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» English Essays and Papers
Madama Bovary & Anna Karenina
<view this essay>.... rational decisions. It was Anna and Emma's
loss of reasoning and isolation that propelled them toward their
downfall.
Emma at the beginning of the novel was someone who made
active decisions about what she wanted. She saw herself as the master
of her destiny. Her affair with Rudolphe was made after her decision
to live out her fantasies and escape the ordinariness of her life and
her marriage to Charles. Emma's active decisions though were based
increasingly as the novel progresses on her fantasies. The lechery to
which she falls victim is a product of the debilitating adventures her
mind takes. These adventures are f .....
Number of words: 1502 | Number of pages: 6 |
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Nike Company Profile
<view this essay>.... promotion.
Nike deals in a very consumer orientated market. This means that the demand for the Nike's goods heavily depends on the popularity of the various fitness activities. The company adjusts continuously their product mix in order to meet demands. It manages its business carefully, leading in aggressive marketing styles and innovative products.
When P. Knight and B. Bowerman created Nike, they decided to create a company to win, for the "ultimate victory". This idea has been influencing Nike (the Greek Goddess of Victory) every day and it has been a dramatic success.
(millions of dollars) 1999 1984 1989
Total Revenue 8,777 3,790 1,711
Total Ne .....
Number of words: 2687 | Number of pages: 10 |
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Red Badge Of Courage
<view this essay>.... threshold he stopped, horror-stricken at the sight." "He was being looked at by a dead man who was seated with his back against a column-like tree."(46) The stark irony of a rotten corpse in a backdrop such as the isolated chapel deep in the forest works well with its explicit detail and the realization it brings to Henry about just how real the war is.
This also brings about a great feeling of loneliness, which is one of the many stages that Henry goes through during the story. Henry feels isolated by his cowardly actions. Trying to justify his act of running, he compares himself to a squirrel that ran from an acorn that he had just thrown. By sayin .....
Number of words: 728 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Getting To Know The Caged Bird
<view this essay>.... Loomis, and cartoonist Jules Feiffer and his wife, Judy, in 1970. After the inspiration arose, Angelou began her “rigid work on yellow legal pads” (pg. 9) where she let her ideas flow. The content of those legal pads resulted in a bestseller, of which contained Maya Angelou’s flowing style, the use of dialect, settings, and characterization.
Dialect is very influential to the tone of Angelou’s autobiography, as it was to the tone of Herman Melville’s Billy Budd. It was only through the dialect that the reader was able to understand Billy’s character. As in Billy Budd, Angelou uses dialect in her writings to enhance the tone .....
Number of words: 823 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Lord Of The Flies
<view this essay>.... they are inexperienced on how to handle grave situations. Considering they are all by themselves, their environment forcefully arranges them into two groups.
One of the groups is the hunters which will go out and kill animals for food. This group must be created, otherwise, all the characters shall die. The boy who will take on this challenge will be Jack. Jack, at the beginning of the novel, was a very considerate and caring. An example of this takes place in chapter one where he is about to kill a pig but did not have the heart to do it. However as the novel proceeds, his environment, the forest, and his new role of hunter will change him to an uncari .....
Number of words: 795 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Catcher In The Rye 5
<view this essay>.... to make him out to be a rough tough
boy. "Boy, I sat at that goddam bar till around one o'clock or so, getting drunk as a
bastard. I could hardly see straight." (pg. 150) Holden tried all he could to fit in. He
drank, cursed and criticized life in general to make it seem he was very knowing of these
habits. Holden used the term 'phonies' to describe more than a few people in this book.
He used the term to be what a person is if they don't act naturally and follow other
people's manners and grace. Holden didn't like phonies, he thought of them as if they
were trying to show off. He didn't like it when they showed off because it seemed so fake
and .....
Number of words: 443 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Words On "To His Coy Mistress"
<view this essay>.... time still flows by for them both. As the water flows, this concept
begins to hint at the shortness of time, for them to have sex, the source of new
life. He then proceeds to claim that he could love her ten years before the
flood, something already ancient, and up to the end of the world, using the
juxtapositioning of the two views of time enhance his argument and to convince
to accept his offer by telling her of his long-term commitment for her in the
short-term. This flood also symbolizes life in the fresh start of the new
covenant. Because time keeps going, with or without them, they must be active
participants and not just the static spectator. Otherw .....
Number of words: 818 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Scarlett Letter 2
<view this essay>.... punishment by her mocking and nagging of Hester. Throughout the novel she sometimes seemed to her mother as almost a witch baby (Matthiessen 104). She is a baffling mixture of strong emotions with a fierce temper and a capacity for evil. With Pearl, Hester’s life became one of constant nagging, and no joy. The child could not be made amenable to rules. Hester even remarks to herself, “Oh Father in heaven – if thou art still my father – what is this being which I have brought into the world” (Hawthorne 89)? Pearl would harass her mother Piyasena/Pine 2 over the scarlet “A” she wore. In time, Hester was subjecte .....
Number of words: 1137 | Number of pages: 5 |
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