Literature Essays
Posted: February 12th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Symbolism | Comments Off
The Lord of the Flies is an allegorical novel that deals with the conflict between two competing human impulses. The first impulse is to live peacefully and to follow a moral code. The other impulse, is the rule of the mob, more violent, seeking instant gratification at the expense of the others. In other words, [...]
Posted: December 12th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: John Proctor, The Crucible, Witch Trials, Witchcraft | Comments Off
Death over life- a decision that would no one in their right mind would choose to take. Today, there would be so many other options to take- reasons to live, and that the choice of death would seem almost a sin. On the other hand, if were to take a trip back in time to [...]
Posted: November 22nd, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Poetry | Tags: 18th Century, Analyticial | Comments Off
The differences between eighteenth-century literature and romantic poems, with respect to history is constituted here. This is seen through the influential works of John Keats and Alexander Pope. These works are acknowledged as, “The Rape of Lock” and “The Eve of St. Agnes.” Alexander Pope takes his readers on a hatred filled epic.
A robust piece [...]
Posted: October 19th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Salvation, Violence | Comments Off
Violence is used by Flannery O’Connor to return characters to reality and prepare them to accept their moment of grace. The New Encyclopedia Britannica defines grace as the “spontaneous, unmerited gift of the divine or the divine influence operating in man for his regeneration and sanctification” (401). At any cost, a soul must find salvation. [...]
Posted: October 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Tennessee Williams | Comments Off
The Glass Menagerie is a play that is very important to modern literature. Tennessee Williams describes four separate characters, their dreams, and the harsh realities they faced in the modern world. His setting is in St. Louis during the Depression-Era. The story is about a loving family that is constantly in conflict. To convey his [...]
Posted: October 11th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Marriage | Tags: Comedy, Oscar Wilde, Social Class, The Importance of Being Earnest | Comments Off
While some critics contend that The Importance of Being Earnest is completely fanciful and has no relation to the real world, others maintain that Oscar Wilde’s “trivial comedy for serious people” does make significant comments about social class and the institution of marriage. These observations include the prevalent utilization of deceit in everyday affairs. Indeed [...]
Posted: August 20th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Greek Mythology, Literature, War | Tags: Archilles, Heroism, The Iliad, Trojan War, Troy | Comments Off
Throughout The Iliad, the heroic characters make decisions based on a definite set of principles, which are referred to as the “code of honor.” The heroic code that Homer presents to the reader is an underlying cause for many of the events that take place, but many of the characters have different perceptions of how [...]
Posted: August 20th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Poetry | Comments Off
The main theme of Snowbound is that no-matter what happens, family will be there to help and comfort. This theme is demonstrated widely throughout the poem and even more so in the last stanza of this excerpt. Another, less prominent, theme of Snowbound is the meaning and involvement of God in the lives of people.
The [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Uncategorized | Tags: A Rose for Emily, Southern, William Faulkner | Comments Off
In William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily,” Faulkner’s details about setting and atmosphere give the reader background as to the values and beliefs of the characters, helping the reader to understand the motivations, actions and reactions of Miss Emily and the rest of the town, and changing the mood or tone in the story.
The setting [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Romance | Comments Off
Romanticism is an artistic and intellectual movement originating in Europe in the late 18th century and is characterized by a heightened interest in nature, emphasis on an individual’s expression of emotion and imagination, a departure from the attitudes and forms of classicism, and rebellion against established social rules and conventions.
Romantic writers usually involve one or [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, The Old Man and the Sea | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway | Comments Off
I decided to read this book for two reasons. My friends have read this book in the past and said it wasn’t too bad. Second, it is one heck of a short book. I finished this book in 2 days. As the sample book report says, this book is only 27,000 words long. The book [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: John Steinbeck, Lonliness, Of Mice and Men | Comments Off
The story Of Mice and Men is one of the most well known novels throughout the world. This very popular book is a favorite of many people. So many people can remember the name Lennie. I will explain some of the important factors as well as details in this story.
One of the more memorable characters [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Plays, Sophocles | Tags: Free Will, Oedipus Rex, Oedipus the King | Comments Off
Oedipus the King is widely regarded as a tragedy of fate. Briefly stated, it begins with a terrible plague that destroys the city. King Oedipus sends a messenger to the oracle at Delphi to find a cure. The answer that is received suggests to find out who the killer of King Laios was. Oedipus sends [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Brutus, julius caesar character analysis | Comments Off
William Shakespeare’s play, The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, is mainly based on the assassination of Julius Caesar. The character who was in charge of the assassination was, ironically, Marcus Brutus, a servant and close friend to Julius Caesar. But what would cause a person to kill a close friend? After examining Brutus’ relationship to Caesar, [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Anti War, Hypocrisy, The Long March, William Styron | Comments Off
The novel The Long March by William Styron is a prime example of anti-war, anti-goverment, and anti-military writing. William Styron uses marine reserves, that are forced to make a 36 mile march that they are not prepared for, to show the brutality and hypocrisy in the leaders of this country. The reserves are people that [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Poetry | Tags: Live Oak With Moss, Walt Whitman | Comments Off
Walt Whitman’s Live Oak, With Moss , is an intricate portrayal of love, both physical and mental. Throughout the poem, Whitman incorporates an array of metaphors symbolic of love and the many characteristics associated with love. Dissimilar to mainstream poetry, Whitman introduces a friend-lover relationship between two men, describing the pain and happiness associated with [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Evolution, Literature | Tags: Galapagos Islands, Kurt Vonnegut, Natural Selection, Survival | Comments Off
James Wait’s Rebirth from an Iron Age in Galapagos
In Galapagos by Kurt Vonnegut, James Wait shows his rebirth by leaving his “Iron Age” and entering into his new “Golden Age.” Galapagos portrays a group of people who travel to an island on a boat to unknowingly escape a virus that wipes out all of man [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Poetry | Tags: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner | Comments Off
Coleridge’s poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is wrote in a way that the reader is expected to temporarily allow him or herself to believe it to be able to understand it. The poem itself is about a Mariner who is telling his tale of sin and forgiveness by God to a man referred [...]
Posted: August 18th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Censorship, George Orwell, Nationalism, Nineteen Eighty-Four | Comments Off
The novel 1984, by George Orwell, has many examples of irony throughout it. The two major types of irony: verbal irony and situation irony, are demonstrated again and again in this novel. In the following essay I will discuss these types of ironies and give examples of each from the book.
The first type of irony [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Loss of Innocence, William Golding | Comments Off
Like many excellent works, William Golding’s novel, The Lord of the Flies can be read on many different levels. It is possible to read the book literally, as a mere story about boys marooned on an island. It is also possible to read the book as an indictment of the nature of man – as [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: French Revolution, Literature | Tags: A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens, London, Paris, Social Inequality, Social Injustice | Comments Off
Charles Dickens is an influential writer in his time. Charles Dickens is born on February 7, 1812 in England. Many of the books he writes are classics. One of the his classics is A Tale of Two Cities. A Tale of Two Cities is about a group of people who get stuck in France at [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Macbeth, Plays, Women | Tags: Betrayal, Lady Macbeth, Tragedy, Women | Comments Off
William Shakespeare’s, Macbeth, is a play full of betrayal and deception. It is a story about Macbeth’s desires to achieve greatness and become king. Despite his involvement in actually committing the treasonous acts, he cannot be held accountable. However, if it were not for the deeds of a woman at one time or another, Macbeth [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Good vs Evil, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown | Comments Off
Most criticism and reflection of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Young Goodman Brown centers on a good versus evil theme. Critics also debate interpretations of the main character’s consciousness; is Brown awake or dreaming. What is certain is that he lives and dies in pain because his belief in his righteousness isolates him from his community. It is [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown | Comments Off
Nathaniel Hawthorne, in his short story, “Young Goodman Brown”, generates a relationship in direct contrast with that of a true romance among the roles of Faith and Young Goodman Brown. Whereas, a true romance is the ideal romance, exhibiting virtuous aspects such as trust, as well as a burning passion and an undying love for [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Emily Bronte, Gothic, Love, Romance, Romantic, Wuthering Heights | Comments Off
Wuthering Heights is a twisted love saga, almost a carbon copy of every other book we have read this year and last. Heathcliff, adopted as a child, was loved by his “father” and scorned by his “siblings.” He plots a way to get them back in the most personal way. Not the hip flask, drunkard, [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: 1984, George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four | Comments Off
In the repressive society of Oceania in 1984, Winston Smith lived a restricted life in which all activities were aimed towards the good of the Party. Political and intellectual freedom were completely non-existent. With no laws separating right from wrong, the whole population lived in fear, which resulted in easy control by the government. People [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Anne of Green Gables, Lucy Maud Montgomery | Comments Off
Narcissism can be seen throughout the book Anne of Green Gables. Narcissism has been defined by the Oxford Paperback Dictionary as “abnormal self-love or self admiration”. Narcissism is also synonymous with vanity, conceit, egotism, self-importance and arrogance. The narcissistic tendencies in Anne seem to change throughout the book and are often displayed through her imagination.
