Kendrick Perkins

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    In the speech, Florence Kelley uses rhetorical strategies such as imagery, appeal to pathos, and appeal to logos to convey to her audience that child labor is pitiful, unfair, and hard on kids. Kelley uses imagery to paint the disaster that is child labor. She starts off with, “Tonight while we sleep, several thousand little girls will be working in textile mills, all the night through…” When reading this, it is quote conveys how unfair it is for these young girls who work for us while we do…

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    Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” and Charlotte Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” both focus on the feministic ideas and struggles of women through the use of irony and symbolism to help channel their message towards the audience. Both stories take place in the late 19th century, a time when women were oppressed and thought of to be below men. The main characters of each story, which are women in both, feel trapped their “illnesses”. Jane, the narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper”, had a metal…

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    The scariest experiences can make the most important impacts. In “Prisoner of Tehran”, Marina Nemat utilizes setting and quotes to convey her many challenges that someone at her age should have never encountered. These challenges triggered memories of her earlier childhood before being arrested. In 246, Marina experienced discomfort and fear. In the different prison she met Taraneh and got to see her old friend Sarah. 246 did not have enough room for all the prisoners. “During the time of the…

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    In Frank Stockton’s “The Lady or the Tiger” and Charlotte Stetson’s “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the protagonist is forced to conform to the society in which she lives. In “The Lady or the Tiger,” the king’s daughter must endure her father’s harsh laws, and watch as her lover is thrown into an arena, forced to randomly choose a fate: a life married to a beautiful woman, or a terrifying death by tiger. In “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the main character struggles with post- partum depression. Her…

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    Motorcycle Diaries Thesis

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    THESIS: * Directly answer question: 1 sentence * Thesis statement: - Through our own interactions with discoveries presented in texts across time, our perceptions of ourselves and others can facilitate a fresh and renewed understanding of the world and its people. -Through life we are filled with revelation as we are exposed to the ever-changing world, with this we are incited to grow physically, intellectually and spiritually, developing new ideas and perspectives. * Introduce texts: Ernesto…

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    Zachary Nevin. “Rising from the Fall: Experience and Grace in Goblin Market and Comus” in Stanford undergraduate research journal (SURJ), Vol 9, 2009, pp. 31-36 Purpose of article The journal article ‘Rising from the Fall: Experience and Grace in Goblin Market and Comus’ published in 2009 by Zachary Nevin in the Stanford Undergraduate Research Journal (SURJ) compares and contrasts ideologies of the theme fall in Christina Rossetti’s ‘Goblin Market’ and John Milton’s ‘Comus’ Summary The article…

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    A Great Day Analysis

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    are still relevant in today’s modern world. In 'The Yellow Wallpaper' (Charlotte Perkins Gilman) Jane faces the social problem of what it feels like to not meet her society’s expectations of femininity. In “A Great Day” Fred faces the social problem of what it feels like, again to not meet the expectations of masculinity in his society. 'The Yellow Wallpaper' was written in the late 19th century by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Jane in the text feels inadequate to her husband's sister who is the…

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    ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is a fine example of how a narrator can use language to mirror their own state of mind. Throughout this story both intentional and unintentional hints are given which give us an insight into the female narrator’s psyche. The language in this story changes throughout. In the beginning of this short story about a woman who is suffering from a severe mental illness, the narrator’s thoughts are fluid and her speech is very much controlled. However,…

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    Shaykh uses the narrator’s relations with other characters to illustrate her character. Near the beginning of the story, the narrator describes how Maryam ties her hair into pigtails and fixes her thick eyebrows, from this short description it can interpreted that this character is a young dependent character. Before her secret meeting with her mother, she reveals that she is uneasy and unsure if she could open up to her mother and overcome her shyness. She explains that she is in control of her…

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    Generally speaking, Twain represents realism through the lifestyles of Huck, the Grangerfords and the Shepherdsons, and the townspeople, and shows how all the characters are flawed. To begin with, Huck’s lifestyle is difficult and flawed, and this is shown in the very beginning when the Widow Douglas takes him in. Huck says, “...she took me for her own son, and allowed she would sivilize me; but it was rough living in the house all the time…”(1). Huck establishes his opposition of…

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