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Term Papers on Book Reports
1984 Big Brother Is Watching Y
Number of words: 1160 - Number of pages: 5.... and authority that this idol holds over the people is unimaginable.
The people of Oceania are divided into two classes, the members of the Party and the proletariat. The Party members are like machines that do the jobs of the government. In this world, never has anyone thought any different of his or her place in society. Due to this authority that attempts to control the human train of thought, paranoia among the people became common. Nobody would talk to each other. Bonds between one another were broken, and it was never thought to be any different than b .....
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Hamlet Literary Analysis
Number of words: 1896 - Number of pages: 7.... to play.
In Act One, Hamlet appears to be very straightforward in his actions and his role. When his mother questions him, Hamlet says, "Seems, madam? Nay it is. I know not seems" (1.2.76). By saying this, Hamlet lets Gertrude know that he is what she sees, torn over his father’s death. Later, he makes a clear statement about his state of mind when he commits himself to revenge. "I’ll wipe away all trivial fond records, all saws of books, all forms, all pressures past, that youth and observation copied there, and thy commandment all alone shall li .....
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The Canterbury Tales Handout
Number of words: 478 - Number of pages: 2.... guise of a humanitarian, he is also a crooked business man. He uses his position in the church to get money. He spread the word that he had the power to forgive sins more than a priest. The Friar should have been very poor, perhaps worse off than the people he helped, however he was eating healthy and living large. He spends much time at bars and inns, rather than living with and aiding the destitute.
This man of God, hero of the poor and mediator between God and men, turns out to be as fraudulent as his claims of giving penance. He is more consumed with .....
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Crabbe And The Dead Poets Society: Relationships
Number of words: 535 - Number of pages: 2.... affected by
Mr. Kienny, and he was also the first to suggest the dead poet's society.
Neil was very smart in school but probably knew very little about the
outside world, also like Crabbe. One of the most important things Crabbe
and Neil shared was “Actions speak louder than words” or “Seize the day”.
When Neil secretly started going down to the theater for auditions he was
trying to make his life worth-while and do something that he enjoyed. His
father then came back from out of town to force Neil to quit acting. He
told Neil that he was to become a doctor and .....
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All Quiet On The Western Front: Alienation
Number of words: 626 - Number of pages: 3.... man
is on, he is killing other men just like himself, people with whom he might
even be friends at another time.
But Remarque doesn't just tell us war is horrible. He also shows us
that war is terrible beyond anything we could imagine. All our senses are
assaulted: we see newly dead soldiers and long-dead corpses tossed up
together in a cemetery (Chapter 4); we hear the unearthly screaming of the
wounded horses (Chapter 4); we see and smell three layers of bodies,
swelling up and belching gases, dumped into a huge shell hole (Chapter 6);
and we can almos .....
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Red Badge Of Courage
Number of words: 764 - Number of pages: 3.... circles, like a vast blue demonstration. They kept marching on without purpose, direction, or fighting. Through time Henry started to think about the battles in a different way, a more close and experienced way, he started to become afraid that he might run from battle when duty calls. He felt like a servent doing whatever his superiors told him.
When the regement finally discovers a battle taking place, Jim gives Henry a little packet in a yellow envelope, telling Henry that this will be his first and last battle. The regiment managed to hold off the rebels for .....
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The Red Badge Of Courage
Number of words: 1077 - Number of pages: 4.... he went to tell his friends, thinking that they would consider him a hero. When Henry first arrived at training, he felt that he was invincible. However, when Henry heard that his regiment was going to battle he started to wonder if he would run. He was afraid to tell anyone of this because he thought they would think he was a coward. When he was returning to the regiment, shortly after he ran, he wondered and cared about what they would say to him. "He wondered what they would remark when later he appeared in camp. His mind heard howls of derision... .....
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