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Analysis Of When Breath Became Air
Jake McKenna Mr. Incorvaia APLAC Summer Assignment Period 1 9/1/17 When Breath Becomes
Air (G to N) Essay One day we will all face the inevitable guest of death. But nevertheless, there are
many options when a terminal illness strikes you or someone you love. For example, you may
choose to fight and attempt to move forward with a sense of hope or allow the prognosis to paralyze
you, and eventually give up on life. Paul Kalanithi, the author and main character of the
autobiography, When Breath Becomes Air, was faced with this choice after being diagnosed with
lung cancer at the age of 36. Paul did not have a clear vision of the future, but he deemed himself
worthy to go on. When Breath Becomes Air chronicles Kalanithi's transformation ... Show more
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He knows that he will die, possibly very soon, but he conveys a great strength and spirit of hope. He
goes back to performing operations, only doing one operation a day. During his first operation he
feels faint and needs his attending surgeon to step in while he gains his strength back. Over time
with the help of physical therapy, Paul gains his strength back and is able to complete operations,
working 15 hour days with the hope of completing his residency. Paul believes in tomorrow and this
hope helps him move forward. Soon after, he graduates and decides to start a family with his wife.
Nine months later he was handed a blanket with his daughter wrapped inside, "Feeling her weight in
one arm, and gripping Lucy's hand with the other, the possibilities of life emanated before us." Paul
chose to make the most of his life with the short time he had left. Paul's first ambition, writing,
would become his final task. When Breath Becomes Air, was unfinished and derailed because of
Paul's rapid decline. But this is an essential component of the truth of the reality Paul faced. "During
the last year of his life, Paul wrote relentlessly, fueled by purpose, motivated by a ticking clock."
This example taken from the epilogue directly shows Paul's strength and his ability to never
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My Antonia Essay: The Spirit of Antonia
The Spirit of Antonia in My Antonia
The life of Antonia Shimerdas, the main character in Willa Cather's My Antonia, could easily be
judged a failure. Perhaps measures of wealth, career, beauty and love fall short when held next to
Antonia. If one could categorize life by that unnamable light or spirit which Antonia never loses, she
would surpass all who belittle her achievements in other areas.
Where the spirit comes from, no one can say. "Perhaps an ethereal or god–like being takes residence
in the person's heart"(Helmick 46). Some may say it's simply the chemistry of human beings to vary
in levels of energy, which manifests itself as vigor and enthusiasm for living. "But even one who
attributes the undying light to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
But unlike Jim and the neighbors who look disapprovingly at tasks which Antonia performs for the
livelihood of her family, Antonia, with a daring abandonment of social uprightness, takes to her new
chores with the same ardor she's always possessed. Unlike most women of her time, Antonia feels
what it is to push her body and feel pride in "how much she could lift and endure" (Cather 121).
While other young girls of her age hide from the rays of the sun, Antonia reflects them as she returns
home from her work, "shouting to her beasts, sunburned, sweaty, her dress open at the neck, and her
throat and chest dust–plastered" (Cather 121).
With an inner and outer strength, Antonia thrashes the fields of Red Cloud, Nebraska, leaving her
mark not only on the land, but also on all who meet her. From a detached and unfamilar perspective,
however, this life seems to only have detrimental effects on Antonia's character. When the Harlings,
a family in town, take on Antonia as help, they hope "the girl will be happy here, and she'll forget
those things" (Cather 149). While they succeed in taming Antonia in the kitchen, they cannot bridle
the spirit which leads her to the town dance pavilion every week. In this rhythmic environment, the
able muscles in Antonia's body outshine those of the affluent town girls, who had
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Childrens Literature and the Holocaust Essay
Children's Literature and the Holocaust
During the 1940's Jewish Europeans experienced an unthinkable and atrocious collective trauma. In
her work "Survivor–Parents and Their Children" taken from the anthology Generations of the
Holocaust, Judith S. Kestenberg has argued that regardless of location, the effects of the Holocaust
are felt on survivors parenting. The children of survivors receive a secondary traumatic impact by
being forced to deal with the impact the Holocaust had directly on their parents. The novel Briar
Rose by Jane Yolen is an example of a Holocaust survivor sharing her experiences through a
fictionalized tale made for young adults. Some may believe that a traditional, educationally ... Show
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People can either have "the ability to say 'it could have been me, it was me, also' and at the same
time 'that it was not me'" or the line between the witness and the listener can be blurred and the
historical trauma interiorized. Hirsch identifies a negative identification with trauma as idiopathic or
"self–sameness" (408). An over–identification with trauma causes the witness to act out and become
a victim. As Hirsch writes, "Acting out is based on tragic identification and the continuation of one's
self as a surrogate victim. It is based on over identification and repetition. Keeping the wounds
open, it results in retraumatization" (414).
