Subject Search for: Literature / English Literature
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281.16700 An Analysis of Political Objectives in The Power and the Glory by Graham Greene
The aim of this paper is to reveal how political aspects of The Power and the Glory are greater than the religous themes that arise in the novel. By examining the setting and character traits present in this author's writing style, we can learn why T.S. Eliot and others influenced Greene's outlook on Mexico in the 1930's Communist Revolution in this novel.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 3 source(s) listed
Filename: 16700 Greene Setting Political.doc
Price: US$26.85
282.16704 An Analysis of the Educational Development of the Character Victor in the Novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
This paper will seek to analyze the components of education in the main character, Victor, in the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. By realizing that Victor has only been educated in science, we can begin to understand that he is completely ignorant of ethics and morality when creating the monster. With this insight, we can surely see how Victor must invariably die in the end for avoiding responsibility for caring for the creature after he had made it. This is the major hole in Victor's education that is analyzed in this paper.
283.16713 An Analysis of Exile in The Wife?s Lament, The Wanderer, and The Seafarer Elegies
This paper will explain the main theme of exile in the renown Exeter texts: The Wanderer, The Wife?s Lament, and The Seafarer. By understanding the how lamentation for past lives creates sorrow for the author's of these texts, we can see how they feel exile from love, homelands, and relatives in their endless travels alone. By showing their isolation, we can see how they are exiled and seek to recover the love they have all lost in their lives.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 0 source(s) listed
Filename: 16713 Seafarer Wanderer Elegy.doc
Price: US$26.85
284.16717 Feminine Stereotypes in Chapter 9 of Paradise Lost
This 3 page, MLA style paper examines the use of feminine stereotypes in Milton?s Paradise Lost. The inappropriate use of stereotypes indicates almost a laziness on the part of the author because it leaves the impression that they simply couldn?t develop a real character. In the case of Milton?s Paradise Lost, Eve, as she appears in chapter nine, is a victim of very base stereotypes of femininity and women. Eve is a caricature of the weak woman who cannot fully exist without her mate, who cannot take care of herself.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 16717 milton paradise eve.doc
Price: US$26.85
285.16756 A Psychoanalytic View of Death in Oliver Twist
In this book, we may make a case for post-traumatic-stress-syndrome as it affects an entire society who has recently shifted from an agrarian life and mentality to an industrial one. The most prevalent psychological fascination for the author, and thus the overriding theme is death. It is the purpose, then, of this paper to demonstrate the psychology of death in Oliver
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 16756 Dickens Oliver Twist.doc
Price: US$44.75
286.16774 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
This paper examens "Sir Gawain and the Green Kngiht" for what it says about the time when it was written and for the way the use of romantic ideas of the villain are toyued with by the poet to develop an idea about chivarly and its power and about the Christian values which infuse this poem and reflect concerns of the social order of that time as well.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 4 source(s) listed
Filename: 16774 poem society knight.doc
Price: US$35.80
287.16880 ?I don?t want it for its religious value?: The Importance of Object in Salman Rushdie?s "The Prophet's Hair"
This 3-page undergraduate essay considers Salman Rushdie?s short story "The Prophet's Hair", focussing especially on the protagonist Hashim and the importance of the object of the relic in the story. This paper considers the importance of the relic in Rushdie?s story, arguing that the treatment of the relic in the story reveals important ideas about post-colonialism. The paper first examines the nature of the relic as symbol. The relic symbolizes the West?s fascination with Eastern mysticism, but also suggests the ways the East pokes fun of Western eagerness to find the magic in mundane objects and realities. The relic further symbolizes the corrupting power of abstract ideas such as power and religion, especially when unscrupulous individuals try to make those ideas tangible. Secondly, this paper considers the importance of the movement of the relic, suggesting that the slippage which occurs as the relic moves from the shrine, to Hashim?s house, and back to the shrine, suggests the slippage which occurs when individuals or populations cross state or cultural borders. Finally, this paper considers the importance of the relic as a collectable. In its conclusion, this paper suggests the beneficial messages which can be read from this story.