When [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Women | Tags: Charlotte Bronte, Feminism, Jane Eyre, Social Class, Victorian Era, Women, Women in Society | Comments Off
Feminism has been a prominent and controversial topic in writings for the past two centuries. With novels such as Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, or even William Shakespeare’s Macbeth the fascination over this subject by authors is evident. In Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre the main character, Jane Eyre, explores the depth at which women may [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: F.Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby | Comments Off
A dream is defined in the Webster’s New World Dictionary as: a fanciful vision of the conscious mind; a fond hope or aspiration; anything so lovely, transitory, etc. as to seem dreamlike. In the beginning pages of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway, the narrator of the story gives us a glimpse [...]
Posted: August 17th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: David Guterson, Love, Snow Faling on Cedars | Comments Off
Dear Ishmael,
…I don’t love you, Ishmael. I can think of no more honest way to say it. From the very beginning, when we were little children, it seemed to me something was wrong. Whenever we were together I knew it. I felt it inside of me. I loved you and I didn’t love you at [...]
Posted: June 20th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Greek Mythology, Literature, Sophocles | Tags: Antigone, Tragedy | Comments Off
The personalities of the two sisters; Antigone and Ismene, are different from one another as tempered steel is from a ball of cotton. One is hard and resistant; the other: pliable, absorbing and soft. Antigone would have been a strong, successful 90’s type woman with her liberated and strong attitude towards her femininity, while Ismene [...]
Posted: May 22nd, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Justice, Literature | Tags: Alexandre Dumas, Love, Revenge, Romance, Romantic, The Count of Monte Cristo | Comments Off
The Count of Monte Cristo is a romantic novel set in the nineteenth century. The characters are set in conventional forms Alexandre Dumas borrowed from society. Courageous, avaricious, kind, loyal, selfish, or treacherous each personality embodies a common stereotype. M. Morrel, a merchant and ship owner, represent the good hearted benefactor. M. Danglars, employee of [...]
Posted: May 6th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Islam, Literature | Tags: Saudi Arabia, The Road to Makkah | Comments Off
In The Road to Makkah, the reader is initially confronted with a protagonist who is on a journey through the deserts of Saudi Arabia. However, as one continues to read the book, the reader is aware that there are actually two parallel journeys going on: the journey through the deserts of Saudi Arabia, and also [...]
Posted: November 13th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Sophocles | Tags: Anger, Antigone, Desire, Emotions | Comments Off
Most emotions within the human mind need a spark to be ignited, to be felt and astonished, and the root of these emotions are sensitive to the touch. This could be a certain smell that sends one back years, or a taste to remind them of their bygone days, but it is well known that [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: John Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men | Comments Off
Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, is a story which shows how weak the human trait of loyalty can be if put through the test of time. It shows how people can turn on their family, best friend, and even their life-long companions if they are presented with the opportunity for advancement in life. [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: John Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men | Comments Off
“A guy goes nuts if he aint got nobody. Don’t matter no difference who the guy is, long’s he’s with you. I tell ya a guy gets too lonely an’ he gets sick.” A major theme in Steinbeck’s novell Of Mice and Men is loneliness. The characters Crooks, Candy and Curley’s wife each suffer from [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Plays | Tags: Colonialism, Death and the King's Horsemen, Nigeria, Wole Soyinka | Comments Off
In his play, Death and the King’s Horseman, Wole Soyinka would have us examine every clash and conflict, save for the one involving culture. Certainly this may seem the most obvious part of the play, but we would do the general understanding of Death a disservice if we ignored one of the central conflicts in [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The figures of Winesburg, Ohio usually personify a condition of psychic deformity which is the consequence of some crucial failure in their lives. Misogyny, inarticulateness, frigidity, God-infatuation, homosexuality, drunkenness—these are symptoms of their recoil from the regularities of human intercourse and sometimes of their substitute gratifications in inanimate objects, as with the unloved Alice Hindman [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Pidgin English | Comments Off
Pages 3-82
In the beginning, Lovey and her best friend, Jerry, are watching the Shirley Temple movie before they go to church. They never get to see the end because they have to go and leave. They make up the endings and cry in the middle of the pastor’s sermon. On Lovey’s birthday, Jerry would make [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Clyde Edgerton | Comments Off
Mattie Rigsbee is the main character in Clyde Edgerton’s southern style novel, Walking Across Egypt. Mattie is a seventy-eight year old widow with two middle-aged children. Living alone in a small house, she makes sure that everything is taken care of. She cooks, cleans, mows the lawn, and takes up numerous responsibilities with the church. [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Christianity, Literature | Tags: Slavery | Comments Off
Harriet Beecher Stowe was born June 14, 1811 in Litchfield, Connecticut. She was the daughter of a Calvinist minister and she and her family was all devout Christians, her father being a preacher and her siblings following. Her Christian attitude much reflected her attitude towards slavery. She was for abolishing it, because it was, to [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
African- American folklore is arguably the basis for most African- American literature. In a country where as late as the 1860’s there were laws prohibiting the teaching of slaves, it was necessary for the oral tradition to carry the values the group considered significant. Transition by the word of mouth took the place of pamphlets, [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | Comments Off
Tom Sawyer is a boy who is full of adventures. In his world there is an adventure around every corner. Some of his adventures have lead him into some bad situations but with his good heart and bright mind he has gotten out of them. Tom lives with his aunt Polly, his cousin Mary and [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, To Kill A Mockingbird | Tags: Harper Lee | Comments Off
In Harper Lee’s book, To Kill A Mockingbird, there are many examples of racism. During this time in history racism was acceptable. Racism is a key theme in her book.
Not only those who were black, but also those who affiliated with blacks, were considered inferior. Atticus, a lawyer, who defended blacks in court, was mocked. [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, To Kill A Mockingbird | Tags: Harper Lee | Comments Off
Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is a highly regarded work of American fiction. The story of the novel teaches us many lessons that should last any reader for a lifetime. The messages that Harper Lee relays to the reader are exemplified throughout the book using various methods. One of the most important and significant [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, To Kill A Mockingbird | Tags: Harper Lee | Comments Off
Who is the most guilty? Review the involvement’s of the characters in the novel and evaluate weather or not they were guilty, and if so how guilty?
In the classic novel ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’ by Harper Lee there is an abundance of characters that could be proclaimed to be the guilty party, but who is [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, To Kill A Mockingbird | Tags: Harper Lee | Comments Off
Scout’s relationships with the adults she’s sorrounded by all differ in different ways. Whether those relationships are positive or negative, depends on how long Scout has known them, what kind of people those adults are, and their background.