It is because of these reasons that painful histories must be carefully passed on with the witness's
welfare in mind. Anyone who hears a first hand account about the Holocaust may experience
trauma. According to Judith S. Kestenberg, author of "Survivor–Parents and Their Children," first
hand witnessing of the Holocaust has long–term traumatic effects that are passed down through
generation. As shown through out the studies and cases discussed in the anthology Generations of
The Holocaust, the "psychological task" children of survivors have to face is dealing with the
trauma handed down from their parents as a result of
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1984 Dystopian Essay
In 1948, George Orwell published 1984; Orwell twists the dystopian genre to depict an
exemplification of life in the future based on conformity, dependence upon technology and the
absolute control of the state over the people, their rights, and their history. Orwell follows the
dystopian genre to the basics: a futuristic setting, uniform obedience, and clearly separated classes.
However, Orwell also warps these concepts in ground breaking manners to fit his own idealization:
the disturbing ways futuristic technology is used to infringe upon the rights of the people, the fear–
tactics used in order to keep the people of Oceania in complete order, and how the higher Inner
Party Members claim the luxuries that Outer Party Members do not even dare thinking of lest they
be taken and "vaporized" by the thought police. The dystopian genre used in 1984 has been
recognized to have harrowing storylines based on mental and psychological strife. No matter the
variations of the plot, most–to–all dystopian stories contain: adherence to conformity, a horrific and
unnamable past which lead to the creation of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Orwell hiself saw the horrors of war and the cold control that the wealthy capitalist had over
thousands of people, tricking them into going to war and killing themselves needlessly so he wants
to instil a fear of technology into his early age readers about the uses of techonlogy and how such
technology could be used to hurt others and control them. The telescreens grind on people's primary
need for privacy and safety within their own homes. The microphones solidify that lack of safety.
With the dial–thing that Obrien had, it was showing that no one's thoughts were safe, and that
everyone could eventually find out someone's true inner thoughts. "[T]here was always the danger
of concealed microphones by which your voice might be picked up and recognized;"
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The Accusing Angel versus the Serpent in The Book of Job...
The Accusing Angel versus the Serpent in The Book of Job
The Book of Job is a very complex translation in which two images of evil are presented. Steven
Mitchell calls them the Accusing Angel (Accuser) and the Serpent. They are both very powerful and
portrayed as supernatural beings. His first reference to the Accusing Angel appears early on,
however references throughout the story do not exist. Unlike the Accusing Angel, the Serpent is
mentioned throughout the book. Disturbing imagery and ideas from the unnamable voice from the
whirlwind help to give the reader an accurate perception of the Serpent. Although the context in
which they are presented is different, the way that both are talked about, and defined, are very
similar ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Even though Satan and Lucifer may seem like synonyms, there is a slight difference in their
definitions. Satan is defined as "the adversary of God and lord of evil" while Lucifer is defined as "a
fallen rebel archangel, the Devil." By these definitions it is possible to give either name to the
Accusing Angel. The Accusing Angel fits the description of "the adversary of God" because he is
sent to torment Job and test his faith. The Accusing Angel could also be depicted as an adversary
because of the way he tempts God into allowing him to test Job. The Accusing Angel says that Job
must be protected by some kind of divine power and that if he was to fall into hard times, he would
"curse [God] to [His] face." The Accusing Angel also fits the definition of Lucifer because of the
idea that the Accusing Angel is a fallen angel. Thus, the definition of Accusing Angel is a
combination of Satan and Lucifer.
Mitchell also uses the image of a Serpent to portray evil in his rendering of The Book of Job. The
Serpent is not described in great detail until later in the story, but the description given is extensive.
The first mention of the Serpent is by Job when he issues his "curse." Job says, "Let the sorcerers
wake the Serpent to blast [the day I was born] with eternal blight." Job introduces the Serpent as
extremely powerful, but does not give the reader any information regarding
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Why Roselily, Doesn T Crime Pay?
