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Term Papers on Book Reports
Pride And Prejudice: Elizabeth Bennet
Number of words: 1728 - Number of pages: 7.... because she does not adhere rigidly to the standards set forth by
society, "where the family and the community...tend to coerce and even
predetermine the volition and aspirations of the self"(Tanner 125). She is
self-reliant and independent, while "contemptuous of all the conventions
that restrict the individual's freedom"(Litz 65). Darcy observes Elizabeth
as "...sick of civility, of deference, of officious attention...disgusted
with the women who were always speaking, and looking and thinking for
[men's] approbation alone"(Ghent 185). Elizabeth rej .....
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An Analysis Of “The Cask Of Amontillado
Number of words: 1268 - Number of pages: 5.... but use the
pride his victim has in wine to lure him into the catacombs to taste some
of his non- existent amontillado. At this point, the reader knows the
conflict will be one of man versus man. It is an external struggle because
Fortunato and Montresor are in a life and death fight. However, the
conflict is largely internal, because Montresor has a fierce hatred that
Fortunato is unaware of. The narrative hook seems to occur when Fortunato
follows Montresor into the vault. Even if the reader was confused by the
language of the first paragraph or is puzzled .....
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Walking Across Egypt: A Young Elder
Number of words: 944 - Number of pages: 4.... of North Carolina associate with the elderly. These signs are influencing her decisions about what she thinks she can and cannot do. She displays typical, elderly forgetfulness as she washes the toilet seat with mouthwash rather than with alcohol. And again displays it as she falls through the bottomless rocking chair. Later she displays physical inability when she asks her son Robert about helping with some yard work, which she had always taken care of before.
“I’m too old to keep a dog,” (20) she says to the dogcatcher as he is leaving with a brown fice .....
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Dolores Claiborne
Number of words: 517 - Number of pages: 2.... her mother after she has been accused of killing Vera Donovan. She has developed a drug abuse problem, just like her father. Salena is the reason for many of the scenes throughout the movie, as she is remembering them and discussing what really happened with her mother.
In both the novel and the movie, the story of the eclipse and the events leading up to it are told in a flashback. The difference is that in the novel, Dolores is telling her story to the police in the form of a confession. She wants to get it all out of her conscious so that she can be c .....
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A Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man: Conflicting Desires Within A Doctrine
Number of words: 865 - Number of pages: 4.... "Tower of Ivory" and "House of
Gold" which is part of the Roman Catholic Litany of Our Lady. Later when
Stephen is at school, he again thinks about Eileen. Stephen gets his first
sensual experience from Eileen when she puts her hand into his pocket and
touches his hand. Stephen gets quite confused with the terms of the Litany
of Our Lady so he starts to associate the "Tower of Ivory" and "House of
Gold" to Eileen. The way James Joyce describes the scene, "She had put her
hand into his pocket where his hand was and he had felt how cool and thin
and soft her h .....
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A Tale Of Two Cities - L0ve An
Number of words: 2085 - Number of pages: 8.... in the novel is that of Lucie Manette and her father, Dr Manette who has been kept in the Bastille for eighteen years. Lucie meets him with the help of another character, Mr Javis Lorry, and tells her father that his agony is over and that she'll bring him to London and away from his previous sufferings. Later in the story, the night before Lucie is to be wedded to Charles Darney, we learn that Lucie has saved her last day as a single woman to be with her father and to reassure him that she'll still be with him even though she is to be married. "Lucie was to .....
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The Black Cat By Poe
Number of words: 678 - Number of pages: 3.... “The Black Cat.”
Next, symbolism is always an integral part of any Poe story. The most obvious of symbolic references in this story is the cat’s name, Pluto. This is the Roman god of the underworld. Pluto contributes to a strong sense of hell and may even symbolize the devil himself. Another immensely symbolic part of “The Black Cat” is the title itself, since onyx cats have long connoted bad luck and misfortune. The most amazing thing about the symbolism in this story or in any other of Poe’s is that there are probably many s .....
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