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Search results 1081 - 1090 of 1131 matching essays
- 1081: Our Town
- ... takes place while Rosalind is disguised as a man, calling herself "Ganymede." Rosalind-as-Ganymede persuades Orlando to pretend that Ganymede is his beloved "Rosalind." In her male disguise, Rosalind takes over roles within the fiction of the play that, in its time, were exclusively male, such as the role of choosing her own mate and directing his courtship of her. These sorts of roles would conventionally belong to her father ...
- 1082: Our Lady Of The Snows
- ... Snows" The author 'Morley Callaghan' has written many stories and award winning novels through out his long career. Some pertain to true stories in which he has encountered through out his life. Others are straight fiction but involve a truth that deal with real-life situations and themes.(Canadian Encyclopedia: edi,1) In the novel "Our Lady Of The Snows", a real-life situation has taken effect where a young woman ...
- 1083: Oliver Twist
- OLIVER TWIST BOOK SUMMARY Dickens, Charles. Oliver Twist. New York: Longman Edition, 1981, pp. 353 This book is a fiction novel set in the 19th century. I found the main theme of he book to be about the social problems at that time in England. The main character in the book is Oliver Twist. He ...
- 1084: Lysistrata
- ... takes place while Rosalind is disguised as a man, calling herself "Ganymede." Rosalind-as-Ganymede persuades Orlando to pretend that Ganymede is his beloved "Rosalind." In her male disguise, Rosalind takes over roles within the fiction of the play that, in its time, were exclusively male, such as the role of choosing her own mate and directing his courtship of her. These sorts of roles would conventionally belong to her father ...
- 1085: Lord Of The Flies - Book Report
- ... Allen, Walter. "The Modern Novel," Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973: 120-121 Baker, James R. William Golding New York St.Martin's Press, 1965. Burgess, Anthony. "The Novel Now: A guide to contemporary Fiction" Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973: 120-121 Dick, Bernard F. "William Golding" Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973: 121-121 Gordan, David J. "Saturday Review" Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973 ...
- 1086: Lord Of The Flies
- ... that can confuse the reader, but this happened rarely. I think all serious readers would like this book. Probably the people who could enjoy this book the most would be the faithful followers of Science Fiction and Adventure novels who might enjoy the stranger aspects of life. I also think readers who are interested in human behavior would relish this book because of the way it portrays the many sides of ...
- 1087: Lord Of The Flies
- ... Allen, Walter. "The Modern Novel," Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973: 120-121 Baker, James R. William Golding New York St.Martin's Press, 1965. Burgess, Anthony. "The Novel Now: A guide to contemporary Fiction" Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973: 120-121 Dick, Bernard F. "William Golding" Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973: 121-121 Gordan, David J. "Saturday Review" Contemporary Literary Criticism Detroit: Gale Research, 1973 ...
- 1088: Life Of Ma Parker
- ... Women on the Market" (chapter 8). This Sex Which Is Not One. pp. 170-191. Lohafer, Susan. "Why the Life of Ma Parker Is Not So Simple: Preclosure in Issue-bound Stories". Studies in Short Fiction. 33.4 (1996): 475-86. Mansfield, Katherine. "Life of Ma Parker". The Garden Party and Other Stories. Ed. Alfred A. Knopf. New York: 1922. pp. 140-150. (taken from the web-site: http://www.cs ...
- 1089: Jonathon Swift
- ... a collection of these abilities. In conclusion to the story, the reader can scrutinize each sentence to find a different meaning or interpretation. Clearly, this essay is and should be treated as a work of fiction and nothing more. Though it is nothing more than a fictional work it should be taken into account that the essay carries a deeper meaning to which every reader can find difference.
- 1090: Johnny Got His Gun
- ... World 3754). Man obtains a relationship with both themselves and God through the ritual of worship. Mankind is confused at times with the conflict of morality and human instinct. "The world Updike creates in his fiction is morally ambiguous. And it is so, in a large part, because of the perpetual conflict between two antithetical forms of human morality" (World 3754). John Updike illustrates the problems of faith and the difficulty ...
Search results 1081 - 1090 of 1131 matching essays
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