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Book Reports Term Papers and Reports |
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Social Class Distinction In Madame Bovary: A Way Of Categorizing People
1332 Words - 5 Pages.... full rank of bourgeois. Because the level of one’s social
class status is determined so much by appearances, an individual can keep
up a good front and be accepted into the circle when they are out of town
where no-one knows the truth. Both Emma and Homais followed this practice
in their pursuits to really belong. “Madame Bovary” is about a sense of
self, a search for personal identity and reality versus illusion. The
symbolism throughout the story is clearly indicative of this fact (Barron’s
5).
To what social class did the characters belong, in reality, in appearance?
Did they move from one class to another during the story? In the following
pages I will respond ....
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“The Hand”
441 Words - 2 Pages.... not really know the man before she married him and yet she thought he was a good person. After examining the hand I think she sees a part of him that went unnoticed before. She realizes that she doesn’t really know him and that he may not be as sweet and kind as she had imagined. She is now able to see the nasty side of him. When she cries out she seems to be almost afraid of the hand meaning she is actually afraid of him. When the hand is moved she is calmed again, but only until the morning when she sees it again. I still do not understand why she kisses it. She gives in and accepts the fact that she will see the hand every day and constantly be reminded of the fa ....
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A Freudian Turn Of The Screw
950 Words - 4 Pages.... were hidden messages.
Henry James can capture a reader by the imagination and hard thinking. There is enough evidence to convince proponents of either opinion. It’s probably not so much the evidence as it is the predilection of the proponent that determines their choice. A person who has an imaginative soul or who finds it easy to rise above the mundane restrictions of everyday life would probably argue that Peter Quint and Miss Jessel are ghosts, where as a more logical thinker with a literal sense of mind would probably search out the explanation in psychopathology. The decision is really left up to the reader.
Henry James use of symbolism in The Turn of the Scre ....
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Report On Book Titled Black Li
1747 Words - 7 Pages.... than a follower… more of an activist. I stand for my rights as well as other people’s rights.
I was very secure in my feelings through the book in that I was brought up to have an open mind about others racial backgrounds as well as my own. The whole concept of someone disliking someone else due to a racial difference baffles me. Differences between people are the one thing that holds are species together. We embrace it, but yet use it to discriminate, separate, and emotionally destroy others.
In Black Like Me, John was a white man that stepped into the dark dismal life of a black man in the Southern region of the United States. He thought that he had prepare ....
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Lives Of Dystopia Can Be Changed
2147 Words - 8 Pages.... seems that they are being held hostage or being kept in prisons, yet they are almost completely free. Winston is living life on camera because of the telescreens that watch his every move, and Offred’s life is supervised by Aunts and guards regardless of the situation. She is taken to the bathroom, watched while she sleeps, and even though she is constantly being watched, her face cannot be seen. She wears white wings on her face so that no one can see her and the only way she can see out is by sneaking short peeks at the outside world.
In both of these books, 1984 and The Handmaid’s Tale, the main characters know that the controlled lifestyle that they are living is w ....
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Character Analysis Of Arthur Dimmesdale In "The Scarlet Letter"
475 Words - 2 Pages.... largest flaw. His body refuses
to do what his heart says is right. Dimmesdale instructs Hester to reveal
the truth, but when she refuses he doesnÿt have the willpower to confess
himself. Therefore, his sin becomes even larger than hers, because while
hers is an exposed sin. He continues to lie to himself and his followers
by keeping his secret hidden, so his is a concealed sin. Here Hawthorne
shows us just how strong Dimmesdale actually is, by allowing him to hide
his sin and bear the weight of it, he creates an extremely interesting and
tremendously strong character.
The scaffold is the place that Dimmesdale shows the amount of pain
and self-loathing he is truly ca ....
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Coming Of Age In Mississippi
593 Words - 3 Pages.... make ends meet after her father left to be with another women. Her mother had more children and married again, but Anne’s relationship with her stepfather was very shaky. He thought Anne was too outspoken for her own good.
Racism surrounded Anne and even though she was young she challenged it. She wanted to know why, whites went to other schools, and why she couldn’t tutor whites who needed help. She also wanted to understand why blacks were being mistreated, beat, and even killed for no other reason but their color. The event in Anne’s childhood followed her into adolescence. Anne’s challenging spirit was growing. This caused a bad relationship with her m ....
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Your Chemical World
5608 Words - 21 Pages.... painting, hence the archaic cave paintings found in Southern Europe. Today we use chemistry to build our houses, to drive to work everyday, even toasting your toast in the morning. Because chemistry is our link to the hidden world of the earth’s terrestrial fruits like Silicon or Iron our hands will be forever bound to chemistry. The book starts off with our beginning and the unlikely usage of chemistry in pre-historic times. Our ancestors were more then likely concerned primarily with staying alive. Certain things are needed to do that, like food, shelter, energy, and drink. Once those needs were meet our Neanderthal brethren made some archaicaly beautiful cave paintings. ....
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