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Everyday Use
Number of words: 522 - Number of pages: 2.... Dee controls the world with her hands; she can do whatever she wants.
Another example that exposes the reality of Maggie is that even her mother treats them differently. Dee is the perfect girl while Maggie is just a normal person. Her mother dreams with Dee; even in her dreams she believes that Dee is perfect. In her dream, there are only three persons: Herself, Dee, and the TV guy. "Sometime I dream a dream in which De and I are suddenly brought together on a TV program…" those were the words of her mother. Maggie's name was never mentioned in the dream.
The descriptions that the .....
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Creation Of Reality In 1984
Number of words: 491 - Number of pages: 2.... from the creation of reality, in 1984 is that there is no bad news, and that makes the general population happier.
Reality is also created in today's society. It is done in a more indirect and subtle way. The media in the world today, uses its power to present its opinion, or view the way it wants. People will believe that what the media tells them is the truth, because the media is always thought of as an unbiased source for information. This is not always the case. The news is written by people, and people will always have their own opinion on an issue. The person who writes an ar .....
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Huckleberry Finn - A Racist No
Number of words: 648 - Number of pages: 3.... the hairball's powers. This
type of naivete was abundant at the time and found among all races-the
result of a lack of proper education. So the depiction of Jim is not
negative in the sense that Jim is stupid and inferior, and in this
aspect of the story clearly there is no racism intended.
It is next necessary to analyze the way white characters treat Jim
throughout the book. Note that what the author felt is not the way
most characters act around Jim, and his feelings are probably only
shown through Huck. In the South during that period, black people w .....
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The Use Of Symbolism In The Gl
Number of words: 1021 - Number of pages: 4.... the victrola, draws further back into herself. Now a terrible desperation fills the apartment, and Tom decides he must escape the suffocating environment to follow his own calling. The fire escape to him represents a path to the outside world. For Laura, the fire escape is exactly the opposite--a path to the safe world inside, a world in which she can hide. Especially symbolic is Laura's fall when descending the steps to do a chore for her mother, after leaving the security of the apartment. This fall symbolizes Laura's inability to function in society and the outside world. For Amanda, the f .....
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Robert Frost 3
Number of words: 927 - Number of pages: 4.... dimensions transcend any region. Although his verse forms are traditional--he often said, in a dig at archival Carl Sandburg, that he would as soon play tennis without a net as write free verse--he was a pioneer in the interplay of rhythm and meter and in the poetic use of the vocabulary and inflections of everyday speech. His poetry is thus both traditional and experimental, regional and universal.
After his father's death in 1885, when young Frost was 11, the family left California and settled in Massachusetts. Frost attended high school in that state, entered Dartmouth College, but remai .....
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Hamlet - The Tragedy Of Hamlet
Number of words: 914 - Number of pages: 4.... he is hiding behind the arras in Gertrude's room. This shows how Polonius, a man unaware of the true nature of the situation he is in, is killed by a member of the royalty during the execution of one of their schemes. This makes Polonius' death a tragedy.
The next member of Polonius' family to die is his daughter Ophelia. Ophelia's death is tragic because of her complete innocence in the situation. Some may argue that Polonius deserves his fate because of his deceitfulness in dealing with Hamlet while he is mad, but Ophelia is entirely manipulated and used by Hamlet and the king for .....
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Kurt Vonnegut And Slaughter-Ho
Number of words: 3915 - Number of pages: 15.... cursed us and threw rocks as we carried bodies to huge funeral pyres in the city."
Freed from his captivity by the Red Army's final onslaught against Nazi Germany and returned to America, the soldier - Kurt Vonnegut Jr. - tried for many years to put into words what he had experienced during that horrific event. At first, it seemed to be a simple task. "I thought it would be easy for me to write about the destruction of Dresden, since all I would have to do would be to report what I had seen," Vonnegut noted. It took him more than twenty years, however, to produce Slaughterhouse-Five, or The .....
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A Considerable Speck - Compared To 4 Other Poems
Number of words: 1321 - Number of pages: 5.... superior to everyone, and that he can change the society of Camelot simply by introducing technology.
Hank becomes "the boss" of Camelot, and begins his plans to free the serfs and establish a republic. However his plans are destined to fail because he is incapable of understanding values that are different from his own; he is the ultimate know-it all, and sets out to remake the world in his own image. He is given "the choicest suite of apartments in the castle, after the king’s"(Twain 31), but he criticizes them because they lack the conveniences of the nineteenth .....
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A Modest Proposal: An Analysis
Number of words: 1466 - Number of pages: 6.... the rest of their lives, they will contribute
to the feeding and clothing of many people. Any intelligent person would
assume he intends to put them in factories or farms to work and not be on
the streets begging for food. We are also told that his plan will prevent
voluntary abortions and women murdering their bastard babies.
The narrator shows the reader he is serious by producing
calculations that appear to be well thought-out and then showing us,
through examples, That these children have no future.
Up to this point the narrator appears to be intelligent. He is
from the .....
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A Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man
Number of words: 809 - Number of pages: 3.... student, Cranly, asks him. "I tried to love God," Stephen replies. "It seems now I failed."
The force that eventually unites these contradictory Stephens is his overwhelming desire to become an artist, to create. At the novel's opening we see him as an infant artist who sings "his song." Eventually we'll see him expand that song into poetry and theories of art. At the book's end he has made art his religion, and he abandons family, Catholicism, and country to worship it.
The name Joyce gave his hero underscores this aspect of his character. His first name comes from St. Stephen, the firs .....
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