Jane Lynch

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    Page 44 of 50 - About 500 Essays
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    Phoebe Holden's younger sister and Jane Gallagher Holdens love interest were two iconic characters throughout the novel the catcher in the Rye. Both of these characters have two main functions to help our protagonist Holden Caulfield. Phoebe is described as a pure and innocent child. She is shown throughout the entire novel being everything that Holden enjoys about childhood. Phoebe is honest and innocent unknowing of how cool the world can be. Simply because she's a child she has all the traits…

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    “Mary Wollstonecraft was an English writer, philosopher, and advocate of women's rights”. She was born in Spitalfields, London on April 27th, 1759. Daughter of Edward John Wollstonecraft and Elizabeth Dixon. She was a second child of seven and was raised by a father who wasn't a very successful business man and who was very abusive especially to her mother. She left home at the age of 19 to earn her own livelihood. Between 1778 and 1780, Wollstonecraft worked as a lady’s companion in Bath. She…

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    1. Accept personal responsibility: Many know Hermione as the smart, A-type bookworm, but she truly proves herself to be ethically caring as well throughout the films. Specifically in the first film, Hermione’s “bossy” attitude seems to be a predominantly known and well-recognized characteristic, so it came as a shock when she showed a shred of selflessness, in the beginning. In The Sorcerer’s Stone, Hermione had enough of the constant mockery and ridicule entreated upon her by Ron and Harry, so…

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    “The pen has almost supplanted the needle, and ladies’ closets, formerly the shops of female baubles, are now turned into libraries of learned books” (M., J.). This quote, found in the title page of The Agreeable Variety: Being a Miscellaneous Collection, in Prose and Verse, from the Works of the most Celebrated Authors, exemplifies the book’s intended audience. During the Renaissance period, humanism was flourishing, and Europeans of means were able to focus not only on simply surviving but on…

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    MARRY WELL……. MARRY REALLY WELL TOPIC: The tittle of the article is Marry well…Marry really well written by Ken Fisher. In my opinion, this article is an argumentative article. Marry is to become the legally accepted husband or wife of someone in an official. People nowadays tend to get married based on several aspects such as love, wealth, appearances. In the article, the writer focuses more on his belief that marrying for money is better sense than marrying for love as the individual who…

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    eality in George Eliot’s Understanding of Novel As a woman writer in a time when women’s presence in literature was just beginning to be acknowledged with the rise of novel, George Eliot was already among the best novelists of the time, women and men alike. While being among best novelists can be a subjective matter, perhaps it is safer to say that she was among the best realists. This feature alone has attracted attention from the male writers of her time around the world, so it is actually…

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    Abstract The paper makes a postcolonial feminist reading of Jean Rhys’s novel, Wide Sargasso Sea which is a subversion of Charlotte Bronte’s celebrated novel,Jane Eyre.It tries to show how in the novel, Rhys lends voice to Antoinette Cosway, the most silenced character in Jane Eyre and how she foregrounds the importance of creolized gendered subject within the hierarchy of European patriarchy. The paper unravels the way in which the sense of unbelongingness and gendered discrimination…

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    Maureen Johnson is an American author of young adult fiction and is recognized for the Shades of London series, including The Name of the Star. Johnson’s style is easily characterized by long, complex sentences, extensive use of allusion, and a modern story-telling ability. Mediocre metaphors aside, The Name of the Star is a well-developed novel through Johnson’s use of beautiful descriptions and believable dialogue. The novel is a part contemporary, part paranormal thriller, marked by two…

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    highest social class or have education to understand the humor, setting, characters and events. The era of Gothic literature majorly inspired and created her unique and acclaimed stylistic voice in her novels. Within the novel Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen employs extensive rhetorical devices and literary elements to establish the storyline, purpose, and themes of her writing. One of the most evident devices Austen cleverly uses is the narrator directly referring to the reader in order to…

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    Take the novel Mrs. Dalloway, while the ending is more precise than say Larsen’s Passing, there is still a question of what is to come. After the death of Septimus, Clarissa begins musing about him. “She felt somehow very like him… She felt glad that he had done it… He made her feel the beauty,” and then at the very end of the book, “What is it that fills me with extraordinary excitement? It is Clarissa, he said. For there she was” (Woolf 110, 115). With these quotes, Virginia Woolf leaves the…

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