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Search results 1771 - 1780 of 5332 matching essays
- 1771: Elli
- ... Swine", finally to "Blode Hunde" meaning "Idiotic Dogs". They found the latter the easiest to cope with, although none of them ever did much for their confidence or self-esteem, which was probably the intended effect. If the prisoners had no spirit the Germans would have the best chance of keeping them under control, and the last thought on the prisoner’s minds would be trying to revolt or escape. As ...
- 1772: Eleven
- ... listen to her denials and not ignore her. She would have the courage to say "not mine, not mine" boldly out loud instead of just getting sick inside. With any other point of view, the effect on the viewer would not be the same. We would just see the objective retelling of the story and not know how the situation is viewed by Rachel. Furthermore, we learn about Rachel’s character ...
- 1773: Educating Rita
- ... but I will compare these with authorial intention. From this I will conclude whether this play is mainly about how education changed Rita for the better, and in what ways has it had a negative effect and what has getting to know Rita taught Frank. At first Rita is uneducated. Her background is the working class, but she wants to change her life for a better way of living. She has ...
- 1774: Edgar Allen Poe
- ... the narrator, his crowning act of perversity, is reminiscent of the crazed killer of the old man in "The Tell-Tale Heart," who had succeeded in hiding his atrocity, only to betray himself in direst effect, again to the police. Later, we shall see a similar psychological imolation performed by the narrator on himself in "The Imp of the Perverse." "The Black Cat" illustrates many manifestations and vehicles which the perverse ...
- 1775: Edgar Allen Poe
- ... the narrator, his crowning act of perversity, is reminiscent of the crazed killer of the old man in "The Tell-Tale Heart," who had succeeded in hiding his atrocity, only to betray himself in direst effect, again to the police. Later, we shall see a similar psychological imolation performed by the narrator on himself in "The Imp of the Perverse." "The Black Cat" illustrates many manifestations and vehicles which the perverse ...
- 1776: Dulce Est Decrum Est
- ... and, 'obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud,' to familiarise the situation to the reader and to focus on the repulsive truth of war. These similes simplify the theme of his poem without reducing its effect, and make the poem easier to understand. This reflects the views of the World War I society where there was a need for such anti-war messages, especially when there were people placed in high ...
- 1777: Dubliners
- ... a time when the Irish were united under Parnell, but following his fall and betrayal, there was a split between those who were loyal to him and those who were out to get him. His effect on Ireland, though, did not go unnoticed and to this day, he still attains great respect. In a book written by Frank Budgen (James Joyce and the Making of Ulysses and Other Writings), James Joyce ...
- 1778: Dr. Suess
- ... author. Each of his books show his playful personality, which is one of the characteristics that draws people to his writing. His books can be read over and over again, and each time the same effect is drawn from it - excitement, pleasure, and pure enjoyment. The books written by Seuss are used as tools in order to help children learn to read as painlessly as possible, and it works! Kids don ...
- 1779: Dover Beach By Matthew Arnold
- ... One of the most evident is Dr. Jekyll’s love interest, Muriel. Rouben Mammoulian added an entire twist to the movie that served as a way of relating how the transformation of Jekyll and its effect on others. Muriel essentially is Dr. Jekyll’s fiancée whom he is madly in love with. As the movie progresses we see how this new invention that the doctor has discovered transpires him into an ...
- 1780: Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep
- ... the word real in lines fifty-four through fifty-seven. In this poem Lawrence Ferlinghetti explores a normal mans life by making the dog symbolize him. Ferlinghetti uses alliteration and repetition to help create the effect of what the dog does and how he feels and thinks. He also uses colorful imagery to explore what the symbolic dog sees. These writing devices that Lawrence used made "Dog" interesting and easy to ...
Search results 1771 - 1780 of 5332 matching essays
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