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Term Papers on Book Reports |
Dances With Wolves
Number of words: 432 - Number of pages: 2.... to change. Dunbar only goes out because he wants to see the frontier, or land that hasn’t been settled. This just so happens to be Indian land. As the story progresses, Dunbar befriends the tribe, turns against his Northern army, and goes to live with the Sioux. The tone here is a more warm and friendly environment, because Dunbar realizes that his new friends are more civil than men of his own kind.
Things really start to turn around when Dunbar’s troops find out that he has joined the Sioux. They trap him and beat him, then make him serve as a slave. Dunbar never ends up goin .....
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The Lord Of The Flies: A Picture Of Our Society Today
Number of words: 1059 - Number of pages: 4.... society is much like this
as today's society is also about survival and what choices we make to
survive.
The mini-society started off peaceful. The purpose was to set a
signal fire and live off fruit until help came. The conflict came when
the fire and hunting could not be committed to at the same time. As the
fire was a 24 hour task and hunting needed the whole party, the party
started to take sides. Ralph's fire would be the sensible thing to do to
get rescued however hunting would lift the standard of living for all the
boys and would also be a luxury, recreational event. The fire .....
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Guest House
Number of words: 1229 - Number of pages: 5.... Mr. Bingley. He doesn’t tell them straight out that he has been to visit him, because he knows they’re all dying to meet him. So, he teases them about it first by telling them that hey may be the ones to introduce him to some of the other neighbors. They still don’t catch on until he drops the bomb that he’s already been to visit. He enjoys their shocked reaction, but doesn’t stick around. In this chapter we find out that Lizzy (the fathers favorite) is the second daughter. We also find out that one of the other daughter’s name is Kitty and she has an annoying cough and is really .....
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The Interesting Narrative Of Olaudah Equiano
Number of words: 1072 - Number of pages: 4.... they did not “round up” the Africans themselves they would trade goods for slaves which caused tribes to attack other tribes for more slaves to increase their own wealth and status. These two factors left damage to the African tribes.
Equiano recalls that the slaves taken by his Ibo people were almost treated as one of the family. The slaves do the same amount of work that any other member of the family would do. When Equiano reached the West Indies he saw the Africans being literally worked to death, because they were so numerous and wouldn’t lose money if they perished. Another princ .....
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Crime And Punishment: Is There Or Is There Not Such A Thing As Crime?
Number of words: 1017 - Number of pages: 4.... way to define crime is through ethics and morals. Each person
on this Earth possesses a conscience; when we do something wrong, our conscience
makes us feel guilty, although some people feel less or more guilt than others
about certain acts; it varies individually. Based on this, one can define a
crime as the things that make us feel guilty, although some crimes do not make
us feel guilty. Some people do not feel any guilt when committing immoral acts;
these people are deemed psychopaths or sociopaths by society. For example, most
people do not feel guilty when they break th .....
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My Antonia: A Review
Number of words: 1043 - Number of pages: 4.... pronoun "I" makes you feel his personal involvement. The point of
view is immediate and subjective. Looking back on his memories, he knows
what is eventually going to happen to the characters. He persuades you to
sympathize with all of them. His perception, being broad and persuasive,
sets the tone for the whole book. What is the purpose of having the story
told by Jim Burden thirty years later? From that perspective he can
present with great clarity and tenderness the highlights of his memories.
A man of the world, he is reinvestigating his values. Jim Burden sets down
everything the .....
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Scarlet Letter 3
Number of words: 1293 - Number of pages: 5.... open up and be themselves. It is here [the forest] that Dimmesdale openly acknowledges Hester and his love for her. It is also here, in the forest, that Hester does the same for Dimmesdale. The forest is where the two of them engage in conversation, without the constraints that Puritan society places on them.
The forest is the very embodiment of freedom. Nobody watches in the woods to report misbehavior, thus it is here that people may do as they wish. To independent spirits, such as Hester Prynne's, the wilderness beckons her: “Throw off the shackles of law and religion. What good .....
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Frankenstein: Morality
Number of words: 773 - Number of pages: 3.... be twice the power and possibly twice the evil,
which could hurt or kill his family. When and if Frankenstein commits the moral
sin of creating another monster he may be rid of both monsters forever. "With
the companion you bestow I will quit the neighbourhood of man,"(pg 142) promises
the morally corrupt monster to the doctor upon the completion of his partner.
When the doctor, if and when he, finished his first creation's mate there is a
chance that the monsters will not keep their promise and stay in Europe envoking
fear into townfolk.
The good doctor, trying to act morally, des .....
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Nineteen Eighty-Four: A Grim P
Number of words: 1083 - Number of pages: 4.... about.
Perhaps the book seems so bleak because the events in the book are a somewhat logical projection from
current conditions and historical environment that Orwell observed in 1948. Perhaps people would be more
comftorble with the book if they could rule out in their minds the possibility of the profecy becoming a
reality.
In a critique of his own work, Orwell called Nineteen Eighty-Four “A work of a future terrible [sic] because it
rests on a fiction and can not be substantiated by reality or truth. “ But perhaps this future is realizing itself
more than Orwell tho .....
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The Joy Luck Club: Differences Between Generations
Number of words: 688 - Number of pages: 3.... grew up during perilous times in China. They all were taught "to desire nothing, to swallow other people’s misery, to eat [their] own bitterness." (p. 241) Though not many of them grew up terribly poor, they all had a certain respect for their elders, and for life itself. These Chinese mothers were all taught to be honorable, to the point of sacrificing their own lives to keep any family members’ promise. Instead of their daughters, who "can promise to come to dinner, but if she wants to watch a favorite movie on TV, she no longer has a promise" (p. 42), "To Chinese people, four .....
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