate the conditions of daily life.
The distance between the state, the outer world and the people,
the inner world, creates an ignorance that the state refuses to attend. It
is widely known the two factors for the makeup of a civilization lies in
the people and the state or the state and its people. Witho ...
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The Killer Angels (Gettysburg)
... a group of prisoners why they were fighting. They gave no answer, but asked him the same question. Sergeant Chamberlain answered, “To free the slaves, of course.” The South, however, was against freeing the slaves. The entire Civil War, whether the people were for or against the idea, was about freedom. The Killer Angels was informative, very fascinating and I liked it. I liked the book because I learned many things from it. I’d never thought much about the importance of the Battle of Gettysburg until I read The Killer Angels. From this book I learned many things. I learned that the Battle of Gettysburg was th ...
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Analysis Of The Red Scare
... decades later in history when Senator Joeseph R. Macarthy accused high government officials and high standing military officers of being communist. Undoubtedly the most important topic of an investigation into a historical occurrence is its inception. What caused the Red Scare?
At the heart of the Red Scare was the conscription law of May 18, 1917, which was put in place during World War I for the armed forces to be able to conscript more Americans. This law caused many problems for the conscientious objector to WWI, because for one to claim that status, one had to be a member of a "well-recognized" r ...
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