Jane Lindskold

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    Page 13 of 50 - About 500 Essays
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    How can Austen's Mansfield Park be read within the New Historicist argument suggested by Stephen Greenblatt; the ideological paradigm where there is no room for dissent? Or how can Austen herself be understood either as a novelist or as a historian, especially with her great role in nation building, according to the definition of a nation suggested by Homi Bhabha? While Richard Allen's emphasis the complex symbolic in the literary works that propagate specific ideological structures (Allen. 11),…

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    Gooney Bird Summary

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    Gooney Bird is a series of children's novels by Lois Lowry the American author who has made a name for herself writing children's fantasy such as the Given Quartet, The Tate series, the Sam Krupnik series, and the Anastasia Krupnik series.She was born to career military officer based in Hawaii and spent her childhood moving across different states of the US such as Pennsylvania, New York, and Rhode Island. When she was eleven she lived for a brief period in Tokyo, spent her high school years in…

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    Charlotte Brontë ‘s “Jane Eyre”. Against all odds, both works has contrasting and differing element from its’ narrative and writing styles. With Rebecca being known as the Jane Eyre of the 20th Century, and vice versa, avoiding uproar among the public was inevitable. Nevertheless, both of these classic literary works has transcended over time. It has ranged far beyond the comparisons and contradictions of its’ heroines and scenarios. The fictional written chronic works of both Jane Eyre…

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    Ambiguity In Wieland

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    Charles Brockden Brown’s gothic novel, Wieland, or The Transformation, divulges into the ambiguity through the first person narration of Clara, and her inability to decipher between reality and superstition. Throughout the haunting novel, Clara finds herself endlessly questioning the strange events that pierce her and her family’s lives, unable to trust her own skepticism and to find any definite answers. Scholar, Christine Hedlin, observes Clara’s narration in her essay entitled “Was There Not…

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    Adele and Edna: Two Forms of Divinities In literature, authors occasionally resort to reader's faith in supernatural knowledge to convey controversial themes that cannot be explicitly expressed in storylines. Women independence and gender consciousness, for instance, were such notions that the patriarchal society disapproved in the late nineteenth-century. In order to reveal the restrictive nature behind ostensibly perfect social order, Kate Chopin constructs two forms of divinities in The…

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    Masculine Mystique

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    In the article Yes, I’ve Folded Up My Masculine Mystique, Honey, author Stephanie Coontz speaks about the issue of masculine mystique in the present-day. Coontz backs her analysis and statements with several sources from sociologists to authors of several books. By using these sources, Coontz finds the history of extreme traditional gender roles and how they affect society in the present. By showing how these gender roles have affected society and how they continue to affect individuals, readers…

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    Symbolism In Sweet Home

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    ‘“This ain’t sweet home. School teacher ain’t got em (165).”’ Sethe makes her child face torture for only a few minutes instead of several long years labouring at Sweet Home. Death serves by holding the position of haven, which is a considerable situation to be in rather than returning to Sweet Home, which represents hell. The school teacher symbolizes the devil, as he brings forth negativity by wanting to corrupt the lives of Sethe’s family members. Nonetheless, Sethe displays the…

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    Bewildered by society’s dating game? You’re not alone. The dating culture appears to be quick and easy, but ultimately causes confusion and unhappiness. Some alleged benefits of present day dating can be considered the roots to its’ major issues. To understand and create a true and meaningful relationship, time, effort, and communication are crucial. We cannot let our developing culture, that promotes speed and convenience without obligation, influence the appropriate approach to dating. The…

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    Intersectionality and the Many Variations of Masculinity 1. Dorothy Allison stands as a well-known, best-selling author of Southern literature. Allison may be best known for her provocative and honest book Two or Three Things I Know for Sure. In this memoir, Allison recounts her life by emphasizing the abuse, sexual and physical, the Gibson women encountered from their male counterparts. She uses her voice in literature to stress the painful fate she was destined to have because she was born…

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    Introduction: Pride and Prejudice is a romance novel by Jane Austin, first published in 1813., The story charts the emotional development of the protagonist, Elizabeth Bennet, who learns the error of making hasty judgments and comes to appreciate the difference between the superficial and the essential. The comedy of the writing lies in the depiction of manners, education, marriage, and money in the British Regency. Since its publication, many scholars have done numerous researches on this…

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