The short story entitled, "Roselily" attacks the masculine agenda as it regards women the secondary
beings and places them next to the men in hierarchy. The men enjoy supremacy and take relative
freedom in their relationship with women, ignore and abandon them without any obligation to their
duties. The sexual behavior of men highly pressurizes Roselily under the burden of four children,
each by different father and the fourth one taken away by the child's father. The men burden
Roselily with motherhood and desert her. The reasons behind it might be the racial turmoil of the
time but it breeds the irresponsible behavioral pattern in them and they simply drift apart. Roselily's
new husband is a Black Muslim. He expects her to give him "Babies" ... Show more content on
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It is "a nightmarish account of a black man who represses his rage before white people and turns it
on his women" in the family. (Mickelson 158) The unnamed father fiercely loves his sister,
Daughter in his childhood and unwittingly contributes in her destruction. Daughter is a "sexually
free woman in a sexually repressive time" and does give away her love to the white man who
enslaves her brother in the land and treats him worse than a beast. (Gillespie 221) When the family
members discover the reason of her illness, they tie her to the bed and treat her worse "as if she were
an animal." (Walker 38) The family ostracizes Daughter for taking a white lover and punishes her
severely. Would she have been a man, the family would not have treated her like a beast and driven
her to death. Her father, the patriarch harshly beats her with his belt and does not let her set free. She
knocks her brother down, the moment he sets her free and disappears in the night. She is found dead
the next day on the fence post near the house. The father carries the brunt of his sister's death all his
life and vows not to trust any woman in future. After marriage, he victimizes his wife and punishes
her severely. He cripples her down so that she cannot return to the imaginary advances of the
landlord; he thinks she is engaged in. It compels her to end her life. The brutal cycle of
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What Are The Similarities Between Hinduism And Confucianism
Hinduism is a major religion in India, Nepal and a few other Asian countries. It has more than 900
million followers throughout the world nonetheless this religion has no individual founder, no
singular scripture, no single set of teachings that are uniformly believed and followed by all Hindus.
Hinduism is said to exist as a supreme being while both Buddhism and Confucianism are based
upon the teachings of a man. Taoism revolves around a concept (Kokemuller, 2005). All of them
have significant similarities and differences. Buddhism is an offshoot of Hinduism, and its founder
Gautama lived as a Hindu. Both religions share common features such as place of origin, belief in
reincarnation, and belief in different paths taken to attain enlightenment. ... Show more content on
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Nevertheless, this quotient is slowly changing in the cities as more and more women join the
working force. They have even started to earn more than the man in the house. This has led to an
understanding between the genders. The modern husband and wife have begun to work a strategy to
manage housework and office work in a peaceful manner that would not stress either. In fact, there
are thousands Hindu men who working chores that were previously dominated by women such as
cooking to maintain a healthy work–life
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Ambiguity In Dave Egger's What Is The What? '
Instability and uncertainty, though culturally subjective, are ubiquitous to humankind. The
abstraction of life and death has engendered religions, music, art, and folklore. In Dave Egger's
What is the What?, a narrative recount of the life of Sudanese refugee Valentino Achak, the motif of
the unknown, the enigmatic What, subtly guides the child and adult Achak in Africa and the United
States respectively. Introduced by Achak's father as part of a creation tale, the What serves as a
mysterious and unseen force in the lives of the African refugees. It is the embodiment of variable
ambiguity, with neither consistent definition nor closure. Achak's lack of an understanding of the
What parallels his lack of understanding of his surroundings ... Show more content on
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It is this negation that proves the What is a malleable force dependent on the nature of its people.
The What of Africa and the What of the United States stem from completely different narratives.
Egger puts a human face to the struggle of facing the unknown; Valentino, despite all his adversities,
chases this indefinable substance with hope and appreciation of the value of history and experience
in his attempts to balance the suffering of his youth with the fortune of the
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Tattered Identity : Tatycoram's Temper In Little Dorrit
Tattered Identity: Tattycoram's Temper in Little Dorrit Identity is intangible, yet easy to manipulate,
distort and obscure. Charles Dickens, in his novel Little Dorrit, explores many understandings of
identity: he explores a deluded idea of one's own identity through Flora Finching and the creation of
a new identity through Rigaud. With Tattycoram, however, he explores the conditions in which one
may choose to actively suppress one's own identity. Tattycoram may be most easily characterized by
her short temper and irritability. Her body language is relatively early on in the novel described as
"contemptuous" and "impatient" and she was–according to her adopted family, the Meagles–prone
to outbursts (Dickens 212; 213). Yet, her body language itself seems to communicate an additional
layer to Tattycoram which surpasses Dickens' adjectives or the Meagles' descriptions–namely, that
she is constantly trying to contain her emotions, her anger and irritability. Dickens writes that
"Tattycoram set her full red lips together, and crossed her arms upon her bosom" and later in the
same scene that "[s]he pressed her lips together again, and took a long deep breath" (214). This
scene, in which the Meagles repeatedly question Tattycoram about the mysterious Miss Wade, the
reader gets a sense that Tattycoram is trying to keep her composure, suppressing her desires to show
her emotions. She "pressed her lips together" to avoid saying something unpleasant, while she
"crossed her
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Reading A History Pioneers Of Psychology By R. Fancher And...
