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    Analysis of Compass and Torch Losing your relationship to your dad is very rough and nobody wants to make that experience. In the short story Compass and Torch from Elizabeth Baines that was published in 2003. The story is about a son and a fathers relationship. While they are on a camping trip the sons desire is to be united with his dad again, so they have a good relationship again. In this analytical essay, I want to focus on the most important symbols, do a characterization of the father,…

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    An unknown author once said, “Some people create their own storms, then get upset when it rains.” Irony can be seen in three different ways, which include dramatic, verbal, and situational irony. Verbal irony is when the opposite of what is meant, is said. Dramatic irony is when the audience or some characters know something that others don’t. Situational irony is when when the opposite of what you expect to happen, happens. During the play A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Hermia and Lysander were in…

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    In Anton Chekhov’s short story ‘Heartache’ the main character, a cabby called Iona Potapov, feels painfully alienated since he thirsts for talk but nobody is willing to listen to him. He is desperately looking for someone to share his sorrow with in order to ease his heartache. However, everyone the cabby comes across, no matter their age or the social class they belong to, are so indifferent and heedless of his pain. His loneliness is a result of his sons' recent death and a lack of people to…

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    Parvana Quotes

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    Parvana isn’t your usual eleven year old, she is surrounded by violence, oppression and poverty. She lives in Afghanistan, where the Taliban are under control. The Taliban banned women from coming out of houses and the only time they could come out was when they had a note from a male or when they were accompanied by one. At one point a Taliban soldier asked why Parvana was with her and he responded as follows “I need this girl to help me walk," her father would tell any Talib who asked,…

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    In the story “Recitatif”, Maggie is a kitchen woman and a target for abuse. Maggie attracts the ire of the residents on St. Bonny’s due to her being mute, bowlegged, and wearing a childish hat. With a passing glance, one would think that Maggie is simply a side character who plays very little role in the story as a whole, but this cannot be further from the truth. Maggie is absolutely central to the conflict of the story, and she has a profound effect on the actions of other characters within…

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    In the novel Chains, by Laurie Halse Anderson, the main character, Isabel is a young slave girl who lives in a Loyalist household during the Revolutionary War. In the Lockton mansion she endure loss of family and a great deal of abuse. Moreover, Isabel goes through a lot of emotional fluctuation, from wanting to drive a sword through her owner; to being in such indecision she cannot think straight. Anderson depicts how there is no progress without struggle through her use of repetition,…

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    Herland Analysis

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    Written in 1915 by feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Herland is a turn-of-the-century feminist utopian fiction about an all female society discovered by three male travelers in an isolated part of South America. Van, Terry, and Jeff come to discover the highly advanced civilization of Herland and can’t seem to believe that no men live there;after over a year of living with the women, both Van and Jeff come to see and respect the value of true womanhood, but Terry fails to abandon his…

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    Curley's Wifes Women

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    In the 1930’s women weren’t equal with men. They didn’t have the same opportunities that the men had. They couldn’t vote, they worked at home, and they weren’t allowed to have the same jobs as men. Lots of things that women tried to do were frowned upon by most. John Steinbeck uses Curley’s wife to show us how her choices, like most women, were oppressed back then. One way Steinbeck showed us that woman weren’t equal was by using Curley’s wife and her life on the ranch. There was a part in…

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    Tzipora Wiesel - a lily amongst the weeds White lilies are known to be symbols of purity, which is something Tzipora seems embody. She is the youngest sister, and seems to be emotionally and mentally strong for her age, as she did not show sadness when the Wiesel’s were forced from their home. When Tzipora is still alive, Elie has hope that all that has happened could be a nightmare. That someone will rescue him. However, when Tzipora (and Elie’s mother) disappear (and are killed), Elie’s hope…

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    Sparks are Breathing Towards the end of Henry Howard’s sonnet, which embodies the aspects of courtly love such as secrecy, aristocracy, and adulterous actions, the speaker, who harbors love and does not reveal it due to the denial of his lover, declares “Sweet is the death that taketh end by love”. The speaker, who suffers through the inability to display his love, makes this observation while love resides in his heart. This observation reveals the secrecy of courtly love in the sonnet. The…

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