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Elli
... This statement is evident in both situations, when s life was spared by the German soldier due to her beautiful hair as well as when she admitted that "If mother were to died, I won't be able to maintain my will to survive".
Without s continual enthusiasm towards the observance of Jewish festivals, she would have had absolutely nothing to look forward to and in-turn it would have eventuated in a loss of faith and maybe even death. Without a doubt, this characteristic of hers was imperative for her survival. and some fellow room- mates, went to great lengths to create an atmosphere which was even remotely related to Chanukah. A look out person was assigned in ...
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Canterbury Tales Chaunticleer
... describes Chaunticleer in many different ways. One of them
is his language. Chaunticleer's language is that of a scholar. He
quotes many different scriptures in a conversation with Pertelote,
such as, Saint Kenelm, Daniel and Joseph (from the bible), and
Croesus. From each author he tells a story about an individual who had
a vision in a dream and the dream came true. He may have been making
all the stories up in order to win the argument with Pertelote, but,
this seems unlikely because he does not take heed to his own advice
and stay away from the fox that encounters him later. He is educated
enough to know these supposed quotati ...
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What Is The American Dream?
... labor. Langston’s father left home to live in Cuba and then Mexico to free himself from the Jim Crow laws and Segregation.
Hughes then went to live with his grandmother in Lawrence, Kansas until he was thirteen. His grandmother, Mary Sampson Patterson Leary Langston, was very prominent in the African American community of Lawrence. Her first husband was killed at Harper’s Ferry while fighting with John Brown; her second husband, Hughes’ grandfather, was a prominent politician in Kansas during the Reconstruction. During the time that he lived with his grandmother, however, she was old and poor resulting in little to eat and forcing them to rent out part o ...
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Sweetness And Power
... sugar, and a strong reason the book at hand is as follows:
Western peoples consume enormous per capita quantities of refined sugar because, to most people, very sweet foods taste very good. The existence of the human sweet tooth can be explained, ultimately, as an adaptation of ancestral populations to favor the ripest-and hence the sweetest-fruit. In other words, the selective pressures of times past are most strikingly revealed by the artificial, supernormal stimulus of refined sugar, despite the evidence that eating refined sugar is maladaptive.
With such an obsession with sweet foods, there is an obvious desire for an explanation of how such a once unknown ...
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The Lady Of Shalott
... translation of the function of the mirror serves. One of these functions is obviously to connect the Lady to the outside world since it is her only means to do so without risking her life. A second function that the mirror serves is to simply reflect the most beautiful parts of the island and create a contrast between the interior and exterior worlds. Lady of Shalott simply is far away from any sadness or ugliness of the world. A third function of the mirror and it could be argued, the most important function to fulfill the curse placed upon the Lady by making the world to tempting to be secluded from. To once again reiterate, the functions of the mirr ...
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Happiness In Brave New
... maturing children. The process used is hypnopædia, or repetition of sayings during sleep. After many repetitions of one phrase, the idea is hardened within the human mind, proving most difficult to undo. Evidence of this method to provide artificial happiness surfaces in both Lenina and Bernard’s actions. Huxley states this coldly during Lenina’s trip home with Henry Foster, “‘What a hideous color khaki is,’ remarked Lenina, voicing the hypnopædic prejudices of her caste” (62). Khaki is a color worn by lower castes in the society and the higher castes are taught not to associate with them. Bernard’s hypnopædic lessons did not work as well as most. He sees ever ...
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Oliver Twist 3
... Each character had a unique name that connected itself to the characteristics of the story. For example Oliver Twist. A reader may understand the Oliver part, but how do you explain the Twist? This boy’s name associates itself with all the ‘twists’ and changes that occur in his life. Oliver goes from being an abused orphan, then taken in by wealthy people, then kidnapped by his half-brother, and then rescued by a friend of his deceased father. Jack Dawkins was also another colorful character’s name who fit pretty well with his traits. Jack was also known as the ‘Artful Dodger’. The way this character acts and the way he tal ...
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Review Of 1984
... as a trap for O'Brian.
Settings
Oceania - One of the three totalitarian superpowers that rule the world using censorship and pure
terror.
Mr. Charrington's rented room - Winston and Julia's secret hideaway where they come to make
love and hide from the telescreens and constant watch of the Party.
Ministry of Love - A rehabilitation center which uses torture and brainwashing technique in order to
completely conform its prisoners into the thinking and beliefs of the party only to be later killed, sent
to forced labor camps, or even released back into society.
Plot
In 1984, Winston Smith lives in London which is part of the country Ocea ...
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Holden Caulfield (catcher In T
... ...
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Hard Times By Charles Dickens
... to doubt facts and to never entertain any vice or fancy. As soon as Gradgrind’s children were old enough to absorb, he was feeding giving more lessons than they could hold. His children were brought up only knowing one way to live and that was the idea that if it is not fact, then it is false. He was emotionaless as were his children because they were brought up only knowing what they were taught by him. Eventually, as Gradgrind’s children became older, what they were taught began to turn sour in their minds. Tom, Grandgrind’s son, began to despise his father and all he was taught and thus began to rebel. He took to smoking and gambling, which eventually led to h ...
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