Beside her father, the adult that Scout probably respects and likes the most is Miss Maudie. The two [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, People | Tags: Harper Lee, Southern, To Kill A Mockingbird | Comments Off
Early Life
Born in Monroeville, Alabama, on April 28, 1926, Nelle Harper Lee is the youngest of three children of Amassa Coleman Lee and Francis Lee. Before his death, Miss Lee’s father and her older sister, Alice, practiced law together in Monroeville. When one considers the theme of honor that runs throughout Miss Lee’s novel, it [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, To Kill A Mockingbird | Tags: Harper Lee | Comments Off
To Kill A Mocking Bird deals with many primal and basic lessons in human nature. The book exposes many issues that affect most people throughout their lives. Scout, the main character was one of the most affected by these lessons. During the book she was exposed to many profound experiences, which no doubt will leave [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Beowulf | Comments Off
The Anglo-Saxons were the members of the Germanic peoples who invaded England, and were there at the time of the Norman Conquest. They were people of their own time, language and culture. In the Anglo-Saxon adventure filled tale of Beowulf, the heron Beowulf was, at the time, considered the modern day superman. His character exemplifies [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Zora Neale Hurston’s “Their Eyes Were Watching God” Research Paper “I am Me, My Eyes Toward God” Mark Evans Zora Neale Hurston an early twentieth century Afro-American feminist author, was raised in a predominately black community which gave her an unique perspective on race relations, evident in her novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God. Hurston [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Most people are skeptical about psychics and psychic powers. In the book The Vision by Dean Koontz, there arises a real convincing psychic Mary, who has visions of murders that are yet to happen. But, a new twist to the story causes Mary to see a different kind of vision. Murders more gruesome than ever. [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: H.G. Wells, The Time Machine | Comments Off
Let me start off this essay by saying that I believe H.G.(Herbert George) Wells is one of the most intelligent writers of his time: a true futurist. Obviously, I read The Time Machine by H.G. Wells and I would like to say that it was extremely well written and sounds as though it was written [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Sisyphus was given a punishment by the gods, to push a rock up a hill, only to have it fall down on him again. Mersault is a person accused of murder who has spent over a year in jail. What both these characters have come to realize is that they are forced to live in [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
In The Stranger, Albert Camus portrays Meursault, the book’s narrator and main character, as aloof, detached, and unemotional. He does not think much about events or their consequences, nor does he express much feeling in relationships or during emotional times. He displays an impassiveness throughout the book in his reactions to the people and events [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
It all began in the cold month of January, 1840, in New Orleans. Fog laid a heavy blanket on the streets and alleyways of the city. Rain steadily engulfed the seaside locality, and the sound of drunken riverboat men and the slaves celebrating their festivities surrounded the area. New Orleans was where Jessie Bollier lived, [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Machiavelli’s views have been misinterpreted since his book was first written, people take him in the wrong way, and are offended by what he says. Careless readers take him in a completely wrong way, such as they think that he believes that the end justifies the means, that a leader should lie to the people, [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Niccolo Machiavelli’s The Prince examines the nature of power and his views of power are still somewhat in existence today. I’ll discuss this in this essay, emphasizing the following theses. Machiavelli discusses power over the people, dictatorial power, and power with people, shared power. While it is possible for power with to attain greater prevalence [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The novel that I chose to do this report on was, “The Plague”, by Albert Camus. It is about a plague that hit the European countries in the middle ages. I chose to describe the literary term of parallelism. Here are some following facts about the story’s plot that involve parallelism through the novel.
The novel [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde is the story of moral corruption by the means of aestheticism. In the novel, the well meaning artist Basil Hallward presets young Dorian Gray with a portrait of himself. After conversing with cynical Lord Henry Wotton, Dorian makes a wish which dreadfully affects his life forever. “If [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Introduction
In this book analysis, about the book “The Outsiders” by S. E. Hinton
I will discuss character and plot development, as well as the setting, the author’s style and my opinions about the book. In this part of the analysis I will give some information about the subjects of the book, and about the author.
The author [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
“He was only a man who had meant well, who had been spurred along the course of thinking by an eccentric necromancer with a weakness for humanity. Justice had been his last attempt-to do nothing which was not just. But it had ended in failure” (White, OAFK 634). The “he” in this passage refers to [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The Member of the Wedding by Carson McCullers is the story of an adolescent girl who triumphs over loneliness and gains maturity through an identity that she creates for herself in her mind. It is with this guise that twelve year old Frankie Addams begins to feel confident about herself and life. The author seems [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The main characters in this story are Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy. During a war in London they were sent to a professor’s house outside London. Lucy, while exploring with her brothers and sister, found a secret passage through the wardrobe to Naria,a secret world. In Naria there are other characters. One of them is [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Most people think of the Civil War as a military battle between the North and South. Without studying the subject, they do not appreciate the facts that make up this historical event. When one reads the novel, The Killer Angels, the reader will have a much better perception and understanding of what actually happened during [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Setting:
The setting g takes place in two major places. Reston Maryland which is a suburb of Washington DC. and the second major area is in Kenya Africa. The story takes place in the 1980’s.
Main Characters:
Since this story is a true story there is no one character that is a main character. The author does not [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: F.Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby | Comments Off
The Hidden Story in Green and White
Color symbolism is really popular in novels written during the 1920’s. One such example is Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby. There is much color symbolism in this novel, but there are two main colors that stand out more than the others. The colors green and white influence the [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: F.Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby | Comments Off
Summary
At the onset of this book, the reader is introduced to the narrator, Nick Carraway, who relates the past happenings that construct the story of Jay Gatsby and Nick during the summer of 1922. After fighting in World War I, or the Great War as Nick called it, Nick left his prominent family in the [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: F.Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby | Comments Off
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby” is rich in symbolism, which is portrayed on several different levels in a variety of ways. One of the most important qualities of symbolism within this novel, is the way in which it is so fully integrated into the plot and structure. Some of the symbols are used mostly [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck | Comments Off
The Grapes of Wrath is a novel by John Steinbeck that exposes the desperate conditions under which the migratory farm families of America during the 1930’s live under. The novel tells of one families migration west to California through the great economic depression of the 1930’s. The Joad family had to abandon their home and [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck | Comments Off
The Grapes of Wrath is an eye-opening novel which deals with the struggle for survival of a migrant family of farmers in the western United States. The book opens with a narrative chapter describing Oklahoma, and the overall setting. It sets the mood of an area which has been ravished by harsh weather. “The sun [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The Good Earth, by Pearl S. Buck, is a tale of a farmer who rises from a commoner to a wealthy land owner. The setting is pre-Revolutionary China, sometime in the 20th century. The story is one of a farmer who becomes a wealthy man through hard work while facing droughts and floods. He becomes [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
In the short story, “The Fall of the House of Usher,” by Edgar Allen Poe, setting is used extensively to do many things. The author uses it to convey ideas, effects, and images. It establishes a mood and foreshadows future events. Poe communicates truths about the character through setting. Symbols are also used throughout to [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The play “The Devil and Daniel Webster” was written by Stephen Vincent Benét in 1938. Stephen Vincent Benét was born in 1898 in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. His education came from Yale University and the Sorbonne in Paris, France. “The Devil and Daniel Webster” has a wide array of characters, each with a distinguished personality, yet an [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Arthur Miller, The Crucible | Comments Off
Can a person’s opinion equal their fate? In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, John Proctor’s stand in a society where opinion drove fate created ignominy towards him and his beliefs. First he hid his horrible sin inside, fearing the consequences. When he finally did, he was placed in a tangled labyrinth of feelings as to what [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Alexandre Dumas, The Count of Monte Cristo | Comments Off
Theme:
The Count of Monte Cristo is a very powerful book. So powerful in fact, that was controversial when it was first released. The Catholic church in France condemned it because of its powerful message it presented the reader. This theme was one of revenge and vengeance. Monte Cristo had two goals- to reward those who [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The Conflict Between the Individual and the State and the Grammatical Fiction in Darkness At Noon
“The Party denied the free will of an individual-and at the same time exacted his willing self-sacrifice.” The obvious contradiction of the above definition of the Communist party is depicts the conflict between the individual and the State in Arthur [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Alice Walker, The Color Purple | Comments Off
The main theme this essay will be focusing on is the distinction between the “real” outcome of economic achievement as described in The Color Purple by the lynching of Celie’s father, and its “alternative” economic view presented at the end of the novel depicting Celie’s happiness and entrepreneurial success. We will attempt the task at [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Alice Walker, The Color Purple | Comments Off
Rape, incest, sex , forced labor, and a little reefer on the side. These are all of the components of a Novel by Alice Walker. All of these views are illustrated proficiently in Alice Walkers third novel, The Color Purple. Each one of these aspects had a lasting impression upon the ideals and notions of [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: John grisham, The Client | Comments Off
The Client by John Grisham takes place in Memphis, Tennessee. It starts out with a little boy, named Mark and his brother sneaking into the woods to try and smoke cigarettes. While in the woods, they witness a man kill himself. But before he does so, this man tells Mark some very important secrets, which [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: John grisham, The Client | Comments Off
1) The main character of my book was Mark Sway.
