|
Papers on English
Inherit The Wind
Number of words: 839 | Number of pages: 4.... of ideals that we must trust in it’s veracity. It isn’t meant to be explained!
Ironically, the thing that people are the most hungry for, meaning, is the one thing that science hasn’t been able to give them. Enter God, the means
that mankind has clung to for purpose. If there isn’t a God, does that mean
that 95% of the world is suffering from some sort of mass dillusion? There
may be a thousand arguments against there being a supreme being that we can
think of, but it’s all those reasons that we cannot think of that allow him to
continue to exist as a necessity in our hearts and minds. True, in the past .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Great Gatsby
Number of words: 1066 | Number of pages: 4.... it seemed the more he felt he needed to emulate him. He then began to talk of a Mr. Tom Buchannan. Tom was not to Carraway’s liking. He seemed harsh and too masculine to have any relation in Nick’s life. Nick is simple, innocent, and he is just starting out. From what he has told me about him, Tom seems to be a bigot of sorts, not to fond of Nick’s existence in this side of town at all. How does tom fit in to all this, I asked myself. Tom is Daisy’s husband; Daisy is Nick’s cousin. Kind of confusing, eh? Carraway started to finish up the session with a story of how he and Tom took a trip to Manhattan. On the .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Failure In Shiloh
Number of words: 756 | Number of pages: 3.... He can't accept the fact that his
life has changed and he must move on. On the contrary, Norma Jean has
taken up new hobbies, which include weight lifting, adult education classes,
and living life more. Norma Jean has decided to continue on with her life
and not reflect on the past. Leroy can't accept the fact that his wife
wants to change and move on with her life and this causes them to drift
apart and eventually leads to their separation of souls.
Leroy and Norma Jean also faded apart because they stopped
communicating with each other. Without the communication between them they
didn't get to express their feelings, nor did .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Shawshank Redemption And Film
Number of words: 747 | Number of pages: 3.... the idea that Shawshank exists to contain individuals from the outside world, to torment them with the beauty of nature, yet, force them to exist in a world of ugliness and hatred. Every scene within the prison is framed by bars and dark sombre grays or blues as backdrop, the effect of which is to indicate the oppressive nature of life in "inside" and the dominance of the prison in the lives of every individual.
The repression of Shawshank, as well as the enforced routine, is depicted by the film makers through lighting, camera angles and music. The majority of scenes have no background music; the impact of silence achieving t .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Nathaniel Hawthorne Weaves Dreams Into Reality In Much Of His 19th Century Prose
Number of words: 1419 | Number of pages: 6.... own narrative in his short story, The
Birthmark, published in 1850 during the latter part of the period of
Puritanism expands his observations of mankind with keen insight.
Truth often finds its way to the mind close-muffled
in robes of sleep, and then speaks with uncompromising
directness of matters in regard to which we practice
an unconscious self-deception, during our waking
moments. (par.15)
The prophetic statement was made by Hawthorne to open the reader's mind and
perhaps inject an introspective glimpse of his perspective that dreams do .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Shilo
Number of words: 736 | Number of pages: 3.... Mabel would wear during her inspection of Norma Jean’s house: "she inspects the closets and then the plants, informing Norma Jean when a plant is droopy or yellow. She also notices if Norma Jean’s laundry is piling up" (666). Everything must be in its proper place, having been ordered by Mabel’s strict discipline policy.
Mabel’s discipline is the result of her anger against Norma Jean for getting pregnant out of wedlock, and the death of the baby a few months after birth; taking Mabel’s only grandchild. It is doubtful Norma Jean will give Mabel another grandbaby. She is thirty-four, and it has been .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Animal Farm By George Orwell
Number of words: 658 | Number of pages: 3.... Old Major wanted, such as the welfare of the animals. In the Russian Revolution his counterpart would be Trotsky. Trotsky believed and wanted the same things as Lenin, and wanted to continue what Lenin had started. Then comes Napoleon. Napoleon was selfish and greedy. He did not want to share the power or the decision making with any other individual. This was the same for Stalin. At first Napoleon and Snowball shared the decision making and had debates about what course of action they would take. This worked for awhile. Then Napoleon grew weary of long debates, and he thought he could make the decision by himself. He then forced .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Kohlberg And His Scale Of Matu
Number of words: 743 | Number of pages: 3.... Taylor, the main character in the book, reaches the highest level and stage of moral development according to Kohlberg's scale. Even though Taylor makes many stage five decisions, she belongs in stage six.
In the book The Bean Trees Taylor starts out in stage five. Her decision to move and become independent due to the low success-failure ratio automatically places her into stage five. Taylor makes the decision to move not because she would get recognition for it or even personal profit but because it is the right thing to do and that is a clear example of a stage five decision. "Judgements are based on abstract, more personal p .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Lord Of The Flies
Number of words: 1703 | Number of pages: 7.... tasks; the older boys want to spend more time hunting than carrying out more routine duties, such as keeping the signal fire on the top of the mountain going, and building shelters. A rumor spreads that a "beast" of some sort is lurking in the forest, and the children have nightmares. Jack, (A ruthless, power-hungry person), promising to fulfil the children's desire for a reversion to the ways of primitivism, is chosen as the new leader, and the society splits into two sections: those who want to hunt and soon become savages, and those who believe in rational conduct, and a civiliized manner. Ralph, the rational leader, soon fin .....
Get This Essay
|
|
Realism In A Raisin In The Sun
Number of words: 585 | Number of pages: 3.... other women - or just get married an be quiet" (38). This passage shows that Walter is clearly a chauvinist, and does not believe in his sister’s desire to be a doctor. Similarly, Beneatha does not believe in Walters aspirations of becoming a rich entrepreneur, and thinks he is rather foolish, incapable, and will resort to any means to make money. "Oh, God! Where is the bottom! Where is the real honest-to-God bottom so he can’t go any further!" (142). Beneatha is referring to the fact that Walter plots and schemes get more ridiculous as time goes on. She wonders however, if there will be a limit to just how far he wi .....
Get This Essay
|
|
|