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    All great Wizards started as a student, as did Harry Potter. He started his journey clueless about the wizard world, but now he is known as a great wizard in fact a hero, but Harry Potter reached the point of becoming a hero by going through the 5 stages of a hero’s journey; departure, Initiation, the road of trials, the innermost cave, and finally the return and reintegration with society. Specifically, in Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone the hero, Harry Potter follows these essential…

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    Krabat is a children’s novel published in the 1970s; Marco Kreuzpaintner Krabat’s director worked his hardest to modernize Krabat in order to make it more interesting and successful. In 2011 a movie was published under the original name Krabat. Instead of creating it for children, Krabat was anticipated more for adults especially those who read the book in their childhood. Krabat as a movie is very interesting, and exciting as it showed innovative ideas about black magic, friendship, and wicked…

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    The Sacrifices of Harry Potter Sirius Black in the Order of the Phoenix once said “We’ve all got both light and dark inside of us. What matters is the part we choose to act on, that's who we really are.” Often we can identify the moral values of a person through the sacrifices they make. Throughout J.K Rowling's Harry Potter series it is apparent how important sacrifice is throughout the progression of the novels. However, one of the most notable sacrifices happens before the books even begin.…

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    “Before I discovered the miracles of science, magic ruled the world.” (Kamkwamba 1). Magic took over the world that William Kamkwamba knew growing up in the early 2000’s in Malawi. He heard many stories from his father about magic and how it influenced his life. Magic was almost used in the way people use religion, to explain the supernatural of the everyday. In the very beginning of the book, William is given a bag of bubble gum, not knowing the bag had been stolen. After finding out the bag of…

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    Walter Mitty Journey

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    life, people often use traveling as a mechanism to do one of two things: find themselves or lose themselves. The actual circumstances of the journey itself do not have to be exoctic or far away, it can be as simple as Walter Mitty’s excursion in “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.” In this short story, Mitty travels alongside his wife through their somber town past various physical locations. These locations give the reader a glimpse inside Mitty’s mind as they elicit daydreams about several…

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    to feel that fantasies are a way of transporting himself into a more manly and more desirable person. This is depicted through the use of symbolism to create a better understanding of the sequences found throughout the work. James Thurber’s “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” uses symbolism to craft the theme of how identity is molded from the clay you find around you. One symbol Thurber walks on are the overshoes that Mitty is told by his wife to go get when he is dropping her…

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    story are dominated by their husbands. They are forced to complete arduous and bland housework all day. The author portrays the women’s lifestyle after marriage as insipid and bleak in comparison to their vibrant lives before marriage. In both “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” and “A jury of Her Peers” the main characters are in an oppressive marital relationship, and find a way to cope with this matrimonial burden.…

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    As I analyzed how Voldemort and his servants exemplified love and loyalty, I saw how they had strong love and loyalty but it was self-centered. Selfishness and fear were the main motivations of Voldemort for bringing about his plan of getting rid of Muggle-born wizards and taking control of the wizard government or destroying it if refused to comply with his vision. He was selfish because he was afraid of being defeated and losing his power. He did not care about who lived and who died in the…

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    Presidents from then on were required to plan out every trip and always have a bodyguard by their side. Along with this, the Secret Service agents working the day of the assassination state that there was nothing they could have done to help Kennedy after the shots were fired. They were in a completely different motorcade car with no immediate access to the President. Even if the Secret Service agents had been immediately accessible to Kennedy at the time of the assassination, very few of them…

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    H is for Heroic: Harry sticks by his morals and has a strong sense of what is right and what is wrong. When he firmly believes that an injustice has occurred, he will do anything necessary to set things in order. After he discovered that Sirius Black, the man who he once thought to have killed his parents, was actually innocent and was going to have his soul sucked out of him by the dementors at any moment, Harry was dead-set on saving Black’s life, no matter what the risks. "’Get on— there 's…

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