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Book Reports Term Papers and Reports |
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Winston Smith's Downfall
509 Words - 2 Pages.... indoctrinated completely on the
goodness of the Thought Police and Big Brother. Mandatory children's groups,
The Spies, encouraged children to turn their parents in if they were caught
committing thoughtcrime. The English language was being destroyed by the Party,
who's language, Newspeak was beginning to become used more frequently. The
object of Newspeak was to reduce the number of words in one's vocabulary,
therefore reducing one's opportunity to have free thought. At the Ministry of
Truth, Newspeak words were being used to transform all literary works of the
past into an acceptable state for the present. It was factors such as these
that prompted the intellectual reb ....
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I Stand Here Ironing Literary
1060 Words - 4 Pages.... when he was very tiny, just like Tillie had to leave her daughter: "She was a miracle to me, but when she was eight months old I had to leave her daytimes with the woman downstairs to whom she was no miracle at all." We both did what we had to do.
I wasn't able to spend a lot of time with Charles when he was a baby because I worked seven days a week on a split shift. Circumstances had changed by the time he was a year old, to where I could stay home, but by then he was walking and talking some. I barely new him, just as Tillie barely knew her daughter when she got her back: "When she finally came home, I hardly knew her." Soon, I had another child (Kevin) and less tim ....
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Drawing Names In The Lottery
441 Words - 2 Pages.... is assigned to a remote trading post near a tribe of Sioux Indians, his sworn enemies. Communications between them are limited, and the Indian tribe describes white men as “dumb and useless.” The feeling is mutual, too. White men then considered Indians as barbaric, uncivilized, and also useless. These two groups of people acted extremely hostile towards each other.
But that is sure 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 ....
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Love And Marriage
1018 Words - 4 Pages.... to have their share of vexation, and it is better to know as little as possible of the defects of the person with whom you are to pass your life. (21)
These lines, uttered by Charlotte Lucas, typify the prevalent opinion that marriage is not bound by the idea of "felicity." It is logical to assume that, since Charlotte does not see marriage as a relationship founded on emotion, she must see it as a institution of status -- not love. This strongly pragmatic view of marriage is also shared by Mrs. Bennet. However, due to the intelligence, or lack thereof, displayed by Mrs. Bennet, it seems that her practical view of marriage results from a conditioning brought about by ....
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Universial Themes In "The Return Of The Native" And "Great Expectations"
1239 Words - 5 Pages.... are considered classics because of their timeless
themes.
Thomas Hardy's The Return of the Native displays a theme of chance.
Book First, chapter 8 contains a perfect example. Eustacia persuades young
Johnny Nunsuch into helping her feed a fire. She dismisses him and begins
to walk home. Before reaching home, he is frightened by the light coming
from the heath and returns to discover Wildeve meeting with Eustacia. By
pure chance, Venn discovers the boy and quizzes him.
“Then I came down here, and I was afeard, and I went back; but I didn't
like to speak to her, because of the gentleman, and I came on here again”
[Johnny Nunsuch]
“ A gentleman--ah! What did she say ....
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The Effects Of Catch 22
1017 Words - 4 Pages.... Daneeka's two assistants failed
ever to find anything wrong with him, which deeply perturbed him. The war also
caused Doc Daneeka to lose his wife after his "death." The war that was imposed
on Doc Daneeka ravaged his life and terminated all of his chances to become a
normal, practicing doctor.
Before the war arrives on Doc Daneeka's doorstep, it appears to have
benefitted him. Doc Daneeka was making a nice sum of money from various illegal
means. He received kickbacks from drug stores in the area that ran an illegal
operation. He also utilized beauty parlors to perform two or three abortions a
week to bring in more revenue. When the war begins, Doc Daneeka's practic ....
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The Necklace: Mathlide's Downfall
466 Words - 2 Pages.... dreams in which she has the life of ease and riches. Pride comes to place when she is complaining to her husband about the way hey live and how she deserves more than this. When they discover that they have been invited to a big party, she feels she must live up to her pride. Knowing without a doubt that they have no money, she wants to have a beautiful dress and along with the dress she gets a radiant necklace from Mrs. Forrestier.
The incident in which Mathlide loses the necklace plays an active role in Mathlide’s pride. Mathlide refuses to endure embarrassment by telling Mrs. Forrestier that she lost her necklace, so she goes and replaces the necklace. Her pride will no ....
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Lives Of Saints: Christina's Strength In Resisting Society's Demands
488 Words - 2 Pages.... Nino Ricci's novel
Lives of the Saints, it is only the most tenacious that can resist caving in to
the pressure.
Often, this deviance can harm others, not just the dissident. Vittorio is
continually badgered for the deeds his mother performed, and he is too innocent
to realize that, her independence of spirit is the reason. As well, Cristina's
father does not see past the cloud which has slowly been built up in Valle del
Sole. The cloud which prevents most people from seeing how the failure to be an
individual rules the town, and how anyone with the nerve to be unique is
ostracized. Cristina's father's failure to understand this leads to the decline
and eventually their ....
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