2) Mark Sway is a bad little eleven year old boy with a huge burden on his hands. Mark smokes ciggaretes, uses foul language, and picks on his little brother, Ricky. Mark grew up in a trailer, with an abusive father, a mother who is hardly [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The Caucasian Chalk Circle by Brecht uses epic theatre to bring forth an idea or meaning for the audience to consider while entertaining the audience. Epic theatre involves the use of alienation techniques to distance the viewer from the story but still concentrate on the overall meaning. The person who just views the story would [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
People’s lives are shaped through their success and failure in their personal relationships with each other. The author Sylvia Plath demonstrates this in the novel, The Bell Jar. This is the direct result of the loss of support from a loved one, the lack of support and encouragement, and lack of self confidence and insecurity [...]
Posted: November 1st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Kate Chopin, The Awakening | Comments Off
Kate Chopin’s The Awakening is a work of fiction that tells the story of Edna Pontellier, Southern wife and mother. This book presents the reader with many tough questions and few answers. It is not hard to imagine why this book was banished for decades not long after its initial publication in 1899. At that [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
I was on my way to work, when I started to read this interesting story and I don’t deny that I was a little sceptical in the beginning. But the more I read, the more I wanted to know about this man and his unique ways to define Science. I finished reading it in about [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Tess of The D'Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy | Comments Off
The belief that the order of things is already decided and that people’s lives are determined by this “greater power” is called fate. Many people, called fatalists, believe in this and that they have no power in determining their futures. Despite this, many others believe that coincidence is the only explanation for the way their [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
“Sula” by Tony Morrison is the story of a friendship between Nel Wright and Sula Peace, who are opposites in the way of relating to other people, to the world around them, and to themselves. Nel is rational and balanced; she gets married and gives in to conformity and the town’s expectations. Sula is an [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
In Ray Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes, it is suggested among several other themes in the novel that “Perfect Love casts out all fear.” This quote taken from the Gospel of John illustrates the point that where there is unconditional love, and one loves and is loved in return, there is no fear. This [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
In the fourteenth century, chivalry was in decline due to drastic social and economic changes. Although feudalism-along with chivalry-would eventually fall for other reasons, including a decrease in cheap human resources due to a drop in population caused by plague epidemics and the emergence of a mercantile middle class, the Gawain author perceived a loss [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
This essay is on setting differences using the works of Dante’s The Inferno and Jean Paul Sartre’s No Exit.
Adam looks about spotting all the important people that will influence the rest of his life. He takes a deep breath and prepares to make this his last and final addition to life. Quietly he draws back [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility | Comments Off
Book Report – Sense and Sensibility
1.) In Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility, the title is a metaphor for the two main characters Elinor and Marianne. Elinor represents sense and Marianne represents sensibility.
We find out early that Elinor does not share her feelings. When Edward comes into the story, there was an immediate attraction. She tells [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility | Comments Off
In Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility the title is a metaphor for the two main characters. Marianne who represents Sensibility, and Elinor who represents Sense.
We find out early on that Elinor does not share her feelings. When Edward comes into the story there is an immediate attraction. Elinor tells no one of her feelings. It [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
The characters in Gullivers Travels and Robinson Crusoe are portrayed as resembling trained soldiers, being capable of clear thought during tense and troubled times. This quality possessed within Robinson Crusoe and Gulliver is a result of the author’s background and knowledge. Daniel Defoe was knowledgeable and proficient in seamanship, he understood the workings of a [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Stephen Crane, The Red Badge of Courage | Comments Off
Stephen Crane’s literary technique has long been a matter of great interest, analysis, and speculation. In The Red Badge of Courage Crane takes us into the life of a young man named Henry Fleming, who wants to enlist in the United States Army and fight in the war against the South. By using irony, similes, [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice | Comments Off
On pride and prejudice, which in your opinion comes in for sharper criticism from Austen. Support your answer by referring to specific incidents and episodes.
pride n., v., 1. high (or too high) opinion of one’s own dignity, importance, worth, etc. 2. the condition or feeling of being proud. 3. a noble sense of what is [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Justice, Literature | Tags: Injustice, Plato, Socrates | Comments Off
In The Republic, Plato attempts to demonstrate through the character and discourse of Socrates that justice is better than justice is the good which men must strive for, regardless of whether they could be unjust and still be rewarded. His method is to use dialectic, the asking and answering of questions which led the hearer [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: John Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men | Comments Off
Many of you may think it was easy enough for George to pick up that Luger and shoot this man, Lennie, right in the back of the head. This, however, is not so. The internal conflict that George must have faced was no doubt greater than anything you can imagine. George, an angel of mercy [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Sophocles | Tags: Oedipus the King | Comments Off
The events in Oedipus the King, written by Sophocles, show an underlying relationship of man’s free will existing within the cosmic order or fate which the Greeks believed guided the universe in a harmonious purpose. Man was free to choose and was ultimately held responsible for his own actions. Both the concept of fate and [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Plays, Sophocles | Tags: Fate, Oedipus Rex, Oedipus the King | Comments Off
The events in Oedipus the King, written by Sophocles, show an underlying relationship of man’s free will existing within the cosmic order or fate which the Greeks believed guided the universe in a harmonious purpose. Man was free to choose and was ultimately held responsible for his own actions. Both the concept of fate and [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
I. Author Information
Herman Melville, was born in 1819, in a very “good” neighborhood in New York. A. Many influences on Melville’s works were European literature, experiences in his travels, and tragedy in his life. B. Melville was born into the time when inspiring works of American literature began to emerge. Yet, European heritage in literature [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Title of Work: Medea
Country/Culture: Greek
Literary Period: Classical
Type of Literature (genre): Drama/Tragedy
Author: Euripides
Authorial information:
Euripides was born in 484 BC and took up drama at the young age of 25. At most drama competitions, however his plays came in last place until he was about 45 or 50 years old. In his entire life, he wrote 92 [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Setting: The story takes place in Mossflower, a forested area where the animals of Redwall live. It takes place in fantasy times. There are no humans, just animals roam the earth.
