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Term Papers on Book Reports
Social Injustices In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn
Number of words: 1368 - Number of pages: 5.... society we see should make us question the world we live in, and only the journey down the river provides us with that chance.
Throughout the book we see the hypocrisy of society. The first character we come across with that trait is Miss Watson. Miss Watson constantly corrects Huck for his unacceptable behavior, but Huck doesn’t understand why, "That is just the way with some people. They get down on a thing when they don’t know nothing about it" (2). Later when Miss Watson tries to teach Huck about Heaven, he decides against trying to go there, "...she was go .....
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The Chosen
Number of words: 1147 - Number of pages: 5.... soul.
The other protagonist in the novel is Danny Saunders. Danny is the son of a very devoted Hasidic Jewish tzaddik. However, Danny is not a very enthusiastic Hasid. He has earlocks, grows a beard, and wears the traditional Hasidic outfit, but he doesn't have the reverence for it that he should. Danny is a genius. His religion forbids him to read literature from the outside world, so he struggles with his thirst for knowledge and the restraints that have been put on him by both his father and his religion. He lives with his father, mother, older siste .....
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The Prologue From The Canterbury Tales: Clothing As An Insight
Number of words: 504 - Number of pages: 2.... armor left
dark smudges on his tunic. Humbling experiences cause humans to step back
and analyze the fortune they have; they learn that they do not have to wear
their achievements. Sometimes people boast their success through fine
clothing. Unlike the flamboyant Yeomen, the distinguished knight wears old
garments.
The Yeomen succumbs to society's inclination that when he dresses
the part he will become successful. He wears a coat with a green hood. From
a low social standing, he believes that the better he looks the more
successful he will become. Emphasis shou .....
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Archetypes In A Rose For Emily
Number of words: 406 - Number of pages: 2.... but her dependence her father does not allow her to
have that freedom.
Her father's over-protection is evident in this passage, “We remembered all
the young men her father had driven away, and we knew that with nothing left,
she would have to cling to that which had robbed her, as people will” (279).
Her father robs her from many of life's necessities. She misses out on having
friends, being a normal “woman,” and her ability to be happy. Emily is not able
to live a normal life which she indirectly blames on her father. Emily is so
used to having h .....
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Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The House Of The Dead
Number of words: 770 - Number of pages: 3.... the Dead was initially published in Russia, 1860. Upon
initial examination of the work, it appears to be a stream of consciousness
account of Dostoyevsky's four years in a Siberian prison camp. But, upon
further review, it seems to be more an account of Dostoyevsky's personality and
attitudes through these years. In his first year in prison, Dostoyevsky “found
myself hating these fellow-sufferers of mine.” (305) His first day in prison,
several convicts approached him, a member of the noble class and no doubt very
wealthy in the convicts' eyes, and asked him f .....
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Satire And Jane Austen: A Winning Combination
Number of words: 614 - Number of pages: 3.... the reader
not only to see through the mask worn by most of the characters within the
novel, but to also understand Austen’s frustration with people similar to
them who allow their ranks in the community to effect the way in which they
treat others. A prime example of this would be her characterization of the
Bingley sisters because while wasting little time going into detail about
them, she made it clear to the reader that the two young ladies definitely
suffer from a superiority complex as well as gifts for making discourteous
remarks about people ( Elizabe .....
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Herman Wouk's The Winds Of War
Number of words: 660 - Number of pages: 3.... composition about and emphasizes so very clearly
After reading her essay, I came to grasp and understand her theory that
one is best not to accept advice from another on how to read literature,
since the best advice is no advice at all. Woolf expresses the conception
that when one begins to read literature he begins to enter different stages
of interpretation that will ultimately improve his pleasure and
satisfaction. It was obvious to me that I had in fact indulged in forms of
interpretation when reading literature, but it had never dawned on me until
rea .....
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Sphere: Summary
Number of words: 361 - Number of pages: 2.... forced to live in the spacecraft with all communication lost
with the outside world. Killer shrimp, fire, and internal floods follow
the introduction of the squid. Barnes is eaten alive by the gigantic
squid.
After the climax and many deaths the few people left discover whoever
enters the Sphere is granted the power that everything they think or
imagine happens or is created. Either it's conscious or subconscious,
while they're sleeping or awake, or even if they really want it to happen.
They also it was planted by another world as a test of its full
cap .....
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