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Term Papers on Book Reports
The Lottery: Theme And Irony
Number of words: 420 - Number of pages: 2.... villagers stone Tessie to death. The title is ironic because when one thinks of a lottery it is looked on as an amusement to test one’s luck in order to win a prize.
Tessie’s death is seen as another irony. Tessie could not restrain from stoning another person but when she found out she was to be stoned she threw a fit. Tessie could not wait to go to the drawing. It was a major event and tradition in their village and many other villages. When Tessie remembered it was the twenty-seventh she ran to the village. Ironically she was running to her death. .....
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Orwell's Animal Farm: Summary Of Characters
Number of words: 403 - Number of pages: 2.... people
against them.
Boxer is a cart horse who works night and day on the windmill and for
Napoleon's cause. When he hurts his hoof and is unable to work, Napoleon is
uncaring and sends him off to the slaughterhouse since he is of no further use.
Some of the animals come to realize what is happening and are mad at Napoleon,
but Napoleon talks his way out of it by convincing the animals that they are
mistaken and the hospital uses vehicles marked "slaughterhouse" to pick up
injured animals. Stalin's character was similar as he used people for his own
advant .....
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An Analysis Of Maya Angelou's "I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings"
Number of words: 813 - Number of pages: 3.... and womanhood. As with every
cocoon, there is always a time when one must leave and bravely enter the unknown
world behind the shell. Mrs. Flowers encouraged Maya to emerge and assisted her
in finding her strongest defense and force, her love of literature, to open this
barrier and allow Maya to end the silence. By doing this, it enhanced Maya's
courage and willingness to conquer other barriers and fortresses. Maya's love of
literature expanded and opened her horizons. One of Maya's favorite pieces of
literature is The Tale of Two Cities. She enjoyed it bec .....
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The Symbolism In Ethan Frome
Number of words: 537 - Number of pages: 2.... whole or a specific place. For example, Starkfield was a dreary town, "buried under snow, silent and incommunicative as the characters (Nevius 136)." Even Ethan’s farmhouse was symbolic of himself. The "L" of the farmhouse was like that of his own body, shrunken and weak (Nevius 136).
Ethan himself represented Wharton’s idea of a honorable man in the nineteenth century. He has admirable qualities, such as integrity, ambition, and wisdom (Magill 531). It is his sense of morals and responsibility that continuously prevents him from leaving Zeena and joining Ma .....
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The Metamorphosis: Gregor Was An Unselfish Person
Number of words: 505 - Number of pages: 2.... enough money, he hired a cook and servant. He was even
thinking of sending Grete to the conservatorium to further enhance what he
believed to be musical talents.
Even after his metamorphosis, he never asked for much. Showing his
concern for others' wellbeing, he hid under the couch so as not to disgust
anyone by his sight. Although they brought him food everyday, he barely ate any
of it. He even wished he were not such a burden on the family, and that he could
have transformed back into his old self.
All of the actions mentioned above displa .....
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The Metamorphosis: Society Split Into Different Sections
Number of words: 1101 - Number of pages: 5.... from uneasy dreams, he found himself transformed into a gigantic
insect" (P862, Ph1) that Kafka meant something underneath the surface.
Awakening from uneasy dreams could mean awakening from an uneasy, labored
life by quitting it all. His transformation could mean how society can
compare him to a cockroach for his giving up on them and treat him as if
he was less than human.
Gregor has obviously had a life of hard labor at a job that he
finds to be unbearable; as he states "Oh, God what an exhausting job I've
picked" (P862 Ph4). He feels that he mus .....
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Analysis Of "The Tell-Tale Heart": First Person Point Of View
Number of words: 375 - Number of pages: 2.... knowing what will happen next.
By using first person point of view, Poe was able to show how the
narrator feels. An example of this is when the narrator uses the phrases
at the beginning to question his existence. The narrator wanted to know
if he was mad, or not. Phrases such as "I heard all things in the heaven
and in earth" (62), tells the reader that the narrator indeed is mad, yet
the narrator thinks himself not. In the following statement, "If still
you think me mad, you will think so no longer when I describe the wise
precautions I took for the con .....
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The Canterbury Tales: The Knight
Number of words: 518 - Number of pages: 2.... then Chaucer talks about the knight's son, then the Yeoman, the Wife of Bath, the Monk, the Merchant, and the Clerk. Along their journey each character has his or her own tale to tell. The narrator is very descriptive of each of the characters. He makes sure to give full details of each one. The knight in The Canterbury Tales is a important figure and he reflects all of the qualities that a medevil knight should have.
The Knight is one of the few characters in The Canterbury Tales who gets a relatively straightforward treatment. The Knight is described in .....
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