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» Book Reports Essays and Papers
John Cheever’s Portrayals Of Suburban Life
<view this essay>.... his work one can quickly conclude the same.
Possibly it is Cheever’s previous associations with New England businessmen, wives, children, and friends that spark the themes in his novels. Some say that his work is “cryptoautobiographical” (The American n.pag.) considering his bouts with publishing companies, homosexuality, alcoholism, and family. Others say that he is a “short story writer that failed at trying a novel”(Beacham 236). Some criticize his work for lacking a climax and plot making for an uneventful story line. Clearly one thing holds true. Cheever depicts life in American suburbs with humor and compassion in a way that no other can compare to.
Che .....
Number of words: 2518 | Number of pages: 10 |
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As I Lay Dying By William Faul
<view this essay>.... the work. Addie is inbittered by this, and is never the same. Anse is begrudging of everything. Even the cost of a doctor for his dying wife seems money better spent on false teeth to him. "I never sent for you" Anse says "I take you to witness I never sent for you" (37) he repeats trying to avoid a doctor's fee. Before she dies Addie requests to be buried in Jefferson. When she does, Anse appears obsessed with burying her there. Even after Addie had been dead over a week, and all of the bridges to Jefferson are washed out, he is still determined to get to Jefferson. Is Anse sincere in wanting to fulfill his promise to Addie, or is he driven by another motiv .....
Number of words: 662 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Allegory In Young Goodman Brown
<view this essay>.... and his "Faith", he is talking to his wife, but he is also talking to his "faith" to God. He is venturing into the woods to meet with the Devil, and by doing so, he leaves his unquestionable faith in God with his wife. He resolves that he will "cling to her skirts and follow her to Heaven." This is an example of the excessive pride because he feels that he can sin and meet with the Devil because of this promise that he made to himself. There is a tremendous irony to this promise because when Goodman Brown comes back at dawn; he can no longer look at his wife with the same faith he had before.
When Goodman Brown finally meets with the Devil, he declares that .....
Number of words: 2425 | Number of pages: 9 |
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Comparison Of Tones Used By Ph
<view this essay>.... writers. Because she was a slave and she was aware of her position in society as opposed to the whites, she knew that enfuriating her audience was the wisest thing to do. When criticizing slavery she chose her words very wisely. In her poem “On Being Brought from Africa to America,” for example, she does not blatantly protest about slavery and call her readers savages like Douglass would do. Instead she and realized has realized her position in serialized her position in society as a slave and In her literature she criticizes slavery through rli Although, Phillis Wheatley was an abolishnist writer, she passive than a lot of her literature didn’t always ref .....
Number of words: 452 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Comparison Of 1984 And Animal Farm
<view this essay>.... a week earlier. Because of the Party's successful assault on the
individuality of its members, people became cheerful when they heard of the news.
This perceived reality is the truth to the Party members.
The true reality in 1984 is shown only to the reader and some Inner
Party members. O'Brien knows the real truth of things as shown by his torturing
of Winston. He tells Winston that if the Party tells the people that 2+2=5,
then it does. He also instructs Winston that if the Party informs its members
that 2+2=3 or 4 or all at the same time, then it is so. Although this true
reality is available to Inner Party members, they too do not have .....
Number of words: 394 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Frankenstein: What Makes It A Gothic Novel?
<view this essay>.... despair. Shelly's writing shows how the varied and
dramatic settings of Frankenstein can create the atmosphere of the novel and can
also cause or hinder the actions of Frankenstein and his monster as they go on
their seemingly endless chase where the pursuer becomes the pursued.
Darkly dramatic moments and the ever-so-small flashes of happiness stand
out. The setting sets the atmosphere and creates the mood. The “dreary night
of November” (Shelly 42) where the monster is given life, remains in the memory.
And that is what is felt throughout the novel-the dreariness of it all along
with the desolate isolation. Yet there were still glimpses of happiness in
S .....
Number of words: 700 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Vonnegut's Portrayal Of Society In Breakfast Of Champions
<view this essay>.... is a very adequate discription of the literary journey through the
current scene of America. At one point or another, Vonnegut discusses
nearly every social, political, or cultural problem afflicting America.
Racism, violence, greed, and commercialism are a few among the many
problems prevalent in this country ("Briefly" 146). Vonnegut's novel is
an exhibit of the flaws of a robotic, self-destructive society (Allen 107).
In Breakfast of Champions, Kurt Vonnegut portrays a prefabricated,
unfeeling society and an American culture plagued with despair, greed, and
apathy.
The issue of society's flaws is a major concern of Breakfast of
Champions. Such problem .....
Number of words: 2162 | Number of pages: 8 |
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Crime And Punishment And The Outsider: Self Discovery
<view this essay>.... and formed their own ideologies. Raskolnikov, for instance,
believed that “we have to correct and direct nature. But for that, there
would never had been a single great man”1. In fact, he had written an
article titled “The psychology of a criminal before and after the crime”.
It stated that ‘ordinary' men live according to the law and exist only to
reproduce the human race, yet ‘extraordinary' men may break laws “if in his
own conscience it is necessary to do so in order to better mankind”2.
Raskolnikov believed that indeed, he was an “extraordinary man”3, but like
Meursault, his beliefs were untested. As a result, he murdered an old
pawnbroker women .....
Number of words: 1866 | Number of pages: 7 |
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