The Main Characters: The main characters are Mattimeo who is the son of the great warrior mouse of Redwall, Matthias. Matthais is the great warrior [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Gustave Flubert’s masterpiece, Madame Bovary, was first published in 1857. The novel shocked many of its readers and caused a chain reaction that spread through all of France and ultimately called for the prosecution of the author. Since that time however, Madame Bovary, has been recognized by literature critics as being the model for the [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: J.R.R Tolkien, Lord of The Rings | Comments Off
Imagine yourself in a pre-industrial world full of mystery and magic. Imagine a world full of monsters, demons, and danger, as well as a world full of friends, fairies, good wizards, and adventure. In doing so you have just taken your first step onto a vast world created by author and scholar John Ronald Reuel [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
John Neufeld is the author of “Lisa Bright & Dark”. He lives and works in New York City these days. He was educated at Yale. His style of writing are usually touching stories.
Finding information about John Neufeld is quite difficult since the Internet nor the book has provided any help whatsoever.
Lisa Shilling is the main [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Kate Chopin, The Awakening | Comments Off
“Too strong a drink for moral babies, and should be labeled ‘poison’.” was the how the Republic described Kate Chopin’s most famous novel The Awakening (Seyersted 174). This was the not only the view of one magazine, but it summarized the feelings of society as a whole. Chopin woke up people to the feelings and [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
After reading the book Johnny Tremain, How would you describe Mr. Lorne? You would probably say that he is a friendly man that helps out other people. He runs a newspaper, called the Boston Observer , in the colony of Massachusetts where he lives. The newspaper is well known and popular in the colony. Mr. [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, Violence | Comments Off
Discuss Charlotte Brontë’s use of violence, in the text Jane Eyre, that captures the reader’s attention in relation to scenes, settings and characterisations?
The author of Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë, uses depictions of mental, physical and natural violence throughout the text to interest the reader and create springboards towards more emotional and dramatic parts of the [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre | Comments Off
“Jane Eyre” is set during the Victorian period, at a time where a women’s role in society was restrictive and repressive and class differences distinct. A job as a governess was one of the only few respectable positions available to the educated but impoverished single women.
Not only is “Jane Eyre” a novel about one woman’s [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison | Comments Off
Invisible Man is a story told through the eyes of the narrator, a Black man struggling in a White culture. The narrative starts during his college days where he works hard and earns respect from the administration. Dr. Bledsoe, the prominent Black administrator of his school, becomes his mentor. Dr. Bledsoe has achieved success in [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison | Comments Off
“Who the hell am I?” (Ellison 386) This question puzzled the invisible man, the unidentified, anonymous narrator of Ralph Ellison’s acclaimed novel Invisible Man. Throughout the story, the narrator embarks on a mental and physical journey to seek what the narrator believes is “true identity,” a belief quite mistaken, for he, although unaware of it, [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Gulliver's Travel, Jonathan Swift | Comments Off
Generations of schoolchildren raised on the first Book of “Gulliver’s Travels” have loved it as a delightful visit to a fantasy kingdom full of creatures they can relate to-little creatures, like themselves. Few casual readers look deeply enough to recognize the satire just below the surface. But Jonathan Swift was one of the great satirists [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Gulliver's Travel, Jonathan Swift | Comments Off
One of the most interesting questions about Gullivers Travels is whether the Houyhnhnms represent an ideal of rationality or whether on the other hand they are the butt of Swift’s satire. In other words, in Book IV, is Swift poking fun at the talking horses or does he intend for us to take them seriously [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: F.Scott Fitzgerald, Materialism, The Great Gatsby, Wealth | Comments Off
Greed, Corruption, the Search of One’s Self and the 1920’s
The characters’ search of their own identities and the struggle that ensues is the most suffusive theme throughout The Great Gatsby . The fact that we never really know the characters, and the corrupt immoral things they do, directly represent the 20’s high society lifestyle. The [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist, Poverty, Social Class | Comments Off
During his lifetime, Charles Dickens is known to have written several books. Although each book is different, they also share many similarities. Two of his books, Great Expectations and Oliver Twist, are representatives of the many kinds of differences and similarities found within his work.
Perhaps the reason why these two novels share some of the [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck | Comments Off
John Steinbeck passionately describes a time of unfair poverty, unity, and the human spirit in the classic, The Grapes of Wrath. The novel tells of real, diverse characters who experience growth through turmoil and hardship. Jim Casy- a personal favorite character- is an ex-preacher that meets up with a former worshiper, Tom Joad. Casy continues [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Frankenstein, Knowledge, Mary Shelly | Comments Off
Although humans have the tendency to set idealistic goals to better future generations, often the results can prove disastrous, even deadly. The tale of Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, focuses on the outcome of one man’s idealistic motives and desires of dabbling with nature, which result in the creation of horrific creature. Victor Frankenstein was not [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Alan Paton, Cry the Beloved Country, Father and Son, Social Class, Social Inequality | Comments Off
The book “Cry, the Beloved Country” by Alan Paton is a book about agitation and turmoil of both whites and blacks over the white segregation policy called apartheid. The book describes how understanding between whites and blacks can end mutual fear and aggresion, and bring reform and hope to a small community of Ndotcheni as [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: American Civil War, Literature | Tags: Booker T. Washing, Social Class, Social Inequality, Up From Slavery | Comments Off
The autobiography of Booker T. Washing titled Up From Slavery is a rich narrative of the man’s life from slavery to one of the founders of the Tuskegee Institute. The book takes us through one of the most dynamic periods in this country’s history, especially African Americans. I am very interested in the period following [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Poetry | Tags: Beowulf, Paganism | Comments Off
John Gardner introduces the reader of Grendel to an intimate side of Unferth unseen in the epic poem Beowulf. In Grendel we behold what a pathetic, sniveling wimp Unferth has become. In Beowulf all that we see is a jealous bastard. Why did Gardner make the character of Unferth so different from the original depiction? [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner | Comments Off
William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying is a novel about how the conflicting agendas within a family tear it apart. Every member of the family is to a degree responsible for what goes wrong, but none more than Anse. Anse’s laziness and selfishness are the underlying factors to every disaster in the book.
As the critic [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: A Separate Peace, John Knowles | Comments Off
Someone once said that being yourself, being who you are, is a successful rebellion. Gene Forrester, one of the main characters in John Knowles’s novel, A Separate Peace should have taken this advice. Throughout the novel, Gene acted artificially, disguising his true self. He lived in fear of people finding out what he was really [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Sophocles | Tags: Aristotle, Tragedy | Comments Off
The Nature of Tragedy:
In the century after Sophocles, the philosopher Aristotle analyzed tragedy. His definition: Tragedy then, is an imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude; in language embellished with each kind of artistic ornament, the several kinds being found in separate parts of the play; in the form [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Poetry | Tags: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner | Comments Off
“Look out Below!” – Craaack! About 15 Men and women turn their glances toward the sky, and see a large, perhaps 100 feet, tree falling to the ground. As the tree hits the solid earth, everything grows very quiet. All look at the lumberjack, who killed this tree, and find him weeping in sorrow. This [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: European History, Literature | Tags: All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque, War, War Literature | Comments Off
Nationalism can be defined as having a sense of belonging and loyalty to ones country or nation state. Of all the European nations, France was the first to sport the idea of nationalism. Many countries became influenced by the French’s ideas of nationalism. As a result nationalism had spread throughout out Europe by the nineteenth [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: European History, Literature | Tags: All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque, War, War Literature | Comments Off
Paul Bäumer, the narrator and protagonist in All Quiet on the Western Front, is a character who develops extensively within the course of the novel. As a young man, he is persuaded to join the German Army during World War I. This three year ordeal is marked by Paul’s short, but tragic trek into adulthood [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll | Comments Off
Did you read and enjoy Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland books as a child? Or better still, did you have someone read them to you? Perhaps you discovered them as an adult or, forbid the thought, maybe you haven’t discovered them at all! Those who have journeyed Through the Looking Glass generally love (or shun) [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens, French Revolution | Comments Off
Throughout the book, A Tale of Two Cities the theme of sacrifice is used to help the reader realize the cost of life, as well as to develop the plot through the effects of those sacrifices. Through the characters of Sydney Carton, Dr. Manette, and Ms. Pross the theme of sacrifice is developed. The theme [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams | Comments Off
Tennessee Williams is known for his powerfully written psychological dramas. Most of his works are set in the southern United States and they usually portray neurotic people who are victims of their own passions, frustrations, and loneliness. The play represents the conflict between the sensitive, neurotic Blanche DuBois and the crude, animalistic Stanley Kowalski.
