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Papers On British Literature
Page 105 of 229
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Eighteenth Century Perceptions Of Prostitution
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The Man Of Feeling by
Henry Mackenzie was written in the elate eighteenth century (around
1770) while Daniel Defoe's Roxana was written earlier - at approximately
1720. This 5 page paper argues that MacKenzie wished to bring to life
the experiences of Christ, while Defoe was more concerned with making a
political point. The moral theme in both is repentance. No additional
sources are listed.
Filename: KTwhores.rtf
Elements of Mystery Writing
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A 5 page paper which discusses the elements of mystery
writing. The paper argues that mystery writing clearly involves unexpected events and
turns, and also implements many other qualities, in addition to suspenseful events, that
help to enhance these surprising events and thus create this unique form of literature. The
novels used in discussion include "And Then There Were None", by Agatha Chrisite, "The
Pale Horse", by Agatha Christie, and "The Case of the Lucky Legs" (Perry Mason), by
Erle Stanley Gardner. Bibliography lists 6 additional sources.
Filename: RAmystry.wps
Eliot & Thackeray
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A 3 page essay that discusses how George Eliot in Middlemarch and William M. Thackeray in Vanity Fair craft vivid female characters, who are largely responsible for conveying the themes of the authors in both novels. Becky Sharp and Rosamond Vincy seem cast from the same mold and in both works they convey the disdain of each author for values based on materialism. Likewise, Celia Brooke and Amelia Sedley offer contrasts that underscore the points being made by the authors. No additional sources cited.
Filename: kheandt.rtf
Eliot and Hardy and the Victorian Age
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This 6 page paper discusses "Jude the Obscure" by Thomas Hardy and "Middlemarch" by George Eliot; it also discusses Matthew Arnold's idea of a balance between anarchy and culture. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: HVEliHar.rtf
Eliot's "Brother and Sister"
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A seven page paper looking at this poem in terms of its relationship to George Eliot's own life. The paper concludes that "Brother and Sister," which recollects an idyllic period in childhood, also foreshadows a time when the world Eliot embraced so lovingly as a child would turn its back on her. Bibliography lists six sources.
Filename: KBgepoem.wps
Elizabeth Bowen’s “The Demon Lover”
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This is a 4 page paper discussing the various perspectives of Elizabeth Bowen’s short story “The Demon Lover”. The analysis is preceded by a brief biography of the Bowen. Elizabeth Bowen’s short story “The Demon Lover” is considered one of her most analyzed and controversial works in terms of content and implied intention of the writer. Written during the beginning of World War II, the story is about a woman, Mrs. Kathleen Drover, who returns to her home to pick up some things to take back to her family while they are staying in the country during the bombing. Or is it? Critics of the story have various theories about the actual intent and events which take place in the tale. While some critics view the story purely from a horror perspective in which her former psychotic lover from World War I returns, other critics believe that her journey is one from a psychological perspective while others again argue that the tale was written in an allegorical sense and depicts the horror and terror of war itself.
Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: TJEBowe1.rtf
Elizabeth Gaskell/Mary Barton
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A 5 page essay that examines Gaskell's novel Mary Barton (1848), which was certainly not unique in pointing out the miserable conditions that characterized the life of nineteenth century English working classes. Like Dickens' Oliver Twist and others, Gaskell describes scenes of wretched squalor, but she does so in a manner that makes it clear that the middle-class ideal of domesticity and cleanliness, which was equated in Victorian society with concepts of decency, failed to perceive the realities of working class life. Gaskell's characterization of the industrial working classes negates the popular Victorian perceptions regarding the 'lower' classes and shows not only the details of their lives, but also how those details fit into the context of the lives of her characters. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khgasamb.rtf
Ellmann on Eliot's Waste Land
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A 3 page essay that summarizes and discusses Maud Ellmann's "A Sphinx Without a Secret: The Waste Land," a critique of the poem by T.S. Eliot. Ellmann begins her discussion of T.S. Eliot's poem The Waste Land by comparing it to a phrase from an Oscar Wild's story, saying that the work is an example of a "sphinx without a secret" (Ellmann 258). In so doing, Ellmann begins her detailed and insightful examination of Eliot, which looks at this poem from a psychoanalytical perspective, which favors a post-structuralist reading of the text. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: khellwl.rtf
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