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Papers On American Literature
Page 216 of 532
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Dickens' "Bleak House" and Fate:
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This 4 page paper explores the idea of there being no such thing as an accident, and how this idea relates to Charles Dickens' "Bleak House". This paper examines issues such as how the Chancery court perpetuates evil instead of being a tool for justice, among other issues. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: GSLoveto.rtf
Dickinson & Whitman/The Self & The World
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A 3 page essay that contrasts and compares the way that Emily Dickinson's "The Soul Selects Her Own Society" and Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself" picture the relationship between the self and the outside world. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khssssom.rtf
Dickinson and Whitman
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A 12 page research paper that contrasts and compares Emily Dickinson's "The Soul selects her own Society" and Whitman's "A Woman Waits for Me." The writer looks at the similarities between their poetic form and their differences in their decorum, i.e. the context of their work. Annotated bibliography lists 9 sources.
Filename: khedww.rtf
Dickinson’s “This World is not Conclusion”
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A 3 page paper analyzing Emily Dickinson’s Poem 501. Dickinson makes her point in the first line of the poem, and provides the remainder of it in support of her opening statement. Her message is that despite the efforts of people to explain God, ignore God, “serve” God or define God, He operates in a manner that defies human logic and focuses on the individual. If the individual is able to avoid awareness of God, He is at work nonetheless, nibbling away at the soul, making His presence sensed, at least, if not fully known without first gaining commitment of belief. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: KSpoDickin501.rtf
Dickinson/Because I Could Not Stop for Death
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A 3 page essay that analyzes Emily Dickinson's poem. The writer argues that in this poem, Dickinson presents a rather cordial view of death, which she personifies as a courtly gentleman. Her verse proposes that death entails an adjustment in perspective from the human state of awareness toward one that is universal. In other words, the poem describes a period of adjustment in which the speaker adjusts to a new state of awareness and being. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khdicbic.rtf
Dickinson/I HAD been hungry all the years
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A 3 page explication of Emily Dickinson's poignant poem "I HAD been hungry all the years." In this poem, Dickinson offers images of what life's banquet is liked when viewed by someone who feels like an outsider. Dickinson was a recluse most of her life and seldom ventured from her home. Examination of this poem suggests that, at some point in her life, she had the opportunity to experience more than her solitary existence and that the "plenty" of this occurrence was both painful and revealing to her. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khedhun.rtf
Dickinson/My had stood--a Loaded Gun
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A 3 page essay that discusses Emily Dickinson's poem number 754, "My Life has stood--a Loaded Gun," in which Dickinson represents herself and her life, metaphorically, as a loaded weapon, a phallic symbol that is associated with masculinity. The imagery, and the energy, that pervades the poem indicates Dickinson's deeply seated conflicted feelings concerning traditional concepts of masculinity and femininity and the symbolism she employs expresses her inner rage at the restricted nature of gender that was prevalent in Victorian society. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: khed754.rtf
Dickinson/Some Keep the Sabbath
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A 4 page essay that explicates the poem "Some keep the Sabbath going to church," by Emily Dickinson. The writer argues that this poem provides a contrast between the conventional customs of faith and religion that were practiced in the nineteenth century and Dickinson's own reclusive, private form of worship, which stressed the natural world as the proper environment in which to appreciate the Divine. Examination of Dickinson's use of images, symbols, her narrative voice or "speaker," use of irony, setting, and tone demonstrate that this poem constitutes a radical position that deviates markedly from the accepted stance toward religion and worship that was generally accepted in nineteenth century America. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khsksab.rtf
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