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Papers on Book Reports
The Effect Of Uncle Tom's Cabin
Number of words: 829 | Number of pages: 4.... wife of liberal clergymen and theologians. Her
father Lyman and brother Henry Ward were two of the most preeminent
theologians of the nineteenth century. This extremely devout Christian
upbringing, focusing on the doctrines of sin, guilt, atonement and
salvation, had an undeniable impact in her writings. Each of her
characters displays some aspect of these beliefs. Although he is unjustly
and ignorantly vilified by contemporary Black society, the character Uncle
Toms is given a Christ like persona. Tom forgives his oppressors, turns
the other cheek to blows, blesses those who curse him, and prays for those
who sin against .....
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"Miss Brill": Emptiness In One's Life
Number of words: 559 | Number of pages: 3.... and then just walked away. Miss Brill imagined that the band knew what the ermine toque was feeling and played softly as the drum beat "The Brute! The Brute!" over and over. Her tendency to notice these things shows that she is melancholy with her own life and can find no other way to fill in her emptiness other than with the lives of other people.
A good quality Miss Brill has is her imagination. She imagines that the whole setting at the park is like a play with no audience. She feels that everyone is involved including herself. Miss Brill imagined that "they weren't only the audience, not only looking on; they were .....
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Racism In Heart Of Darkness
Number of words: 1210 | Number of pages: 5.... p.255) This lack of human expression and human characteristics is what Achebe says contributes to the overflowing amount of racism within Conrad's novella. Human expression, is one of few things that make us different from animals, along with such things as communication and reason. This of course, being that without human expression, the native woman is considered more of a "savage...wild-eyed and magnificent," (Achebe quoting Conrad, p. 255), possibly even "bestial."
In an attempt to refute Achebe's proposed difference between the two women, C.P. Sarvan said that Conrad perceived the native woman as a "gorgeous, prou .....
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Bolt's "A Man For All Seasons": Reasons For A Person's Actions
Number of words: 780 | Number of pages: 3.... that life is
the greatest value to man, and to place anything above it would be asinine.
More's behavior was bizarre even to his own time period. His daughter,
Margaret, pleaded for him to sign the oath, "Then say the words of the
oath and in your heart think otherwise"(81). Her father could not morally
be satisfied by this. More believed that when an oath is taken, one is
placing his pledging his self and soul. " When a man takes an oath, Meg,
he's holding his own self in his own hands. And if he opens his fingers
then- he needn't hope to find himself again"(81).
On the other hand, Richard Rich's actions were not based u .....
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The Jungle By Sinclair: A Man Of Many Colors
Number of words: 411 | Number of pages: 2.... Eventhough he
inevidably fails, he does everything in his power to be an ideal husband.
Rudkis, like many other good-hearted people, had to circumb to the
evil powers of greed. He buys an expensive house that he could not afford.
He could settele for a house of lesser value that suits his needs just as
well, but he doesn't. Eventhough he is somewhat conned into buying it, his
greed still convinced him. Shortly after this, he is so eager to get more
money, that he starts to behave immoraly. After he lost his job due to an
injury, he sinks into a life of crime as a foe of society. He becomes a
mugger and a grafter. He dupes fe .....
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One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest And Fahrenheit 451: Changing The System
Number of words: 1562 | Number of pages: 6.... Patrick McMurphy, fights to change the system in a mental hospital. McMurphy is outgoing, a leader and a rebel. There was a constant power struggle in the novel between the patient's new found savior McMurphy, and the evil Nurse Ratched who rules their wing of the hospital with an iron fist. McMurphy fights to change the system to try to win back the patients' rights and in the process gain more privileges for the patients and himself. McMurphy also seems to get pleasure out of fighting the system. His motives are simple, he wants to help out his fellow patients, his friends, to make their lives better.
McMurphy was successful .....
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A Farewell To Arms
Number of words: 572 | Number of pages: 3.... she gives him Saint Anthony on a necklace. While fighting, Frederick gets wounded very badly. Rinaldi and the priest visit him at the hospital. Catherine visits him later and they have an affair in the hospital room. After this Frederick realizes that he is really, truely in love with her; that he isn't just attacted to her physically anymore. Catherine is now stationed at the hospital Frederick is in and changes her schedule to the night shift. Catherine is pregnant and Frederick feels "trapped biologically". They are both staying in a hotel room, and wish they had somewhere to go after watching an Italian couple in a church. Th .....
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Of Mice And Men
Number of words: 437 | Number of pages: 2.... of the other ranch hands did respect him, though; as much as someone could expect from anyone at the time the story takes place. Throughout the story, Lennie found out just how fragile life was in his strong hands. When he was younger, his aunt would give him mice to play with and pet. Because he was so strong, he would pet them too hard and kill them. When Slim gave Lennie a pup, he eventually pet it too hard and accidentally killed it too. Then, while talking to Curley’s wife in the barn, she invited Lennie to touch her hair. When she wanted him to stop, he got scared and held on. When she screamed, he shook her and told her t .....
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The Lottery: Theme And Irony
Number of words: 420 | Number of pages: 2.... as another irony. Tessie could not restrain from stoning another person but when she found out she was to be stoned she threw a fit. Tessie could not wait to go to the drawing. It was a major event and tradition in their village and many other villages. When Tessie remembered it was the twenty-seventh she ran to the village. Ironically she was running to her death.
The theme of “The Lottery” is that people do not care when something does not, immediately or personally, affect them. Before Tessie was chosen she looked forward to the lottery but since she was picked she objected and thought the whole thing was dumb. Th .....
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12 Angry Men Contrast Paper
Number of words: 587 | Number of pages: 3.... at the wrong times. In the 1957 version, ever though they were an all-white jury, they still treated each other with disrespect. If one wanted to discuss something the other didn’t want to because that one was so stubborn to change his vote. He stood alone. He didn’t want to change his vote for a thing he always thought he knew everything. In the 1997 version, the black men were the problem. He was just like the man that didn’t want to change his vote. He thought he knew everything, but he didn’t. Finally, one man told him to sit down and shut up. Towards the end he was really quiet until the jury asked him w .....
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