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Search results 4141 - 4150 of 6744 matching essays
- 4141: The Great Gatsby
- ... Daisy’s cheating on Tom with Gatsby, Tom’s cheating on Daisy with Mrs. Wilson, and Nick’s caught in the middle. Gatsby ends up convincing Nick to get Daisy to come to Gatsby’s house, because they had a history together. Daisy comes, and both she and Gatsby find out that their love for each other never went away. The trouble really begins when Tom finds out that Daisy’s ...
- 4142: Understanding Holden Caulfield
- ... Kennedy 6 Works Consulted Baumbach, Jonathan. ‘The Saint as a Young Man: A Reappraisal of The Catcher in the Rye.” Modern Language Quarterly 25.4: 461-472. Bloom, Harold, ed. “Holden Caulfield.” New York: Chelsea House Pub., 1990. Branch, Edgar. “Mark Twain and J.D. Salinger: A Study in Literary Continuity.” American Quarterly 9:2: 144-158. Bryan, James. ‘The Psychological Structure of The Catcher in the Rye.” PMLA 89.5 ...
- 4143: Compare And Contrast Dystopian
- ... can be a crime; it only has implied laws that might or might not be enforced at any time. The Thought Police monitor the outer party members of Oceana with a device installed in every house, the telescreen. It broadcasts pictures and sounds. The only difference is that it has a camera which watches your every move day in, day out. In principle, a party member is never alone except when ...
- 4144: Color Symbolism In The Scarlet
- ... passion, growing in a place not fitting, similar to how Hestor's passion did not fit in with the Puritan society. As the sunlight shines through a red and yellow window in the governor's house, a red light shines throughout the room. This is symbolizing Hestor's passion spreading throughout the Puritan society. Hawthorne also uses black and darkness as symbols throughout The Scarlet Letter. Black is used to represent ...
- 4145: Materialism - The Great Gatsby
- ... in order to earn wealth and status to get the attention of Daisy Buchanon, a woman he falls in love with five years earlier. "He [Gatsby] found her [Daisy] excitingly desirable. He went to her house… There was a ripe mystery about it, a hint of bedrooms upstairs more beautiful and cool then the other bedrooms… It excited him too that many men had already loved Daisy—It increased her value ...
- 4146: Metamophasis
- ... his own family gave him. It showed the control that his father put on him. He was not allowed to leave his room. Gregor’s parents were so afraid to take him out of the house, because he was the family secret, and they thought that would bring shame and ruin the family. Gregor’s becoming an insect symbolizes the changes in Kafka’s life from being a slave to his ...
- 4147: Joy Luck Club - Literary Analy
- ... as June. Lindo is mother to Waverly who is a very talented chess player. Suyuan is mother to Jing-Mei, who is a forced piano player by her mother. The story starts off in a house where the everyone has gotten together to have a party because June is going to China to meet her two long lost sisters. June’s mother passed away and now June has to join the ...
- 4148: Jay Gatsby And The American Dr
- ... into one and back into his life. He buys a new car, the symbol of wealth during the Roaring 20’s. He spends many nights looking at the green light in front of Daisy’s house, dreaming about her. He loves Daisy so much that even after she kills Myrtle Wilson in a car accident he says, ”…of course I’ll say I did”. This shows exactly how much he loves ...
- 4149: Joy Luck Club
- ... for men. The women of America receive fair wages and have earned the right to work with men. In China, women are assigned the role of housewives and must stay at home to clean the house and raise the children. Women in America receive educations that will prepare them for the high paying jobs of a professional. The women in China are known for taking orders from their husbands. Another feature ...
- 4150: Hester Prynne
- ... themselves breaking the rigid Puritanical laws. Governor Bellingham lives in a mansion whose “ brilliancy might have befitted Aladdin’s palace, rather then the mansion of a grave old Puritan ruler.” (pg. 98) Bellingham’s extravagant house shows the hypocrisy of the Puritans. They seek to punish those, like Hester, who break the laws of Puritan society but at the same time they too violate their own laws. The Puritans can not ...
Search results 4141 - 4150 of 6744 matching essays
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