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Term Papers on Book Reports

Animal Farm: Struggle For Power
Number of words: 680 - Number of pages: 3

.... story takes place on what was originally called Manor Farm, but the animals rename it to Animal Farm, and when the pigs take over, they change the name back to Manor Farm. The time setting for this story is some point during the 1940’s. During the story, many characters are introduced. There are Jessie, the brown dog, who is friends with Boxer, a diligently working horse, and Snowball, a small pig exiled from the farm by Napoleon, the black pig, in the quest for power. There are also the other dogs on the farm, who had side things going on with Napoleon, and eventually took away Je .....

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The Riders: Summary And Analysis
Number of words: 639 - Number of pages: 3

.... Peter is the first person which scully encounters when he arrived in Ireland and from then on peter has become a good friend of scully, bringing him his telegrams, having a social chat and helping scully with his home. (34). Since the first greeting between peter and scully, peter has schown great enthusiasm to help scully recondition his home on page 24. This even meant putting off his daily post. “Haven't you got the post to do? Diversity, Mr Sculy thats my motto.” Peter Keneally is one of the characters which help reveal scully, his family and general detail of his wife to the rea .....

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Pride And Prejudice And The Edible Woman: Negative Effects Of The Society's Influence
Number of words: 1532 - Number of pages: 6

.... entreats her husband to go introduce himself. Mrs. Bennet describes Bingly as “a single man of large fortune; four or five thousand a year. What a fine thing for our girls!” (51). Bingly is immediately acceptable due to his money and connections, and Mrs. Bennet is already dreaming that one of her children will marry him. In fact, “the business of her life was to get her daughters married” (53). One of Elizabeth's close friends, Charlotte Lucas, feels “happiness in marriage is entirely a matter of chance” (69). She feels that marriage is a vehicle to gain wealth and connec .....

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Fiction Analysis Question # 1: Love And Acceptance
Number of words: 623 - Number of pages: 3

.... mothers compare their two daughters to each other. In Everyday Use the mother tells us that "Dee is lighter than Maggie, with nicer hair and a fuller figure." She Fahning -2-speaks of the fire that burned and scarred Maggie. She tells us how Maggie is not bright, how she shuffles when she walks. Comparing her with Dee whose feet vwere always neat-looking, as if God himself had shaped them." We also learn of Dee's "style" and the way she awes the other girls at school with it. The mother in I Stand Here Ironing speaks of Susan, "quick and articulate and assured, everything in appeara .....

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The Photographs Of Margaret Bourke-White: A Review
Number of words: 499 - Number of pages: 2

.... very interesting looking at her pictures taken from during the war. I would like to go downtown to take some grand view photographs, including lots of detailed subjects. I like to develop the pictures in black and white because it looks neat. White also does a good job of shooting pattern samples. I would also like to try and take more pattern samples. Two photographs that I enjoy are of an old man and a house in India. The first picture is titled, Too Weak to Stand, India, 1946. Under it states, “ When the rains come late, famine follows quickly in undernourished India. After the rice goes .....

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Themes And Contradictions In The Chronicle Of A Death Foretold
Number of words: 927 - Number of pages: 4

.... an excuse for not intervening or warning Santiago Nazar of his murder. Instead they said that “it was if he was already dead” . One person attempted to warn him by slipping a note under his door but he never got around to seeing it. That is another reason that the people believed fate got him there. Santiago Nazar died with dignity because when he falls on the ground after he was stabbed he got up to wipe off the dirt from his intestines. this gives off the idea that he accepted his murder and that he believed this was his fate. This event also determined the rest of Angela’s l .....

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H.m.s. Pinafore
Number of words: 533 - Number of pages: 2

.... were also two sets of stairs to the top deck. The brass railings really gave it a realistic feel to the whole thing. On the deck was a steering wheel and a bell and both of these things were used on numerous occasions. Also up there was another entrance/exit. As well as another by the cabin on the bottom as well as in the cabin. To stage right there was a movable rope holder that is a hug part of the ending. Lower stage right are typical supplies a ship would store, such as crates and extra rope. There are two exit/entrances used- one that is suppose to lead to the right end of .....

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The Dead
Number of words: 452 - Number of pages: 2

.... situation. But Gabriel takes it personally, because everything deals with him, and he gets angry/heated. c. Page 12 Gabriel gives a coin to Lily, the caretaker’s daughter, and she tried to refuse but he just keeps on walking. After leaving he was disappointed that a person would refuse his offers. He offered the coin to Lily to boost his ego. d. Pages 21-23 while dancing with Miss Ivors, she mentions to him that she has noticed his article in a Briton paper. Henceforth she gets on his case and he admits to not liking Ireland. He believes that the Irish are of lower standing, not very educa .....

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Huckleberry Finn Essay 2
Number of words: 837 - Number of pages: 4

.... than childhood similarities; in the novel, Huck becomes more than just another character. He becomes a vessel by which Mark Twain shares his views with the world. In the South where he lived, there was still much bitterness towards ex-slaves and this dictated what was proper and what was not. Instead of writing a manifesto of his views, these views were consolidated with Huck's character. Through Huck's eyes, we are not only able to see Twain's views but we also see them justified. Twain's satirical view of religion manifests itself when Miss Watson confronts Huck on the subject of .....

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Araby By James Joyce And A Sun
Number of words: 1646 - Number of pages: 6

.... had different attitudes and reactions to the initiation experience. In Araby, the reader learns of the boy’s initiation in the final sentence: "Gazing up into the darkness I saw myself as a creature driven and derided by vanity; andmy eyes burned with anguish and anger." The character had a negative reaction to his new awareness. His realization caused him to have feelings of shame, anguish and anger. He was possessed and controlled by his passion for Mangan’s older sister. His ideals of the girl were not realistic but were futile and vain. The girl drew out feelings in him and he dis .....

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