“Love is a serious mental disease,” proclaimed Plato, a philosopher in Classical Greece and the founder of the Academy in Athens; the characters of Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet could relate because of the conflicts they faced. Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet is quite similar to William Shakespeare’s, Romeo and Juliet. The story tells how the protagonist, Henry, meets with the first love of his life, then, loses her to a World War II internment camp. The parallelism between William Shakespeare’s, Romeo and Juliet, and Jamie Ford’s, Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, are known during sequences between both stories.…
The historical lens takes into consideration the political, economic and social conditions of the time period. The lens investigates the authors background in order to understand the text. “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini can be perceived through the historical lens. The novel depicts the Soviet Union’s and the Taliban’s invasion of Afghanistan.…
Analysis of “Happy Endings” by Margaret Atwood “ And will I tell you that these three lived happily ever after? I will not, for no one ever does. But there was happiness. And they did live.”…
For my film analysis, I chose to analyze the movie “The Outsiders” directed by Francis Ford Coppola and based on the novel “The Outsiders” by S. E. Hinton. In this movie, a gang of outcasts from the north side of town called the Greasers are always fighting against a rival group called the Socials, who are the rich jocks from the south side of town. The story follows two young Greasers, Johnny and Ponyboy, who aren’t like the others. These two see that fighting is pointless, but it’s just the way they live their life. The two boys get into a fight with some Socials and end up killing one.…
In Chapter 1, the author starts off by speaking about her origins. She tries to break racial stereotypes by portraying her neighborhood and family as middle class -- comparing…
The black experience is a factor of life that every African-American person has to endure. Ta-Nehisi Coates, the author of the memoir The Beautiful Struggle, is one of those African-Americans. As a child, he mentions the moments in his life where the black experience was prominent. As long as an individual is black, they will encounter parts of the black experience.…
In the drama Naked Lunch by Michael Hollinger, Lucy and Vernon are having dinner together to reconcile after breaking up. However, their dinner is very unusual with Vernon forcing Lucy to eat steak after saying she was a vegetarian after they broke up. Vernon forcing Lucy to eat the steak and Lucy eventually losing her will to fight back with Vernon can imply that Vernon used to abuse Lucy, and will continue to abuse Lucy. Vernon is just like the alligator that he talks about in the beginning of the drama, a predator that cannot be tamed, and Lucy is the poodle that is a prey compared to the alligator and can be trained. Vernon is basically trying to train Lucy, a girl who is a pushover and is willing to go through change, to become the girl that Vernon expects her to be and he achieves this through abuse.…
Two ideas are forced upon every single person. Taxes and death. Through the movie Stranger Than Fiction the audience follows Harold Crick, ironically an IRS auditor, who is forced to face his own fate. However, these are only the ideas posed on the screen. The underlying message stressed throughout this movie is the idea that time is precious and should not be taken for granted.…
The contemporary postcolonial literature by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Hanif Kureishi, M. Nourbese Philip and Zadie Smith combines the concepts of language and gender to show differences in cultural identity and, especially expose the difficulties these differences bring in the assimilation of the native culture and the colonialist culture. Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Kureishi, Philip and Smith all have different approaches and experiences when it comes to the intersections of these concepts and cultures, and their writing shows how language and gender creates a division between the colonists’ culture and the native cultures of the authors. Ngũgĩ’s essay “The Language of the African Literature”, shows how the introduction of the English language into his…
Although many of Billy Collins’ short poems feature a first-person perspective, readers should not necessarily assume that the voice belongs to the poet himself. Indeed, at times, Collins speaks in the voice of a distinct character whose experiences and thoughts reveal a specific situation and crisis. In “The Waitress,” for example, the speaker’s observations indicate that he dines out often enough to recognize the behaviours common to restaurant servers, but the detail of his description suggests that observing the waitress on this occasion has become a personally meaningful activity. The speaker’s detailed observation of his apparently indifferent waitress gives way to a romantic fantasy that reveals him to be a lonely man contemplating…
Since being Korean and not knowing how to speak Japanese he struggles with a communication barrier and the cultural differences. The young boy gets beaten badly by a Japanese teacher, the Korean teacher also gets beaten by the Japanese teacher. The young boy and his whole family is forced to give up their Korean names and switch to Japanese names. This was very hard for them to do, they were being forced to throw away their Korean ways and switch everything to Japanese, their language, writing, and even religion. They were forced to pray at the Japanese shrine and bow to the emperor as…
The reader almost wants to feel sorry for them, which is one reason why this work is controversial. In this eye opening…
The interaction between the flâneur and worker suggest an underlying class conflict present in contemporary Paris. The setting of the painting, notable as an engineering marvel, is also historically important because it is where “different social classes [come] into daily contact,” despite its past as the “scene of heavy fighting during the Commune” (Fried 21). While the bloody history of Paris is still fresh, the calmness of the bridge suggests that class relations are evolving and perhaps improving. Fried references critic Julia Sagraves’s observation that “the painting presents a ‘roomy, airy expanse of sidewalk that allows pedestrians ample passing distance, permitting them to share its space comfortably with dissimilar social types, and even a dog’” (Fried 22).…
Is there eternal sunshine in the spotless mind? This is the question posed by writers Charlie Kaufman, Michel Gondry and Pierre Bismuth in their movie Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. This movie, directed by Gondry, explores the idea that feelings and emotions are more powerful than memories, and that if we erased all of our memories, we would still possess the feelings and emotions that were created by those memories. The movie was inspired by a male friend of Bismuth who said that he would like to have all memory of his girlfriend erased. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind tells a story about two people, Joel and Clementine, who are in a bad relationship and eventually break up.…
IRU #1 Method Element: In the short story, “Happy Endings” by Margaret Atwood, an element that is important to the story is exact repetition. At the end of the short story, it states, “The only authentic ending is the one provided here: John and Mary die. John and Mary die. John and Mary die” (F. 291).…