Subject Search for: Literature / English Literature
Every college term paper and essay listed below can be purchased and downloaded instantly. If you can't find your exact topic just order a customized term paper and our writers can write one from scratch just for you. Our Web site is open 24-hours so you can order at any time.
309.21613 Literary Analysis: A Rejection of Death in the Poem: ?Do Not Go Gentle Into that Good Night? by Dylan Thomas
This paper will analyze the poem "Do not go gentle into that good night" by Dylan Thomas. By understanding Thomas's fear of death, we can break down this poem as a philosophical plea to preserve life over death. By understanding philosophers, such as Socrates and Sartre, we can unveil death in the scope of this poem created by Dylan Thomas at the time of his father's death.
Pages: 6
Bibliography: 5 source(s) listed
Filename: 21613
Price: US$53.70
310.21636 The Monstrous Parent: Fatherhood and Responsibility in Mary Shelley?s Frankenstein
This 4-page graduate essay describes and explains Victor's father/son relationship with his creature in Mary Shelley?s Frankenstein. This paper explores Victor?s responsibility with his family, science and friends and includes references to metaphors. This paper uses three scholarly articles and the primary text to argue that Victor approaches fatherhood through the modern idea of science, and thus enters into his parenthood role selfishly, wishing to create but not wishing to embrace the difficult aspects of fatherhood. Victor fails in his duties both as father and as person, since fatherhood and citizenship and humanity are shown to be connected in Shelley?s text. In using science to create an overly controlling, monstrously maternal version of fatherhood, Victor absconds his duties as a person and a father by refusing to take responsibility for his child. Thus, this essay argues that Frankenstein is a cautionary tale concerning the impact of lack of responsibility on kinship networks.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 4 source(s) listed
Filename: 21636
Price: US$35.80
311.21746 A Character Analysis of Pandarus: The Theme of Love as Madness in Troilus and Cressida
This paper will examine the power of love as madness within the epic poem: Troilus and Cressida by Geoffrey Chaucer. By revealing the character Pandarus a cunning and noble fool that wants Troilus a "man in love", we can see how his match making only contends to bring about grief, madness and death for Troilus and Cressida. By observing this relationship through the character of Pandarus, we can see how love is portrayed as madness in this text.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 21746
Price: US$35.80
312.21750 The Theory of Sin in Middle English Poetical Satire: An Analysis of Redemption from Sin in The Parliament of Fowls, The Pardoner?s Tale and The Pardon?s Tale by Geoffrey Chaucer
This paper will exhibit the theory of sin, as propitiated by Geoffrey Chaucer in The Pardoner's Tale, The Parliament of Fowls and The Parsons' Tale. By unveiling Chaucer's knowledge and innovations on the notion of sin, we can understand how he uses satire to reflect these poetic, yet Roman Catholic set of religious principles in human behaviors.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 21750
Price: US$35.80
313.21805 Expanding Monstrosity in Frankenstein
Inside us all burn passions, or daemons, and if not handled properly, the battle is lost. Passions expand into obsessions and obsessions expand into psychoses, resulting in unacceptable societal behaviors. This is the route Mary Shelly?s Victor Frankenstein takes, and he loses his battle by becoming enslaved to his ever-demanding desires.
The monster, as always, is the child of the mind, its darkest thoughts. Usually, the monster is controlled. We are taught constraint as children at school or home not to act on our darkest desires, but Victor is spoiled.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 21805
Price: US$26.85
314.21825 What's in a Title: Foster and his Angels
This brief literary essay examines the multiple meanings inherent E.M. Forster's choice of Where Angels Fear to Tread as the title of his first novel. The title itself is a commentary on the tragic-comic consequences of sterile, repressive social conventions like propriety to the all too human foibles and frailties people living in a sensual, emotionally-intense world.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 0 source(s) listed
Filename: 21825
Price: US$26.85
315.21828 James Joyce?s ?Araby? and ?Eveline?
This paper compares two of James Joyce's short stories from the collection "Dubliners." The analysis follows a brief biography, and touches on chivalric and heroic themes as well as overall symbolism in the stories, and the potential for a feminist interpretation of "Eveline." The author also discusses the construction of suspense in these stories and Joyce's use of disappointment to further his realist project.