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Papers on Book Reports
Catch-22 & One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest Black Humor; A Satirical View Of The Institution
Number of words: 2609 | Number of pages: 10.... is entertained, but then they realize the seriousness of the situation, and the reader realizes that the joke is on them. The author knew that they would laugh, and the author knew that the reader would be disgusted with themselves because of it. Consequently, the very nature of this process and the sense of personal guilt that is involved invokes a sense of anger. This anger is directed towards the reason for the situation or absurdity. Therefore, the absurdities found in these novels is very effective and very poignant (Pratt 420).
Initially the situations in Catch-22 and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest seem silly and wit .....
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1984
Number of words: 533 | Number of pages: 2.... a beautiful dark-haired girl, staring at him; he worries that she is an informant who will turn him in for his thoughtcrime. He worries about the Party's control of history: it claims Oceania has always been allied with Eastasia in a war against Eurasia, but Winston seems to recall a time when this wasn't true; the Party also claims that Emmanuel Goldstein, the leader of the Brotherhood, is the most dangerous man alive, but Winston doubts the claim. He spends his evenings wandering through the poorest neighborhoods in London, where the proletarians, or proles, live relatively unimpeded by Party monitoring. One day, Winston recei .....
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Epstein’s Welfare In America
Number of words: 1776 | Number of pages: 7.... for a large amount of the reliance upon Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC)…forty-two percent of all new spells on AFDC are associated with an unmarried mother becoming a head of household.” (Epstein 111) To prove that inequality exists in society we need to define the conflict theory and compare and contrast it to the problems of welfare.
The conflict theory or perspective is the view of society that focuses on social processes of tension, competition, and change. (Robertson, 19) The view of conflict was developed by Karl Marx; a man who saw society as a constant source of change. Sociologists and theorists lik .....
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A Separate Peace: Three Symbols
Number of words: 703 | Number of pages: 3.... from the Naguamsett feeling grimy, dirty
and in desperate need of a bath (71). Much like the clean, refreshing water of
the Devon and the ugly saline water of the Naguamsett, Gene's carefree attitude
of the summer session vastly differs from the angry, confused attitude of the
winter session.
Likewise, the two sessions, the summer and winter, give a different
sense of feeling toward school and life at Devon School. The summer session
allows Finny to use his creativity. Finny invents blitzball and founds the
Super Suicide Society of the Summer Session. The students let their carefree
attitudes flow during the summer. Fi .....
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Lord Of The Flies 3
Number of words: 553 | Number of pages: 3.... are leadership, kindness, benevolence, and most of all, friendship.
The second youth is known to the other boys as Piggy. Piggy is not like the other boys, in the fact that his sense of fun and adventure was replaced with that of worrisome and caution. He is a portly child, which brought on the name “Piggy.” He also suffers from various ailments, such as bad eyesight and asthma. “He was shorter than the fair boy and very fat. He came forward, searching out safe lodgments for his feet, and then looked up through thick spectacles” (Golding 7). Piggy symbolically represents every problem, every .....
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Evolution Of Heathcliff In Wut
Number of words: 1148 | Number of pages: 5.... is an intruder who takes the place of a natural offspring and becomes the sole focus of the family. This circumstance foreshadows a life of a child who tries to be something that is impossible. Heathcliff can never be more than what he is. He can never be accepted as a natural son in the Earnshaw family. Regardless of what he does or how hard he tries, he will always be the interloper.
Early in the novel, Heathcliff is picked on by Hindly and he assumes a assertive and threatening posture. “You must exchange horses with me: I don’t like mine: and if you won’t I shall tell your father of the three thrashing yo .....
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The Gift
Number of words: 317 | Number of pages: 2.... to help him because he is ill. But yet
all he does is become peace-fully sicker. And the mom is praying for him to
get better and hopes that one day true health will come back to this youth. Or
in shorter terms, The Gift of life.
Those were my guesses, or hypothesis of what the real meaning to The
Gift were. And I don't care how silly they may have sounded but those are what I
think the meanings were. .....
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The Lottery
Number of words: 390 | Number of pages: 2.... to see someone beaten with rocks, however none of them want it to be them. Even the town’s children were involved in the savage ritual. After Tessie Hutchinson was chosen some of the towns children gave some pebbles to her son so he too could participate in the torture of his own mother. This horrible tradition is placed into the lives of the descendants of the town, so it is passed on from generation to generation. These people are taught to let the evil inside of them loose during . The evil in the souls of the townspeople is brought out during . It is more of an evil that is held in, rather than hidden. This evil comes out onc .....
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Gustave Flaubert And Madame Bovary: Comparisons
Number of words: 1410 | Number of pages: 6.... went out, and were
extremely happy. Although, this love and passion for life shortly ended when
Emma's true feelings began to come about. We soon come to realize that “the
story is of a woman whose dreams of romantic love, largely nourished by novels,
find no fulfillment when she is married to a boorish country doctor” (Thorlby
272).
This is completely true because Emma really does get caught up in her
reading. She wonders why she can't have a flawless love as well as a flawless
life, just as the characters do in the novels she reads.
Once Emma becomes fed up and realizes that he is “a sad creature”
(Flauber .....
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New Women Of The Victorian Era
Number of words: 1453 | Number of pages: 6.... at a position they once knew they would attain. Dorthea is depicted early in the novel as having an intimidating presence; however, at a dinner with the supposedly learned and intelligent Mr. Casaubon, she feels quite uneasy. He is an older man with an unattractive appearance which goes completely unnoticed to the “lovestruck” Dorthea. Her sister Celia comments, “How very ugly Mr. Casaubon is!” Dorthea responds by comparing him to a portrait of Locke and says he is a “distinguished looking gentleman.” Later, after dinner, Casaubon and Dorthea discuss religious matters and she looks at him in awe because of his supposed .....
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