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Biographical Influences In The Great Gatsby
Number of pages: 4 | Number of words: 916.... influences of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby are shown through not only Nick Carraway's dedication to achieving wealth, but also in the very vivid comparisons between Daisy Buchanan and Zelda Fitzgerald, and between Jay Gatsby and Fitzgerald himself.
In many of Fitzgerald's stories he uses his real life experiences, and in The Great Gatsby he chose to use some of his wife's experiences to make the character Daisy Buchanan. Zelda Fitzgerald was an enormous part of her husband's life, as was Daisy to her fictional husband Tom Buchanan. Zelda was often viewed .....
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Ceremony By Leslie Silko
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 505.... believe the reason the women's view is to put a different perspective upon
everything that goes on in the book, as compared with the perspective of Tayo.
There are two women in the book who put their perspective into the story, one of
them is the elderly mistress of Josiah and the other one is Helen Jean who went
on one of the many joyrides that Harley and the others went on. These women are
actually just a way for the author to explain how the rest of society viewed
Tayo. An example of this is when Helen Jean describes Tayo "Too quiet, and not
very friendly(161)". Anothe .....
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Lord Of The Flies: The 13th Chapter
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 437.... to abanden the boat. Everybody got in
the life rafts and watched the boat slowly sink till there was nothing
left to watch.
After a few days at sea the kids and officers land on an island.
As soon as they land on the island Jack and his "group" get together and
tie up the officers with vines on the local trees. This is Ralph's worst
nightmare come true. After they are done Jack tells Ralph, "either your
part of the group or your an outsider and that my group will hunt you for
the rest of your life." Ralph is thinking that this is great because they
will forget everyt .....
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THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA
Number of pages: 4 | Number of words: 944.... parents forbid him he wants to help his friend.
Their conversations are comfortable, like that of two friends who have known each other for their whole lives. When they speak it is usually about baseball or fishing, the two things they have most in common. Their favorite team is the Yankees and Santiago never loses faith in them even when the star player, Joe DiMaggio is injured with a heel spur. In this way Santiago not only teaches Manolin about fishing but also about important characteristics such as faith.
In the story Santiago's bravery is unsurpassed but it is not unti .....
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Krutch's "Killing For Sport"
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 360.... and contrast to show the difference between the
good and the bad. " He seems to get nothing other than the satisfaction of
saying: ‘Something which wanted to live is dead.' " On the other hand the
killer for food receives life in return for his killing, further stating
that the hunter for sport is evil. This work clearly exposes gaming
hunters and expresses how senseless it is to kill for fun. Krutch
identifies hunting as a "reality of evil" because we know it is wrong to
kill without purpose.
There is a secondary descriptive mode used to illuminate the
reader's imag .....
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Accordion Crimes: Dismal Reality Checks
Number of pages: 6 | Number of words: 1630.... He thought of the rat king, fired. Others fired.
A barrage of bullets and shot of every caliber and weight tore the
Sicilians. The accordion maker reared twice and fell back.” A character that
has a great deal of intrigue is the accordion maker. The most interesting fact
of this character is that he has no name, only an occupation. This is symbolic
of all the millions of faceless immigrants that came to America in search of
their dreams, but very few found them waiting, much less at all. “...He had his
theory, his idea of the fine instrument; with the proof of this one, h .....
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Alice Munros Boys And Girls
Number of pages: 5 | Number of words: 1121.... – a name that means "lord" – and implies that he, by virtue of his gender alone, is invested with identity and is to become a master. This stereotyping in names alone seems to suggest that gender does play an important role in the initiation of young children into adults. Growing up, the narrator loves to help her father outside with the foxes, rather than to aid her mother with "dreary and peculiarly depressing" work done in the kitchen (425). In this escape from her predestined duties, the narrator looks upon her mother's assigned tasks to be "endless," while she .....
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Like Water For Chocolate And Master Harold: Oppression
Number of pages: 5 | Number of words: 1346.... of Sam. Now Hally is starting to grow up
and he is noticing things which he did not notice when he was younger. He
realized that where he lives white people have certain rights over black people.
Hally owns a cafe and he has got two black men working for him, one of which is
Sam. Hally walks in one morning and finds Willie and Sam dancing, preparing for
a dance contest. "Hally- Think you stand a chance. Act your bloody age! (Hurls
the rag at Willie) Cut out the nonsense now and get on with your work. And you
too, Sam. Sop fooling around " (Athol Fugard, Master Harold and th .....
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