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» Book Reports Essays and Papers
Fahrenheit 451: Criticizing The Modern World
<view this essay>.... life; mindless. The Hound was a programmed robot that didn’t thing on its own; that only acted as it was told. Captain Beatty states, “It just ‘functions’. It has a trajectory we decide on for it. It follows through. It targets itself, homes itself, and cuts off. Its only copper wire, storage batteries, and electricity” (20), and “It doesn’t think anything we don’t want it to think” (27). That society was programmed to not think, wonder or ask why. They didn’t do anything that they weren’t supposed to do. Today, everything is happening just as The Hound is controlled. Programming is happening in our very world. Take schools for example. Consider Pavlov’s exper .....
Number of words: 612 | Number of pages: 3 |
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A Tale Of Two Cities: Faults Of Social Structure
<view this essay>.... gold coins
out to the father and drives away. This is showing that all the aristocracy
cares about is money. Another place in the novel where Dickens shows the
difference between the classes is when the Monseigneur is having his chocolate
while everyone is waiting to speak with him. When he is done with his chocolate
all he does is walk out and brushes past everyone else as if they are not there.
This shows that all the higher aristocracy cares about is themselves.
Another fault the Dickens points out about the social structure in the society
is the lunacy associated with the revolution. The way the people of St. Antoine
get crazy from being in such a violent .....
Number of words: 479 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Animal Farm: Utopia
<view this essay>.... He does not give
milk, he does not lay eggs, he is too weak to pull the plow, he cannot run
fast enough to catch rabbits. Yet he is lord of all the animals. (p.19)
This speech gets all the animals riled up and sends the toughts of getting
rid of man. Old Major then teaches them the song the Beasts of England
which teaches them the "great" life without man and with no more bad
leaders:
Beasts of England, beasts of Ireland, Beasts of every land and clime,
Hearken to my joyful tidings, Of the golden future time.
Soon or late the day is coming, Tyrant Man shall be o'erthrown, And the
fruitful fields of England, Shall be trod by beasts alone.
Rings shal .....
Number of words: 1091 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Canterbury Tales
<view this essay>.... can be to the way things are in the real World. Chaucer 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 .....
Number of words: 788 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Foreshadowing Destiny(great Ga
<view this essay>.... of blindness. Jordan, Daisy, Tom and the other "jet-setters" of the twenties drive recklessly; they would rather not know what lies beyond the corner than take precaution. So caught up in the frenzy of having fun, they risk thoughtlessly their own lives and the lives of others. Nick states to Jordan, "You're a rotten driver. Either you ought to be more careful, or you oughtn't drive." Jordan responds, "They'll keep out of my way. It takes two to make an accident." Fitzgerald attacks the motif of reckless driving vigorously, since it conveys precisely the vision he had of America. He saw twenties society as recklessly careless; the society was "driving on toward .....
Number of words: 481 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Essay On Jim In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn
<view this essay>.... and his children. In this one instance
Jim is risking his life to possibly find a better way for someone he loves. An
act such as this is an unselfish act that could possibly be rewarded with death.
Most characters wouldn't give unselfishly such as this. This is truly a
charater that is trying to do good and make the best of a bad situation, not for
himself but for others.
Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer were planning to free Niger Jim. He was
owned by Tom Sawyer's aunt and uncle. Before Tom arrived to his uncle's farm
Huck was already there and he stopped Tom before the Phelpses saw him. Tom hid
until that night when they planned to break Jim out. But .....
Number of words: 376 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Ignorance And Racism In Heart Of Darkness
<view this essay>.... a
racist.
Readers usually are good at detecting racism in a book or story.
Achebe tells us about Conrad's ability to hide racist remarks, "But Conrad
chose his subject well - one which was guaranteed not to put him in
conflict with psychological predisposition..." (Achebe, 253). By reading
Heart of Darkness for the second time I started to understand the hidden
racism in the book. I also discovered the racist remarks towards the
natives. Racism is portrayed in Conrad's book, but a reader must know that
back in the eighteen hundreds society didn't understand racism towards
"Blacks". Conrad's critics would have never called Conrad a racist, during
his time, b .....
Number of words: 1088 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Tom Clancy's Genius
<view this essay>.... Tom Clancy chose to write of conventional warfare and sometimes unconventional enemies. Between his novel Red Storm Rising and Debt of Honor, Tom Clancy makes evident the changing face of America’s enemies and threats, while staying true to issues that keep people interested in his books.
Published in 1986, Red Storm Rising is Tom Clancy’s second novel dealing with the former Soviet Union as a potential enemy. This was a time when America’s finest tank and infantry units went on exercises in Germany fully armed with the expectation that the Russians could attack them at any time. This was also a time when the Soviets did the same exercises with the same amou .....
Number of words: 1323 | Number of pages: 5 |
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