Paper University  
Search Papers:   
HOME INSTANT ACCESS MEMBERS LOGIN QUESTIONS CONTACT US
PAPER CATEGORIES
       Arts & Movies
       Book Reports
       Creative Writing
       English
       Finance & Money
       Geography & Places
       History
       Legal Issues
       Medicine & Nutrition
       Miscellaneous
       Music & Musicians
       People & Biographies
       Poetry & Poets
       Politics & Government
       Religion
       Science & Nature
       Society
       Technology
 
Book Reports Term Papers and Reports
The Great Gatsby: Importance Of Daisy
635 Words - 3 Pages

.... of the book but half way through the novel she meets Gatsby and remembers him from her past and then falls in love with him. Daisy lack of love for any one man as she says on page 133 "I did love him once- but I love you to" ,destroys everyone’s lives in the novel. In the beginning she fails to love Tom Buchanan which in a way drives him away to Myrtle which destroys Mr. Wilson’s life. Then she gets Gatsby killed by killing Myrtle in the car accident leading Mr. Wilson to believe that Gatsby was driving the car which hit Myrtle and killed her. So Mr. Wilson kills Gatsby as revenge and then commits suicide. Daisy just can’t find real love so she dates many men and wish ....


Anne Hutchinson
4838 Words - 18 Pages

.... the traditional subordinate role of women in Puritan society by expressing her own religious convictions. was born Anne Marbury in Alford, England, in 1591. Anne's father was a deacon at Christ Church, Cambridge. Francis Marbury spoke out earnestly about his convictions that many of the ordained ministers in the Church of England were unfit to guide people's souls. For this act of defiance, he was put in jail for one year. Undaunted, Francis Marbury continued to voice his radical opinions, including that many ministers were appointed haphazardly by high church officials to preach in any manner they wanted. Eventually, Anne's father did restrain his verbal attacks on the Ch ....


With And Without The State In
1825 Words - 7 Pages

.... exemplifies an age-old repression of a people without hope because of an outside world that suppresses them. This eyewitness account demonstrates how the outside world does not provide resolutions their desolate existence and to help alleviate the conditions of daily life. The distance between the state, the outer world and the people, the inner world, creates an ignorance that the state refuses to attend. It is widely known the two factors for the makeup of a civilization lies in the people and the state or the state and its people. Without one or the other to depend on, reliance hinders stability. The functional branch or government in Rome i ....


Critique Of "The Invisible Man"
1758 Words - 7 Pages

.... he had to act the exact opposite of an educated man. He had to rely upon his own primitive brutality to insure his education. He was then mocked by having to recite a speech he was to memorize, which showed the total disrespect the people who were giving the scholarship had for the future students. After getting into school, a simple job turned into an unforeseen disaster that would change his life forever. He was to chauffeur Mr. Norton, a founder of the college he attended. Mr. Norton was a well educated but very ignorant man. He felt that the college was doing all of the good that could be done. He had no idea of the evils that dwelled upon the grounds. Dr ....


The Great Gatsby: Jay Gatsby's Great Morals And Lack Of Glamour
703 Words - 3 Pages

.... jobs. At the age of seventeen, "James Gatz" had died and became Jay Gatsby. He felt this name represented his goals of life, which were to be rich, successful, and to win Daisy's love. Some may believe he changes his lifestyle to suit himself but it could be assumed that he was doing this for another reason, which may be the need for love. On top of all this, he wants to escape his background and past. Gatsby's life changed from being in the low or middle class to the high class. It is a big mystery of how he receives all this money but it is not from Cody. It is believed that he is a bootlegger. No one was ever sure. In this story, one can relate Jay's character ....


Critiscisms Of My Antonia
1334 Words - 5 Pages

.... Time," Willa Cather's novel, My Antonia, is "defective in structure." (Bloom 51) Its structure is basically based on the narrators', which is Cather herself, point of view about when the main character, Jim Burden, remembers specific moments in an abstract pattern in his life about his Antonia. This is so because the collection of books that make up the novel, My Antonia, is about Willa Cather; the narrator's idea of what and to what point Jim Burden remembers. Miller also states that the novel "lacks focus and abounds in irrelevancies." (Wells 1) This is due to the fact that Cather didn't provide and consistent character portrayal throughout her novel. Another critic, K ....


Great Expectations 2
551 Words - 3 Pages

.... Magwich tells Pip that he’ll never forget his kindness and will remember Pip always and forever. This is the beginning of Pip’s dynamic change. In order to make more money Pip’s uncle sends Pip to a psychotic old ladies house named Mrs. Havisham. Mrs. Havisham is a mean and nasty character who constantly bickers at Pip and tells him of his unimportance. Pip continues to be mild mannered and respectful to Mrs. Havisham yet he begins to see that he will never get ahead in life just being nice. Mrs. Havisham uses Pip as sort of a guinea pig to feel her passion of revenge against men. She does this by using her daughter Estella to torment Pip. Pip’s firs ....


The Glass Menagerie: Internal War
785 Words - 3 Pages

.... “a bastard son of a bastard” (6.125). The only thing keeping Tom from leaving his family is that he feels he needs to take care of his mother and sister. Every time his mother tries to take control of his life, Tom thinks about how his father left and how much better life could be if he did the same thing. Tom doesn’t want to be stuck at home all his life with the responsibility of his mother and sister. In the end, Tom walks down the fire escape for the last time “following in [his] father’s footsteps” (7). No matter how much he tries to be better than his father is he ends up walking out just like him. Amanda is the one that tries to control Tom and burd ....



« prev  442  443  444  445  446  447  448  449  450  451  next »

 
HOME INSTANT ACCESS MEMBERS LOGIN QUESTIONS CANCEL MEMBERSHIP CONTACT US
Copyright © 2006 Paper University