Blanche visits [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: A Separate Peace, John Knowles, Loss of Innocence | Comments Off
An analysis of John Knowles A Separate Peace brings up the theme of man’s inhumanity to his fellow man. What makes this novel unique is that in protesting war, Knowles never overtly referred to the blood and gore of war; he showed the consequences of war, some paralleling the nature of war and some simply [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: A Pair of Tickets, Amy Tan | Comments Off
Amy Tan is an author who uses the theme of Chinese-American life, focusing mainly on mother-daughter relationships, where the mother is an immigrant from China and the daughter is a thoroughly Americanized –yellow on the surface and white underneath. In her book, the mother tries to convey their rich history and legacy to her daughter, [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Plays | Tags: A Doll's House, English Literaure, Henrik Ibsen, Tess of The D'Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy | Comments Off
During the late nineteenth century, women were beginning to break out from the usual molds. Two authors from that time period wrote two separate but very similar pieces of literature. Henrik Ibsen wrote the play A Doll’s House, and Thomas Hardy wrote Tess of the D’Urbervilles.
Ibsen and Hardy both use the male characters to contrast [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
It was the summer of 1972 when Spring Hill, a Washington, D.C., suburb, got its first taste of an increasingly violent, insecure modern world. The quiet residential area, whose inhabitants traditionally left their doors unlocked and spent the summers attending one another’s cookout, was
rocked by the news that 12-year-old Boyd Ellison had been raped and [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Salem Witch Trials | Comments Off
The deterioration of Salem’s social structure precipitated the murders of many innocent people. Arthur Miller’s depiction of the Salem witch trials, The Crucible, deals with a community that starts out looking like it is tightly knit and church loving. It turns out that once Tituba starts pointing her finger at the witches, the community starts [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Plays | Tags: Arthur Miller, Mccarthyism, Salem Witch Trials, The Crucible, Theocracy | Comments Off
The trumped-up witch hysteria in Salem, Massachusetts, deteriorated the rational, and emotional stability of its citizens. This exploited the populations weakest qualities, and insecurities. The obvious breakdown in Salem’s social order led to the tragedy which saw twenty innocent people hung on the accusation of witchcraft. Arthur Miller, author of The Crucible, used hysteria to [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Nathaniel Hawthorne, Sin, The Scarlet Letter | Comments Off
“But (Hester) is not the protagonist; the chief actor, and the tragedy of The Scarlet Letter is not her tragedy, but Dimmesdales. He it was whom the sorrows of death encompassed….. His public confession is one of the noblest climaxes of tragic literature.”
This statement by Randall Stewart does not contain the same ideas that I [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Guilt, Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter | Comments Off
Author’s Background:
Nathaniel Hawthorne was born in Salem, Massachusetts on July 4th, 1804. Hawthorne lived poor due to his father’s death when he was four, but he was helped by relatives and enrolled in college where he displayed an interest in writing. In college, he met a friend who would prove to be an invaluable help [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Hypocrisy, Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter | Comments Off
In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne utilizes imagery to convey that Dimmesdale can represent Puritan Society rather than the round character that can be seen on the surface level. This is seen through the imagery and symbolism of hypocrisy, Dimmesdale as a Christ figure, and the scarlet letter.
First of all, Hawthorne parallels the hypocrisy of [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter | Comments Off
Nathaniel Hawthorne was born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1804. After his graduation from Bowdoin College in Maine, he quickly became a well-known author of literary tales concerning early American life. Between 1825 and 1850, he developed his talent by writing short fiction, and he gained international fame for his fictional novel The Scarlet Letter in [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heroism, J.R.R Tolkien, The Hobbit | Comments Off
CHARACTER INTRODUCTION
BILBO BAGGINS: The Hobbit who led the Dwarves to the Lonely Mountain to reclaim their treasure from the dragon Smaug. He found the One Ring in Gollum’s cave
GANDALF: The Wizard that accompanies Bilbo and the dwarves on their quest. He is well versed in magic spells and often calls upon them to save his [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heroism, J.R.R Tolkien, The Hobbit | Comments Off
The main character of the book is Mr. Bilbo Baggins. He is the Hobbit who led the Dwarves to the Lonely Mountain to reclaim their treasure from the dragon named Smaug. Bilbo is middle aged and resides in a clean, warm burrow dug into the side of a hill. In the beginning of the story [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heroism, J.R.R Tolkien, The Hobbit | Comments Off
Bilbo’s noblest moment in The Hobbit, a fantasy book by J. R. R. Tolkien, is when he gives up the Arkenstone, a precious jewel. He is commended by some for his graciousness of giving away such a treasure, for everyone was rushing to try to get it for themselves. Yet, Bilbo gave the stone to [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heroism, J.R.R Tolkien, The Hobbit | Comments Off
As the book, The Hobbit, by J. R. R. Tolkien begins to conclude, Thorin Oakenshield sees the goodness in Bilbo Baggins and apprehends the most significant parts of life. Since the beginning, Thorin’s principle objective is to become the King under the Mountain and to have all the gold and treasure. While Thorin is on [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heroism, J.R.R Tolkien, The Hobbit | Comments Off
The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien is set in a fantasy world that has differences, as well as similarities, to our own world. The author has created the novel’s world, Middle Earth, not only by using imagination, but by also adding details from the modern world. Realistic elements in the book enable readers to relate to [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Civilization, Leadership, Lord of the Flies, Obsession, Symbolism, William Golding | Comments Off
Imagine a bunch of young children’s lives changed by being trapped on a island with no civilization around. William Golding shows how terrifying it can be in Lord Of The Flies, the novel that brings symbolism above all to the emotions of all that read it. The symbols that bring out the meaning the best [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Civilization, Leadership, Lord of the Flies, Obsession, William Golding | Comments Off
Golding portrays the different characters and those ideologies that accompany them with a strong contrast in writing style. To further understand this we must compare characters from his Nobel Prize winning novel, The Lord of the Flies. A good example of this is Jack who represents evil, described at the beginning of chapter three, and [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, Determination, Leadership, William Golding | Comments Off
Being a part of a group of children having to adapt after being trapped on a island with no surrounding civilization is an unimaginable situation. However, William Golding shows just how terrifying it can be in his novel, Lord Of The Flies, by his use of symbols to represent hardships. The main symbols, which best [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
1. After Simon is killed, the next paragraph begins, “The clouds open and let the rain down like a waterfall…” When the boys kill Simon they not only kill him and spirituality, but what they perceive to be the beast. Because the beast was created by them and embodied all of their evils, one of [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
1. The conch being inexpertly blown and the fact that Piggy has only one lens shows that society has begun to function poorly. The reason for this decline in society is Jack. Jack broke Piggy’s lens, and now Jack who has power, represented by the conch, does not know how to blow it properly. This [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
1. When the fire goes out it symbolizes the loss of all remaining civility and the beginning of absolute savagery. The fire was the boys’ only link to the past, as it was the one true technology they had. Fire symbolizes man’s domination and manipulation of nature. As the fire goes out the boys are [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, Comparison, William Golding | Comments Off
There are always people who, in a group, come out with better qualities as a leader than others. The strongest people however, become the greater influences, which the others decide to follow. However, sometimes the strongest person is not the best choice. Authors often show how humans select this stronger person, in order to give [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
Lord Of The Flies was a very pessimistic book because many people died and also that all of the kids humanity is now lost.
