|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
Book Reports Term Papers and Reports |
|
|
A Man For All Seasons Guilty P
810 Words - 3 Pages.... acceptance of the divorce would allow it to proceed without immense public revolt. King Henry promises More, “not to pursue me [More] on this matter [the divorce]”(54), but after More accepted the Chancellor position, King Henry began badgering him to help him with the affair. The badgering and erratic behaviour became more violent towards More as he perpetually declined to comment on the divorce. Despite that King Henry promised again to More, “There, you have my word – I’ll leave you out of it” (56), he hired Cromwell to pressure More into making a statement. King Henry became so obsessed with trying to achieve More’s ac ....
|
Symbolism- The Chrysanthemums
447 Words - 2 Pages.... the season being December, all attributes to the overall feeling of death.
At the begging of the story Steinbeck set the tone of the story. "The high gray-flannel fog of winter…made the valley like a closed pot." Here the tone is very plainly presented, it’s cold and foggy, a sense of dark, even perhaps death can be seen. It is intrusting to note the parallel and symbolism between the clay pot and the valley Elisa. It is almost as if Elisa was to leave the valley, like the Chrysanthemums, she would be dumped out on the "road of life"
The chrysanthemums are the most powerful symbol in the story. Not only do the flowers represent motherhood for Elisa, they also ....
|
Animal Farm And The Russian Revolution
607 Words - 3 Pages.... as white Russia, and of course the evil dogs of Napoleon who inspire the role as the secret police of Joseph Stalin. Both the novel and Russian Revolution cover the same ideas because of these reasons. In the Russian Revolution an irresponsible leader name "Nicholas the second" or how people in those days refer to him as "the Czar" was overthrown by a new leader with better ideas and ways to keep Russia alive, he was Lenin! But then he was betrayed by one of his communist comrades, Stalin. Stalin ruled for a great period of time, but everyone knows there is no such thing as immortality, and so he got kicked out too! This time by his own people. In Animal Farm a boar name "Old ....
|
Reasons For The Downfall Of Ma
547 Words - 2 Pages.... she could learn about actually reality. The other girls didn't have this problem. They could distinguish between fantasy and reality. This failure to distinguish between the two was Emma's "tragic flaw.'
Emma had read about these ideas in books, but instead of viewing these concepts as fantasy, she viewed them as reality, and later in life, acted as if that was the normal thing to do. Anything different, anything that deviated from her current life appealed to Emma. What was new was romantic, exciting, bold, and adventurous. She perceived Charles to be a character from one of her books when she met him. He was fairly attractive, but most of all, he was a doctor! He was a man ....
|
Pygmalion: Professor Higgins' Philosophy
716 Words - 3 Pages.... lives by a variety of variations of this philosophy.
It is easily seen how Higgins follows this theory. He is consistently
rude towards Eliza, Mrs. Pearce, and his mother. His manner is the same to each
of them, in accordance to his philosophy. However the Higgins we see at the
parties and in good times with Pickering is well mannered. This apparent
discrepancy between Higgins' actions and his word, may not exist, depending on
the interpretation of this theory.
There are two possible translations of Higgins' philosophy. It can be
viewed as treating everyone the same all of the time or treating everyone
equally at a particular time.
It is obviou ....
|
Summary Of Terkel's My American Century
860 Words - 4 Pages.... isn't what
led this man to the Klan, or what he did with them. The thing that really
got me was how much this man changed over the course of time. When he
first joined the Klan, it was because he needed a group to fit into that
related to his problems, and he needed to direct his anger and hostility
toward someone- that someone happened to be blacks.
The reading doesn't really concentrate on all of the things he did
as a Klan member, except to say that he did particularly “hate” one of the
black people in town more than most-Ann Atwater. He claimed to hate her
specifically because every time he went into town, she was leading some
kind of demonstration. I didn't thin ....
|
Antigone
489 Words - 2 Pages.... and fulfilling
reverence. Creon's notion of justice in OK stems directly from the divine. That which the gods
have decreed must become law. It pains Creon to have Oedipus exiled, but he must do so as
the gods have willed it. Creon's respect for divinity and prophecy seems to be his defining trait
in OK. His attitude is one of unquestioning reverence.
In Oedipus at Colonus (OC), one sees the beginning of Creon's decline. Creon has now
come to occupy the throne that once belonged to Oedipus. It soon becomes apparent that his
vision of the proper role of a king has changed to accommodate his new-found position. The
emphasis shifts from that of a king who must rule wisely ....
|
The Stone Angel
855 Words - 4 Pages.... not
like her at all. Hagar feels anger at her mother for Daniel's illness,
"But all I could think of was that meek woman I'd never seen, the woman Dan
was said to resemble so much and from whom he'd inherited a frailty I could
not help but detest, however much a part of me wanted to sympathize. To
play at being her - it was beyond me." (p. 25) Hagar's father sent her to
school out east to learn how to become a proper lady. After coming back
from college to become a proper lady, Hagar wanted to teach school but her
father wouldn't allow it. Hagar, instead, kept her father's accounts and
played hostess. Hagar meets Bram Shipley three years later and decides to
marry him. ....
|
|
|
|
|
Copyright © 2006 Paper University |
|
|
|
|
|