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Help With Book Reports Papers
Comparison Of Book And Movie "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest"
... to the mood and understanding of the story. In the movie,
Bromden is nothing more than a crazy Indian who doesn't want to talk so
pretends to be deaf and dumb. Much of the understanding and respect is
lost in the transition between book and movie. In the book, Bromden has
flashbacks to his childhood, lighting on significant points in his
childhood. His background is never even brushed upon in the movie. Of
course it would have been nearly impossible to tell of Bromdens life in a
movie, much less show the world from his point of view as in the book.
Bromden is still a very interesting character but ...
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Song Of Solomon 2
... to an insurance agent by the name of Robert Smith. We shortly thereafter learn that he will "fly" form the top of Mercy Hospital. On the Wednesday of his flight a group of fifty people gather around the building to witness this event. While waiting for his "flight" or jump a woman in a contralto voice begins to sing the words "O Sugarman done fly away/ Sugarman done gone/ Sugarman cut across the sky/ Sugarman gone home…"(6) This lady simply describes Robert Smith’s flight "home" which we later learn is really him committing suicide. Much later on in the book Milkman is listening to a group of ...
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"The Doll's House" Essay
... ornamented house, Kezia, the youngest of the
girls, takes an interest in the rather simple lamp. In fact, "what she
liked more than anything, what she liked frightfully, was the lamp." This
infatuation symbolizes her impeccability in comparison to the others as she
is drawn to the unadorned lamp. Kezia proceeds to find fault with the state
and proportions of the doll's house and perfection with the lamp in its
simplicity. As others take interests in the gaudy nature of the house,
Kezia rebels: "But the lamp was perfect. It seemed to smile at Kezia, to
say `I live here.' The lamp was so real."
Conflict inten ...
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The Flamboyant Hester Prynne
... politically uncommitted characters in pre-civil war history. Reynolds went on to say, His [Hawthorne's] career illustrates the success of an especially responsive author in gathering together disparate female types and recombining them artistically so that they become crucial elements of the rhetorical and artistic construct of his fiction (Reynolds 179). Hawthorne used ironies of fallen women and female criminals to achieve the perfect combination of different types of heroines. His heroines are equipped to expel wrongs against their sex bringing about an awareness of both the rights and wrongs of women. Hester is ...
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Of Mice And Men: The Feeling Only The Lonely Could Feel
... their group because of the racism
that existed in society in that particular time period. Crooks is not
allowed to be close friends with anyone or participate in the fun stuff
other Ranch workers are able to enjoy. These things combined with others
cause Crooks to feel inferior and lonely. He feels as though there is no
one on the Ranch he can be friends with. Crooks is one of the loneliest
people on the ranch and the saddest because he is unable to do things
normal people could do because of his color.
Candy was a character who felt the despair of loneliness when he
was forced to have his best and only friend ...
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The Catcher In The Rye
... He was further disappointed when she tries to rob him for his money even though he tries to be nice to her.
He also has a date with an old girlfriend, and asks her to flee from this corrupt world and live in the woods with him. She doesn't share the same opinion.
Holden meets some more people, but non of them can solve his problems. He feels more depressed and lonely. He walks around in the rain soaking wet, he is sure he is going to catch pneumonia. But before he leaves this world he wants to visit his little sister, Phoebe, to say good bye. He admires her a lot and they communicate very well.
Holden reali ...
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A Worn Path: A Tale Of Unstoppable Love
... morning" in
December. Phoenix Jackson is "very old and small ", and walks like the
"pendulum in a grandfather clock" ever so carefully with her "thin, small
cane made from an umbrella."
The description of Phoenix Jackson at the beginning of this story
gives the reader a glimpse of how difficult this trip is going to be for an
elderly woman such as her. The description "Her eyes were blue with age.
Her skin has a pattern all its own of numberless branching wrinkles" are
indications of Phoenix Jackson's old age. She supports herself with a cane,
striving not to fall with every step she takes. She wears a "dress reac ...
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King Lear 3
... King Lear's punishment could be seen as a simple problem that was blown totally out of proportion in many ways. This tragedy went totally against Socrates' beliefs, which were, "If we conduct our lives reasonably and morally, we shall live a good life." This story shows that is really does not matter how good or evil you are throughout your life, there will always be things that occur that are never under your control whether they are negative or positive. King Lear's decision was never foreshadowed to have a negative affect on his family or his kingdom. Who would ever think that Lear would end up standing a ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Hypocrisy Is A Sin
... story around. The
underlying sin that Hawthorne deals with in The Scarlet Letter is
hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is the practice of professing beliefs, feelings, or
virtues that one does not hold or possess. All three main characters,
Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth, commit the sin of hypocrisy.
Hawthorne shows that hypocrisy is indeed a sin by punishing the offenders.
Hester Prynne is a strong, independent woman who deals with her sin of
adultery very well. Instead of running away from it, she lives with it and
accepts her punishment. However, while succumbing to the will of the court,
she does not for an instan ...
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Beloved-water Motif
... would be brought back into slavery, Sethe killed her older daughter and attempted to kill Denver and her boys. Sethe, along with Denver, was sent to prison and spent three months there. Buglar and Howard, her two sons, eventually ran away. After about eighteen years, another ex-slave from Sweet Home, Paul D., came to live with Sethe and Denver. A few days later, while coming home from a carnival, Sethe, Paul D., and Denver found a young woman of about twenty on their porch. She claimed her name is Beloved. They took her in and she lived with them. Throughout the novel, Morrison uses many symbols and imagery t ...
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