An example showing why Lord Of The Flies is pessimistic is the fact that World War 3 is happening and all of the kids are stranded from their parents instead of being [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
In the book, “Lord of the Flies” by William Golding, there were many things that happened that relate well to what we have been doing in Psychology 181. There were several times when I found myself relating what we learned in class to the situation that the group of boys in the book found themselves [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
Essay Question Two
Lord of the Flies opens with the introduction of a small group of English boys that are marooned on an island. The plane was evacuating them from atomic war-ridden England. This is a suiting time for this novel to be written- it shows how savage even little boys can be, and that adults [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, Comparison, Comparitive, William Golding | Comments Off
I have chosen “The Lord of the Flies” and “The Withered Arm” because they are similar even though they were written in different time periods. Lord of the Flies was written in the 20th century and the Withered arm was written in the 19th century.
Lord of the flies by William Golding
The title signifies Death, devil [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
“Compare and contrast the characters of Jack and Ralph and discuss the way that the rivalry between them develops in the course of the novel.” By comparing and contrasting the characters of Jack and Ralph it allows the reader to fully understand their characters and how each develops throughout the novel. Once this has been [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
In his first novel, William Golding used a group of boys stranded on a tropical island to illustrate the malicious nature of mankind. Lord of the Flies dealt with changes that the boys underwent as they gradually adapted to the isolated freedom from society. Three main characters depicted different effects on certain individuals under those [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Civilization, William Golding | Comments Off
Character Analysis:
Ralph: main character- Ralph is the narrator of the story.
Jack: Jack is Ralph main enemy in the story. He leads the hunters.
Piggy: Piggy is the smart one of the group.
Simon: He is my favorite character in the story. He is viewed as the Christ-figure and interprets the mysteries of the island.
Roger: Roger is Jack’s [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: A Farewell to Arms, Literature, War | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, War Book | Comments Off
Critics usually describe Hemingway’s style as simple, spare, and journalistic. These are all good words; they all apply. Perhaps because of his training as a newspaperman, Hemingway is a master of the declarative, subject-verb-object sentence. His writing has been likened to a boxer’s punches–combinations of lefts and rights coming at us without pause. Take the [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: A Farewell to Arms, Literature, War | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, Love, War Book | Comments Off
John Stubbs’ essay is an examination of the defense which he believes Henry and Catherine use to protect themselves from the discovery of their insignificance and “powerlessness…in a world indifferent to their well being…” He asserts that “role-playing” by the two main characters, and several others in the book, is a way to escape the [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: A Farewell to Arms, Literature, War | Tags: Critical, Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, War Book | Comments Off
The overall tone of the book is much different than that of The Sun Also Rises. The characters in the book are propelled by outside forces, in this case WWI, where the characters in SAR seemed to have no direction. Frederick’s actions are determined by his position until he deserts the army.Floating down the river [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Racism | Tags: Africa, Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad, Morality | Comments Off
Chinua Achebe, a well-known writer, once gave a lecture at the University of Massachusetts about Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, entitled “An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad’s Heart of Darkness.” Throughout his essay, Achebe notes how Conrad used Africa as a background only, and how he “set Africa up as a foil to Europe,”(Achebe, [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Justice, Literature, Racism | Tags: Heart of Darkness, Ignorance, Joseph Conrad | Comments Off
Joseph Conrad develops themes of personal power, individual responsibility, and social justice in his book Heart of Darkness. His book has all the trappings of the conventional adventure tale – mystery, exotic setting, escape, suspense, unexpected attack. Chinua Achebe concluded, “Conrad, on the other hand, is undoubtedly one of the great stylists of modern fiction [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad | Comments Off
Though Conrad did not learn English until he was twenty-one, he still mastered the language and artfully uses it in Heart of Darkness. One sentence of his is particularly striking, as it sums up the views that he condemns throughout the novella. The accountant, one of the first imperialists Marlow meets, says to him, “When [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad | Comments Off
Whether a reader connects to the symbolism of Heart Of Darkness or is merely reading it for fun, one cannot go away from this story without a lingering feeling of uneasiness. Joseph Conrad writes what seems to be a simple story about a man in search of an ivory hunter; one must look deeper into [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad | Comments Off
In Heart of Darkness it is the white invaders for instance, who are, almost without exception, embodiments of blindness, selfishness, and cruelty; and even in the cognitive domain, where such positive phrases as “to enlighten,” for instance, are conventionally opposed to negative ones such as “to be in the dark,” the traditional expectations are reversed. [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad | Comments Off
In Joseph Conrad’s book Heart of Darkness the Europeans are cut off from civilization, overtaken by greed, exploitation, and material interests from his own kind. Conrad develops themes of personal power, individual responsibility, and social justice. His book has all the trappings of the conventional adventure tale – mystery, exotic setting, escape, suspense, unexpected attack. [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad | Comments Off
Conrad’s novel, Heart of Darkness, relies on the historical period of imperialism in order to describe its protagonist, Charlie Marlow, and his struggle. Marlow’s catharsis in the novel, as he goes to the Congo, rests on how he visualizes the effects of imperialism. This paper will analyze Marlow’s “change,” as caused by his exposure to [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Heart of Darkness, William Golding | Comments Off
Joseph Conrad’s novel Heart of Darkness is about a seaman named Charlie Marlow and an experience he had as a younger man. Early in the novel it becomes apparent that there is a great deal of tension in Marlow¹s mind about whether he should profit from the immoral actions of the company he works for [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Canterbury Tales, Literature | Tags: Geoffrey Chaucer, Greed, Short Stories | Comments Off
Throughout literature, relationships can often be found between the author of a story and the story that he writes. In Geoffrey Chaucer’s frame story, Canterbury Tales, many of the characters make this idea evident with the tales that they tell. A distinct relationship can be made between the character of the Pardoner and the tale [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Canterbury Tales, Literature, Women | Tags: Evil, Geoffrey Chaucer, Women, Women Canterbury Tales | Comments Off
Chaucer, in his female pilgrimage thought of women as having an evil-like quality, that they always tempt and take from men. They were depicted of untrustworthy, selfish and vain. Through the faults of both men and women, Chaucer showed what is right and wrong and how one should live. Under the surface, however, lies a [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Canterbury Tales, Literature | Tags: Courtly Love, Geoffrey Chaucer | Comments Off
In the “Franklin’s Tale,” Geoffrey Chaucer satirically paints a picture of a marriage steeped in the tradition of courtly love. As Dorigen and Arveragus’ relationship reveals, a couple’s preoccupation with fulfilling the ritualistic practices appropriate to courtly love renders the possibility of genuine love impossible. Marriage becomes a pretense to maintain courtly position because love [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Canterbury Tales, Literature | Tags: Compare and Contrast, Comparison, Comparitive, Geoffrey Chaucer | Comments Off
Geoffrey Chaucer portrayed a cross section of medieval society though The Canterbury Tales. “The Prologue” or foreword of this work serves as an introduction to each of the thirty one characters involved in the tales. Two of these characters are the Knight and the Squire, who share a father and son relation. These individuals depart [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Comments Off
Direct Characterization:
Doctor of physics
He was very into astronomy.
He kept his patient from being depressed by horoscope and magic.
He could sense the fortune that’ll arrive in his sick patients dwelling.
He was a very good physician.
He knew the cause of every sickness.
His patient pays him in gold.
