William Godwin

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    The Handmaid’s Tale The Handmaid’s Tale is a science fiction novel written by Margaret Atwood in 1983. Margaret Atwood is a Canadian author who is most known for writing the books The Edible Woman, The Robber Bride, and Alias Grace (Atwood, 1983, p.311). The Handmaid’s Tale takes place in a world where the United States has been overthrown and replaced by a new nation called Gilead. Gilead is a place where women have been subjected to a new role in society. They are no longer allowed to have a…

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    The development in the Northern lights. This book children fantasy/steampunk novel “Northern Lights” was published in the 1995 by Philip Pullman, who is a famous fantasy book writer in this century. The book is set in a parallel universe, it features the journey of Lyra Belacqua who is our main protagonist. She is on a quest to the artic to find her missing friend, Roger Parslow and her imprisoned uncle Lord Asriel. Lord Asriel has been doing conducting experiments with a mysterious thing…

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    Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and the origins of masculinist conventions in science fiction. Mary Shelley was a nineteenth century woman writer, best known for her science-fiction novel Frankenstein. Being a female author was a rather rare occupation in a time where men were generally the dominant and active participants in society. Female authors such as Shelley were generally confined in their writing by the male conventions that existed in the society they lived in, which, with exceptions,…

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    English literature is a ship which has sailed across the boundaries of time and space, to come up with nothing but Great immortal works. One of these Masterpieces , is Emily Bronte's Weathering Heights. Emily Jane Bronte or Ellis Bell as her pseudonym born in 30 July 1818 and died in 19 December 1848 in Yorkshire , England. That smart English poet, novelist, Sunday teacher and governor who produced one eternal novel "Wuthering Heights" 1874, one year before the greatest of the 3 Bronte sisters…

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    From blockbuster Hollywood movies to parodies on the internet, the creature in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is commonly portrayed as a “monster”, but is this accusation really true? The creator of the creature, Victor Frankenstein may have more in common with the “monster” than previously thought. Through careful evaluation, we can see the many similarities and differences between the two main characters in the story. In Frankenstein, the similarities between the creature and its creator,…

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    Frankenstein Victor is the main character of this book, Frankenstein. He is from Geneva, and he is the son of Alphonse Frankenstein and Caroline Beaufort. He has an adopted sister Elizabeth Lavenza, who eventually becomes his future wife. His brother is William Frankenstein, and his best friend is Henry Clerval. Since young, he was mostly self-educated. As he gets older, he is fascinated by modern science; he goes to the University of Ingolstadt and desires to learn new knowledge so that he can…

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    Taylor Boesch Mrs. Schroder English IV Standard 7 December 2017 Frankenstein Gets Gothic Mary Shelley wrote the novel Frankenstein, a unique story, at the time that gothic literature had been becoming more and more popular. Gothic literature is a modern genre, Frankenstein is not the first of this. This genre has been around since 1754 and Frankenstein was written in 1817. Gothic does not necessarily mean dark makeup and leather jackets, but more like castles, dungeons, creatures, or a damsel in…

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    Literary Analysis on Mary Shelley Author of Frankenstein By the time Mary Shelley was nineteen she had written one of the most famous novels ever published, Frankenstein. Mary Shelley was married to the great poet Percy Shelley. While she was on a visit to another great English poet Lord Byron in 1816, Byron suggested all three of them compose horror stories to entertain each other. Her husband and their friend Byron did not go through with their promise on writing horror tales of their own,…

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    Frankenstein, also known as the Modern Prometheus, is a story begins with captain finding this man dying of hypothermia on a dog sled, brought him on his ship and while the man was dying, he told the captain his life story. His story was about himself, a scientist, who was struck with grief when his mother died that he believed he could bring back the deceased by using electricity. His first trial and error he used his dog after it had been hit by a carriage, it lived for a short period and then…

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    Saint Bernard of Clairvaux wrote in 1150 that: "L 'enfer est plein de bonnes volontés et désirs" – or in English: The road to hell is paved with good intentions (Ammer 588). Perhaps no two protagonists, in all the epochs, would be as effortlessly suited for the surplus role of a paradigmatic Robin Hood character, as the ensuing underdogs. The benevolent, Hubris-filled luminaries of Victor Frankenstein and Prometheus have, too, been answerable for stealing for the people – but not from the…

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