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Term Papers on Book Reports
Catcher In The Rye: Holden Caulfield's Perception And Gradual Acceptance Of The "Real" World
Number of words: 1004 - Number of pages: 4.... days we learn of from the novel
place a distressed Holden in the vicinity of Manhattan. The city is decked with
decorations and holiday splendor, yet, much to Holden's despair "seldom yields
any occasions of peace, charity or even genuine merriment."3 Holden is
surrounded by what he views as drunks, perverts, morons and screwballs. These
convictions which Holden holds waver very momentarily during only one particular
scene in the book. The scene is that with Mr. Antolini. After Mr. Antolini
patted Holden on the head while he was sleeping, Holden jumped up and .....
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Far From The Madding Crowd: Love Is Love Is Love
Number of words: 1263 - Number of pages: 5.... or in spite of, the situations she encounters and eventually overcomes throughout her romantic escapades.
Initially, Bathsheba’s character was high-spirited, feminine, naïve and self-centered. This is the first impression she gives Gabriel Oak, who eventually becomes a suitor, when she encounters him at the beginning of the story. The first time Gabriel laid eyes on Bathsheba, she was gazing admiringly at her own reflection in her pocket mirror. Gabriel realized immediately that her greatest fault was “what it is always . . . vanity.”
Gabriel, although impres .....
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Importance Of Restraint In Lord Of The Flies And Heart Of Darkness
Number of words: 496 - Number of pages: 2.... Darkness, (who are
starving) could have easily had many satisfying meals. After all, they
outnumbered the whites thirty to five, but they still had necessary
restraint to refrain from savagely feasting on some of the easily
accessible seamen. Towards the end of the novel, Marlow becomes becomes
very close to losing his sanity, but also has the necessary restraint to
maintain it. He confuses the beat of a drum (the call to man's primative
side) with his own heartbeat, but is still able to restrain from slipping
over the edge as Kurt did. Ralph in Lord of the Fli .....
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The Scarlet Letter: Platform Of Sin
Number of words: 1054 - Number of pages: 4.... the
reader becomes aware of Hester being shunned as an outsider, when she is
placed on the scaffold: “Knowing well her part, she ascended a flight of
wooden steps, and was thus displayed to the surrounding multitude, at about
the height of a mans shoulders above the street . . . . The unhappy culprit
sustained herself as best a woman might, under the heavy weight of a
thousand unrelenting eyes” (63-64). At the same time, the first scaffold
scene is the setting for the introduction of Roger Chillingworth,
Hester'shusband, and establishes his desire to punish .....
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Battle Royale
Number of words: 708 - Number of pages: 3.... of the community, he must fight in a dehumanizing debacle, geared toward the entertainment of the rich white men in attendance. The symbolic message is that blacks have to fight just to be heard in white society and that society is arranged to create conflict within the black community. The narrator states "In those pre-invisible days I visualized myself as a potential Booker T. Washington." Booker T. Washington was known for advocating working within the white community, quietly and without protest to gain status in the white society. The view that m .....
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The Scarlet Letter: The Plot
Number of words: 667 - Number of pages: 3.... sins are far
greater than either Hester's or Author's. This is first evident in the fact
that he married Hester knowing she would never love him and yet he made her
marry him anyway. He admits this while talking to her in the jail cell.
"Mine was the first wrong, when I betrayed thy budding youth into a false
and unnatural relation with my decay."
His second sin is allowing himself to become obsessed with
vengeance against Dimmesdale].
"But, as he proceeded, a terrible fascination, a kind of fierce,
though still calm, necessity seize .....
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Myths In Human Civilization
Number of words: 958 - Number of pages: 4.... Exploding Myths of Male and Female." which
is a book review. The author of the book, Phyllis Burke, writes of Gender
Identity Disorder or GIS that effects both male and female children. A child
labeled with GIS occurs when the child is not confirming to appropriate gender
behaviour. For example, if a boy wants to play with dolls and dress up as the
opposite sex. Burke reveals that at a young age all children in the gender
socialization process are encouraged to play with gender appropriate toys and
roles. If the child does not conform to these roles laid out .....
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Incidents In The Life Of A Slave Girl
Number of words: 850 - Number of pages: 4.... this chapter is to show just how
unfairly, and cruelly slaves (she) were treated. People saw the slaves as
scapegoats and were blamed for everything. She gives many examples of situations
in which someone (one of the masters or mistresses) wasn't happy with something
and blamed it on the slave(s), forcing them to deal with the harsh consequences.
An example is when the cook sends dinner out to Dr. Flint. Sometimes, when he
does not like a dish, the cook gets whipped, other times he shoves all the food
down the her throat until she chokes. I feel that thi .....
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