“The little lady who made this big war”. . . the words spoken by Abraham Lincoln when Harriet met him during the Civil War. So how did Harriet Beecher Stowe help abolish slavery? Harriet Elizabeth Stowe was born June 14, 1811 in Litchfield, Connecticut. Her mother Roxana Foote Beecher, and her father Reverend Lyman Beecher had ten children. Harriet was the seventh to be born. When Harriet was five, Roxana Beecher died from tuberculosis. Her father remarried one year after and had four more…
Some of the most important themes depicted in Jane Austen’s novel Emma is social class and hierarchy, parents’ role and the position of women in society. The following section discusses them comparing the book to the Miramax film adaptation directed by Douglas McGrath. Parents’ role and influence is shown at the example of two couple who cannot marry until their parents approve their decision: Emma and Mr. Knightley, and Jane Fairfax and Mr. Churchill. Emma is very close with her father, she…
Chapter one Anita Desai as a novelist Anita Desai is one of the most powerful and distinguished Indian English novelists. She has an extraordinary sharpness and penetration of vision. Her writings have drawn world-wide critical attention. Anita Desai has added a new dimension to the Indian English fiction: the exploration of human psyche. She is endowed with searching psychological insight and often peeps into the inner recesses of the psyche, rather than merely presenting the outer spectacle…
Jamaica Kincaid “Girl” Meet the author, Elaine Cynthia Potter Richardson, a girl born and raised in the West Indies, who later changed her name to Jamaica Kincaid. Jamaica wrote the short story “Girl” that talk about a fictional character having a very difficult upbringing, being raised in a place that was under British rule, which parents stuck to the old African cultures for the children upbringing. It seemed the mother was very fearful of the environment in which her daughter was growing up…
Luzemma Garza Professor Estess HON 2101 13 March 2018 Working Title (Low Key) In Pride and Prejudice, through the use free indirect discourse Jane Austen immerses the audience in the novel’s reality by setting the tone, describe characters, as well as em/sympathize with them. Free indirect discourse sets the tone of the novel (at several (key) points) with irony. Free indirect discourse is evident in the first sentence “ it is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of…
Hooper is utterly immoral and depleted of conscience, unable to feel quilt or pity, although one can argue that the underlying causes, as well as the effects of that can evoke the reader’s sympathy for the boy. Susan Hill (born 1942) is an English writer, known for her fiction and non-fiction novels, typically written in a descriptive gothic style. “I’m the King of the Castle” is considered one of her notable works, for which she was awarded the Somerset Maugham Award. In “I’m the King of the…
Change of perspective In the novel, Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen we come across as a well told story where the characters are well drawn and supported. By observing the different encounters between Darcy and Elizabeth, we come to learn that she forms a prejudice against Mr. Darcy. Throughout the novel we see how these prejudices she has are ironic and even sometimes wrong and how he over comes his pride. In my essay I would like to look at three instances where we see how his actions are…
This paper manages the battles of life. A Streetcar Named Desire focus on the unsteady characters who’s the truth isn't the American Dream. Blanche, Stella and Stanley approach life seeking after various results in lives. This play occurred directly after the World War II, In New Orleans, Louisiana. The main London creation of this play was at the Aldwych Theater on Wednesday, 12 October, 1949. Tennessee William's initial plays were identified with the life of Americans with the essence of…
“Jane, be still; don’t struggle so, like a wild frantic bird that is rending its own plumage in its desperation. I am no bird; and no net ensures me: I am a free human being with an independent will; which I now exert to leave you” (Bronte 216). In the selected passage, from the analysis taken it appears that Jane is expressing how she is finally free as she always dreamed. This was around the time where Mr. Rochester did not want Jane to leave him after figuring out he was a married man. He…
If talking about the characters in Six Chapters of a Floating Life, almost everyone will focus on Yun, who is regarded as one of the loveliest women in Chinese literature. Compared with other traditional women characters who only live for husband, her love for literature and her virtues make her different and conspicuous. However, Yun’s unique qualities make me more interesting in her husband, Shen Fu. Since Shen Fu gets Yun’s unconditional love, he certainly is an extraordinary person who owns…