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Search results 531 - 540 of 2661 matching essays
- 531: "Fire From Heaven", "Much Ado About Nothing", and "The Flea": Sinful Acts
- ... is transformed in Donne's poem to a just and beautiful display of affection between two consenting adults. These authors use the position of sinful acts as a strengthening point for their corresponding works of literature. They take the same idea and transform it into their basis for their work. David Underdown used this idea to exaggerate the importance of the Puritan presence. Shakespeare took this idea and made it add ... Donne used this idea bring beauty and love to a unjust act. The idea of a sinful act taking place never changed from author to author, but the way they used it was magnificent to literature itself.
- 532: Edgar Allen Poe's Symbolism of Death in "The Fall of the House of Usher"
- ... Introduction. The Science Fiction of Edgar Allen Poe. By Edgar Allen Poe. Penguin Books, 1976. 2. "death". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language. 1992 edition. 3. Lawrence, D.H. Studies in Classic American Literature. The Viking Press, 1964. 4. Lovecraft, Howard Phillips. Supernatural Horror in Literature. Dover Publications, Inc., 1973. 5. Poe, Edgar Allen. "The Fall of the House of Usher". CD-ROM. Lake Ariel, PA: Westwind Media, 1994. 6. Poe, Edgar Allen. Complete Tales and Poems. Secaucus, N.J.: Castle ...
- 533: Paradise Lost 2
- ... space." Discuss the uses of metaphors of colonization in metaphysical poetry and/or Milton. During the period of Milton's Paradise Lost as well as myriad of poets construction of an epoque submerged in metaphysical literature, a number of significant events both socio-political, entwined with a systematic religious metamorphism of the sixteenth and seventeenth century led to a time of unrest and discovery. The creators and author's of work ... space." Discuss the uses of metaphors of colonization in metaphysical poetry and/or Milton. During the period of Milton's Paradise Lost as well as myriad of poets construction of an epoque submerged in metaphysical literature, a number of significant events both socio-political, entwined with a systematic religious metamorphism of the sixteenth and seventeenth century led to a time of unrest and discovery. The creators and author's of work ...
- 534: Easy And Difficult Works In Ed
- ... men and women should know that they would face the difficult tasks before they success. Besides, no college can educate people with all they want, and all they need in the future. Although people study literature, logic or history probably have a fewer job opportunities, these fields actually have more wide job opportunities in the future. In addition, the schools are not a relax place. In stead of it, these schools ... study, they should quit those professors or schools and seek others who have harsh teaching rules. The changes of the social structure caused people tend to learn the high technology instead of studying arts or literature. Some scholars think that people don t know how to write a good paper, or a nice article because people think it s too tedious that takes a lot of time to write, to research ...
- 535: Crime and Punishment: Is There or is There Not Such a Thing as Crime?
- Crime and Punishment: Is There or is There Not Such a Thing as Crime? For this question, I have chosen to discuss the following three works of literature: Crime and Punishment, by Feodor Dostoevsky, Beloved, by Toni Morrison, and Utopia, by Sir Thomas More. To begin with an omniscient and philosophical frame of reference, crime is only defined as crime by the society ... as just??? I think it was just the views of the time. Most of the Americans in this era thought of these views as acceptable, although a handful questioned the integrity of these acts with literature and propaganda. The writing of Beloved constituted sort of a memorial memorandum to these acts unjustly committed on the African-American people. These people were repressed and they definitely felt this was a crime. It ...
- 536: Anne Bradstreet: The Heretical Poet
- ... instruct but, again, to express her personal feelings. It is the personal that provides the heretical aspects. Literary historian Samuel Morison has called "The Flesh and The Spirit" one of the best expressions in English literature of the conflict described by St. Paul in the Eighth Chapter of his Epistle to the Romans, "a conflict that was evidently part of the personal experience of the poetess. The prose meditation that she ... also a rebellious, inquiring spirit. The heretical themes in her poetry stem from this spirit and her need for self-expression. Works Cited Blair, Walter, T. Hornberger, R. Stewart and J.E. Miller, Jr. The Literature of the United States, 3rd ed. New York: New York University Press, 1966. Bowtell, Stephen. The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America. By a Gentlewoman in those Parts. London, 1650. Hall, David D. Puritanism ...
- 537: A Biography Of George Orwell
- ... Why I Write he says that from a very young age he had known that he must be a writer. But, he also realized that in order to become a writer, he had to read literature. However, in Eaton, English literature was not a major subject and he spent his five years reading works by the masters of English prose including Jonathon Swift, Laurence Sterne and Jack London on his own. He failed to win a ...
- 538: El Inconformismo Femenino En L
- ... un escalon mas abojo de los hombres. Referencias Rojo, Grinor and Cynthia Steele. Ritos de Encarnaciσn. Boston, Mass: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1986 Chevigny, Bell Gale and Gari Laguardia, eds. Reinventing the Americas: Comparative Studies of Literature of the Unites States and Spanish America . Cambridge, New York. Cambridge University Press, 1986. Perry, Donna. Backtalk Women Writers Speak Out : Interviews by Donna Perry. New Brunswick, New Jersey. Rutgers University Press, 1993 Gallardo Colσn Julia, Kanellas Nicolαs ed. Biografical Dictionary of Hispanic Literature in the United States. New York, New York. Greenwood Press, 1989. Rivera, Carmen. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Volume 145 Modern American Fiction Writers. Washington, DC. A Bruccoli Clark Layman Book, Gale research Inc. 1994 Fernandez ...
- 539: Ukraine
- ... in St. Petersburg, Russia, on March 10, 1861. He was born a serf who suffered under the tsars. He became a great poet and artist. He created the conditions that allowed the transformation of Ukrainian literature into a fully functional modern literature. HISTORY The fist groups to occupy what is now Ukraine were Cimmerians, Scythians, Sarmatians, and Goths. These were nomadic people who came during the first millennium B.C. They were traders who were well known ...
- 540: Ray Bradbury: Literary Influences
- ... all of this aside, however, if these specific events did not occur in Bradbury's life, he would not have become a science-fiction writer. Throughout his childhood, Bradbury was exposed to many types of literature. While living in Waukegan, Illinois at the age of six, Bradbury's Aunt read him the Oz books. Also at this early age, Bradbury was encouraged to read the classic Norse, Roman, and Greek myths ... This personal memory is raw stuff of writers. This is the stuff you go to, if you want to write original weird stories. We're told all this stuff, you know, to go to the literature of Poe, to go to Hawthorne. This is all nonsense. These people dug their own symbols, their own needs, and their own terrors out of themselves, and got it on paper. They didn't get ...
Search results 531 - 540 of 2661 matching essays
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