He read a lot of medical books written by the famous [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Canterbury Tales, Literature | Tags: Character Analysis, Geoffrey Chaucer | Comments Off
Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, written in approximately 1385, is a collection of twenty-four stories ostensibly told by various people who are going on a religious pilgrimage to Canterbury Cathedral from London, England. Prior to the actual tales, however, Chaucer offers the reader a glimpse of fourteenth century life by way of what he refers to [...]
Posted: October 31st, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Canterbury Tales, Literature | Tags: Geoffrey Chaucer | Comments Off
In the book Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer, gives us a stunning tale about a rooster named Chaunticleer. Chaunticleer, who is the King of his domain in his farmland kingdom. Like a King, he quotes passages from intellectuals, dreams vivid dreams, has a libido that runs like a bat out of hell, and is described as [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: William Golding | Comments Off
Setting
The story takes place on an island somewhere in the ocean. The island is described by the author as tropical and boat shaped. Along the coast there are sandy beaches followed by a variety of vegetation and “creepers”. There are also the orchards, which rise up to the treeless and rocky and rugged mountain ridge [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: William Golding | Comments Off
The classic novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding is an exciting adventure deep into the nether regions of the mind. The part of the brain that is suppressed by the mundane tasks of modern society. It is a struggle between Ralph and Jack, the boys and the Beast, good and evil.
The story takes [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: William Golding | Comments Off
At the start of the novel, there has been an atomic explosion, and the children have been evacuated in an aircraft with a detachable passenger tube. The aircraft has been attacked and released the tube while flying over tropical seas. The tube has crash landed in the jungle of a tropical island, and the plane [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: Character Analysis, William Golding | Comments Off
In his first novel, William Golding used a group of boys stranded on a tropical island to illustrate the malicious nature of mankind. Lord of the Flies dealt with changes that the boys underwent as they gradually adapted to the isolated freedom from society. Three main characters depicted different effects on certain individuals under those [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: William Golding | Comments Off
Chapter One: The Sound of a Shell.
The first chapter concentrates on describing character personalities. Ralph, Piggy, Jack and the rest of the choir are introduced after Ralph blows the conch. The group elects Ralph, ‘the chief’ and they begin to establish rules and boundaries. Ralph, Jack and Simon explore the island and begin plans for [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, Lord of the Flies | Tags: William Golding | Comments Off
“GOLDING PUTS SO MANY ARTIFICIAL RESTRAINTS ON HIS STORY IN ORDER TO EMPHASISE HIS POINT, THAT THE WHOLE THING COMES OUT TOO NEATLY AND, IN FACT, REDUCES THE POWER OF HIS MESSAGE.”
I think that, while the boys experience immense bad luck due to the author, the story still proves its point. It is still possible [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises | Comments Off
The remarkable thing about the book was its liberal use of dialogue and how Hemingway used it to carry the reader through the book. There was no plot in the book in the sense that there was no twists, intrigue, or goals for any of the characters and the dialogue was the only thing that [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises | Comments Off
I finished reading SAR around ten o’clock tonight. I could have taken it all in one big gulp when I began a week ago, but I couldn’t do that. It wanted me to bring it out slowly, so I often found myself reading five or ten pages and laying it aside to absorb without engulfing. [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, Mystery | Comments Off
Ernest Hemingway has created a masterpiece of mystery in his story “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber”. The mystery does not reveal itself to the reader until the end of the story, yet it leaves a lot to the imagination. At the end of the story
Margaret Macomber kills her husband by accident, in order [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Code hero, Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, The Lost Generation | Comments Off
Ernest Hemingway is a renowned American author of the Twentieth century who centers his novels around personal experiences and affections. He is one of the authors named “The Lost Generation.” He could not cope with post-war America, and therefore he introduced a new type of character in writing called the “code hero”. Hemingway is known [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, In Our Time | Comments Off
The Nick Adams stories were my favorite of the collection because I got to know Nick through the reading. I started to understand Nick and I could anticipate the actions and feelings that he was feeling. I am not sure if this is because I became familiar with Nick or because I have done many [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, In Our Time, Short Stories | Comments Off
Half-way through reading Hemmingway’s collection In Our Time I was interrupted by my roommate, George. He wanted to know how I liked the story. He seems to be very impressed that I’m reading Hemmingway. I explained to him that it was, in fact, not one story, but a collection of short stories. He asked if [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
Ernest Miller Hemingway was born on July 21, 1899, in Oak Park, Illinois. His father was the owner of a prosperous real estate business. His father, Dr. Hemingway, imparted to Ernest the importance of appearances, especially in public. Dr. Hemingway invented surgical forceps for which he would not accept money. He believed that one should [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
Many of Ernest Hemingway’s books have had different meaning and all could be interpreted in different way, but there has never been so much written about his other stories. Well the Old Man and the Sea had more written about it than any of his other novels and there have never been so many different [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, First Person, Hemingway, Sherwood Anderson, Writing Style | Comments Off
At one point in his short story, “Big Two-Hearted River: Part II”, Hemingway’s character Nick speaks in the first person. Why he adopts, for one line only, the first person voice is an interesting question, without an easy answer. Sherwood Anderson does the same thing in the introduction to his work, Winesburg, Ohio. The first [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature | Tags: A Call to Arms, Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway, Tone | Comments Off
“After a while I went out and left the hospital and walked back to the hotel in the rain” (332). This last line of the novel gives an understanding of Ernest Hemingway’s style and tone. The overall tone of the book is much different than that of The Sun Also Rises. The characters in the [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, The Old Man and the Sea | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
The book The Old Man and the Sea was written by Ernest Hemingway. Ernest Hemingway was both a fisherman and a Nobel Prize winner. The story is set in a small fishing village near the Cuban coast. Hemingway¡¦s expresses in his tone that he feels sorry for the old man. This is shown because he [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, The Old Man and the Sea | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
The book The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway, is about an old man, Santiago, and his genuine fondness of the sea. Every day he travels out to sea to go fishing which is his occupation. For the past eighty-four days the old man has not caught a single fish. On the eighty-fifth [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, The Old Man and the Sea | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
I read this book for the first time in high school and I remembered it just as well as if I had read it yesterday. As I read it again I remembered some of the same language, especially the old man talking to his hands. Cursing his left hand when it cramped up on him [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, The Old Man and the Sea | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
Relationship, External Nature and Dignity in The Old Man and The Sea
Man has always suffered his most to achieve his goal. However if one doesn’t experience the danger; will not be prepared to handle his problems. Experience is a part of life which gives man his true identity. Does this identity comes from one’s luck [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: Literature, The Old Man and the Sea | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
The Nobelprize winning book: The old man and the sea, has been written by Ernest Hemingway and was published in 1982, though the original American print had been published in 1952. The title is exactly what the book is about. It is a short story. The story is written in one continuous whole and is [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: A Farewell to Arms, Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
In Night and A Farewell to Arms, the reader follows the characters of Elie Wiesel and Ernest Hemingway through their personal struggles between love and war. In Night, Eliezer faces malnutrition, Nazis, and concentration camps, while Frederick Henry, in A Farewell to Arms, struggles with love, patriotism, and religion. Despite their differences, the journeys of [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: A Farewell to Arms, Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
The overall tone of the book is much different than that of The Sun Also Rises. The characters in the book are propelled by outside forces, in this case WWI, where the characters in SAR seemed to have no direction. Frederick’s actions are determined by his position until he deserts the army. Floating down the [...]
Posted: October 15th, 2007 | Author: admin | Filed under: A Farewell to Arms, Literature | Tags: Ernest Miller Hemingway, Hemingway | Comments Off
When I finished FTA I was of course stunned by the death of Catherine and the baby and Henry’s sudden solitude. “What happens now?” I felt, as I so often do when I finish a book that I want to go on forever. This is infinitely more difficult with a book that has no conclusion, [...]