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Papers On Literature
Page 730 of 1292
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Immigrant Views on Being American
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A 6 page essay that explores 2 works. Yoshiko Uchida's memoir Desert Exile (1982) and Anzia Yezierska's Bread Givers (1925). In these books, readers encounter the accounts of two women, each descended from first generation immigrants to America, each facing prejudice and obstacles and each coming to terms with the difficulty of being of ethnic origin in Protestant, Anglo American culture. Uchida's book is a personal memoir and while Yezierska's text is fictional, it nevertheless draws on her own Polish background and accurately reflects Jewish immigrant life in the first half of the twentieth century. While the two works address different eras and different ethnicity, they are similar in that each woman comes to terms with her own definition of what it means to be American. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khyezuch.rtf
Immorality in Of Mice and Men:
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This 4 page paper discusses the role which immorality plays in this novel. Furthermore, immorality is discussed in relation to The American Dream. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Filename: GSMiceMn.rtf
Immortality: Dostoevsky and Tolstoy
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A 4 page paper which examines the expression of immortality in Dostoevsky’s The Grand Inquisitor and Tolstoy’s The Death of Ivan Ilych. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: RAmmtoy.rtf
Impact of Children’s Literature on Little Girls
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A 5 page paper which examines the significance of children’s literature on young girls, considers whether or not it matters if the work is written by a male or female author, and specifically considers examples from L. Frank Baum’s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” and Frances Hodgson Burnett’s “The Secret Garden.” Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TGgirlit.rtf
Impact of Family/Dostoevsky & Alexie
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A 6 page comparative essay that examines Fyodor Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment and Sherman Alexie's Indian Killer. The writer argues that the ways in which these authors explore the alienation of their protagonists reveals basic truths about the human condition and the need of human beings to feel bonds of association with other human beings. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khdosale.wps
Impact of Gilgamesh (Good) and Odysseus (Bad)”
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A 6 page paper which discusses how these fictional figures represent opposing ends of the writer’s definition of good and bad. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: TGgilgod.rtf
Impact of the Great War on Western Literature
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A 4 page essay that discusses the impact of the “Great War,” that is, World War I on Western literature. World War I is known for its “mindless squandering of human life with negligible results” (Hull 17). During its era, it was known as the Great War, the war to end all wars, as well as the war that would make the world “safe” for democracy. The Great War accomplished none of these purposes and, when it was over, the survivors were gripped by grief, guilt, rage and, in the case of one German lance corporal, a young man named Adolf Hitler, by the desire for revenge (Hull 17). The Great War had another significant effect in that it had a tremendous impact on the course of modern Western literature. The collective consciousness of both Europe and America was forever changed by World War I and this change was reflected in the literature produced both during the Great War and in the decades afterward. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: khwwili2.rtf
Imperialism & Conrad's Heart of Darkness
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A 3 page essay that discusses Conrad's classic novel in relation to European imperialism. In Joseph Conrad's deeply psychological novel Heart of Darkness, his narrator, who is known simply as Marlow, comes to Africa as a young man, presumably in search of fortune and opportunity, but the reader actually never meets this possibly idealistic, young Marlow, as the man who relates the narrative is doing on the deck of the Nellie, a "cruising yawl," which is anchored within "sea-reach of the Thames," waiting for the tide to turn (Conrad 65). In the story, this older, cynical and mentally damaged Marlow relates, Conrad explores the paradoxes of British imperialism in the late nineteenth century. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: khconimp.rtf
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