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Lord Of The Flies By William G
... The Brilliance of Lord of the Flies can scarcely be exaggerated, and horrific as it is, it cannot be dismissed merely as a horror-comic of high literary merit, as a ‘sick’ comment of R.M. Ballentyne’s nineteenth century views of the nature of British boyhood (Allen 120).
III. Authors Life:
A. He [Golding] entered the Royal Navy at the age of twenty-nine in December, 1940, and after a period of service on mine sweepers, destroyers, and cruisers, he became a lieutenant in command of his own rocketship (Baker xiii).
B He [Golding] has constantly stressed his Hellenic parentage, claiming Homer, Herodotus, Aeschylus, Sophoctes, and Euripides as kinsmen (Dick 1 ...
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To Kill A Mockingbird 6
... trial: "You know the truth, and the truth is this: Some Negroes lie, some Negroes are immoral, some Negro men are not to be trusted around our women--black or white. But this is a truth that applies to the human race and to no particular race of men" (Lee, 204). This shows that Atticus believes that no race is better than another. Through discussions with my mother, I know that she feels the same way. My mother, however, does not listen to both sides of the story. Atticus always listens to both children, as Scout says: "Well, in the first place you never stopped to gimme a chance to tell you my side of it--you just lit right into me. Whin Jem an' I fuss Atticus doe ...
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Fahrenheit 451 - Similarities To Our Society
... to take less time to do them so we can have more time for other things. Their society is exactly like ours. Besides having advanced technological machines, they also have much larger speed limits, so people could get where they want a lot faster. Clarisse and Montag make it obvious to the reader that they live in a fast-paced world when they first meet each other. Before Clarisse runs into her house, they notice how fast drivers go that they "'don't know what grass is, or flowers because they never see them slowly,' she said. 'If you showed a driver a green blur, Oh yes! he'd say, that's grass! A pink blur! That's a rose garden! White blurs are houses. Brown bl ...
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Essay On Tragic Characters Fro
... clues that the tragic character is in
fact, Antigone. Antigone has a tragic flaw which is her arrogance, or the fact that she
chooses to bury her brother, Polynices, even though the law prohibits it due to the fact
that he is a traitor. Her downfall is her death which comes after she buries Polynices, she is
caught and brought to Creon, whose is king and son Haimon is to marry her. He sentences
her to be banished and locked away in a cave in which she hangs herself and later Haimon
also kills himself.
The tragedy of this play is that the main character, Antigone, dies all because she
wanted to bury her brother but is banished and kills herself. The aspect ...
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Grapes Of Wrath
... disaccord.
Jim Casy is an interesting, complicated man. He can be seen as a modern day Christ figure, except without the tending manifest belief in the Christian faith. The initials of his name, J.C., are the same as Jesus Christ. Just as Jesus was exalted by many for what he stood for was supposed to be , Casy was hailed and respected by many for simply being a preacher. Casy and Jesus both saw a common goodness in the average man and saw every person as holy. Both Christ and Casy faced struggles between their ideals versus the real world. (Despite Casy's honesty, goodness, and loyalty to all men, he would not earn a meal or warm place to stay. Altho ...
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The Yellow Wallpaper 4
... part in. Through it she sees all that she could be and everything that she could have. But she says near the end, "I don’t like to look out of the windows even - there are so many of those creeping women, and they creep so fast." She knows that she has to hide and lie low; that she would have to creep in order to be accepted in society and she does not want to see all the other women who have to do the same because she realizes they are a reflection of herself. She expresses how women have to move without being seen in society. The window does not represent a gateway for her. She can not enter what she can see outside of the window, literally, because ...
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The Shield Of Achilles
... is made of five layers of metal with a triple ply shield strap edging on the rim. On the shield are scenes showing the heavens and earth and sea, two noble cities, a kings estate, fallow fields, a thriving vineyard, a herd of longhorn cattle, and a dancing circle. Once Hephaestus completes the shield, he makes a breastplate and helmet for Achilles. The armor he forges is indestructible and worthy of a god. Through Homers description of the shield and how it is forged, the reader can begin to understand the importance and value of this device in a literary context.
The two cities depicted on the shield represent a city in Greece and Troy. One of the citi ...
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Black Rain
... bomb." That day, I learned for the first time to call it an "atomic bomb." ( 282)
The importance of the name of the bomb may seem ineffectual, but he seems to dwell on finding out what caused this type of destruction. Something else that Mr. Shizuma wants to do is remember every little detail about what happens to everything from what angle the house was on after the bomb to what his wife cooked for dinner with the food rationing. He even likes to write how people cured themselves of radiation sickness and what the burns and other injuries look and act like. These things are like myself in the fact that he does not like to forget what things are like, wants to see ...
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Edgar Allen Poe's: "The Murders In The Rue Morgue"
... murders with questionable motives and circumstances,
the search for the murderer has proved futile. Poe's stage is now set. The
murders, of Madame and Mademoiselle L'Espanaye are then related by a
series of eleven eyewitnesses, a diverse mix of occupation and culture.
However, they concur on one point: all heard an indistinguishable voice
("that of a foreigner") and one of an angered Frenchman at the scene of
the crime. As the account of the last witness is registered, Dupin and the
narrator decide to examine the apartment on the Rue Morgue for themselves.
The Sherlock Holmes-like protagonist does not disappoint us. Dupin assures
the narrator that he knows who the ...
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Traditional Ideologies
... to which the everyday Australian can not only relate to but also understand aswell. The text acts as a medium for the viewer to realise his/her own values and helps the viewer to recognise the social values that surround him/her.
However, texts do not merely inform the reader of values present in the society. They can also reflect the current shift in values and attitudes away from the dominant ideologies. This can be seen heavily in the novel ‘Cloudstreet’ by Tim Winton. In this text many characters are seen to have somewhat different roles in the family that one would expect. Lester Lamb is an excellent example of this. The traditional role of th ...
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