While reading A History Pioneers of Psychology By, R. Fancher and A. Rutherford, in chapter 12, I
came across Gordon Willard Allport who was an American psychologist. Allport is known as a
"trait" psychologist, who was one of the first psychologists to focus on the study of the personality
and in 1937 became editor in chief of the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology. Interesting
enough to draw my attention other than Sigmund Freud, even though his meeting with Freud was
quit "insightful" as Allport told Freud the story of this "anal retentive boy".
Allport and his student Henry Odbert a Dartmouth student who followed Allport to obtain his PHD,
publish the 1936 monograph "Trait names: A Psycho– Lexical Study". A fascinating read 178 pages
article. Allport made a hallmark on personality trait, in last pages of this article, Allport provided a
list of personality which I will discuss along with a summary of the article.
In the first section of the article Allport introduce Jeremy Benthan and his confused proceed of
naming. The introduction of trait name can be seen to follow this principle of culture (not
psychology) determination to a striking degree. Allport and Odbert also spoke about what
Astrological superstition and Galenian medicine contributed to personality trait with name such as
mercurial, and good and bad humor.
They also added that political upheaval which are responsible for trait name such as democrat and
troy. Trait name are invented in accordance
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What Is Daoism?
After researching potential cultures and religions, I chose to do my project on Taoism, also known
as Daoism. Taoism doesn't have an absolute being such as Christianity with god. Instead, Taoism
follows Tao which is "the source of creation, the ultimate, the inexpressible and indefinable, the
unnamable, the natural universe as a whole, and the way of nature as a whole." Tao is everything
and nothing by including the universe but being intangible at the same time. I still find it difficult to
completely wrap my head around this term. The most prominent part of Taoism which is also part of
Tao, is Yin Yang, which are a principle of two opposite forces working in harmony. Taoists also have
a collection of texts and teachings known as the Daozang.
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The Awakening Chapter 1 Summary
1. The Awakening, Kate Chopin: Reading Journal 1, ch 1–13
2. In chapter one the reader meets Edna when she and her husband Mr Potellier arrive at the porch.
Mr Pontellier goes to the country club. In chapter 2, the reader learns that Edna's sister is getting
married, and that Robert may be interested in Edna. In chapter 3, Mr Pontellier calls Edna a bad
mother, and she cries on the porch as a result. In chapter 4, the reader meets Adele, somewhat of a
foil to Edna. Adele loves being a mother and respects all of the conventions of society. In Chapter 5,
Edna and Robert begin to flirt, but it quickly becomes clear that anything beyond casual courtship
would be scandalous in the eyes of society. In chapter 6, Edna begins to truly 'awaken'. ... Show
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Madame Antoine– woman who Edna and Robert visited when Edna feels faint at the Sunday service
on the island of Chênière Caminada]
Mariequita– young, pretty Hispanic girl. She is very flirtatious and has a crush on Robert.
Etienne and Raoul– Edna and Léonce's two sons, four and five years old, respectively.
4. The novel takes place in late 19th century New Orleans, Grande Isle. Social interactions are
highly structured and conventionalized.
5. The caged bird in the novel symbolizes the oppressed role of women in this society. The bird is
unable to communicate and has limited freedom trapped in that cage, as did the women of this time,
they were all expected to be devoted mothers who would do anything for their husband and family.
Edna's swim in the water is symbolic of her awakening, and her fear of having to swim back to
shore is symbolic of the early stage of development she is still at.
The swim also functions as foreshadowing to Edna's eventual drowning.
6. unnamable– not able to be named, especially because too bad or horrific.
Prudery– the characteristic quality or state of a prude
Muslin– lightweight cotton cloth in a plain
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The Absurd Geniuses Of All Time
Samuel Beckett, regarded as one of the best Theater of the Absurd geniuses of all time, is an Irish
playwright and director of the avant–garde. Living in Paris France for the majority of his life, he
wrote in both English and French. Using bleak and hopeless themes, his works depict a harsh attack
on realism and challenge the very meaning of life. Beckett's works opened the world of theater to
many interesting possibilities in drama and fiction. He introduced to theater and novel the idea that
the existence of human life is absurd, an idea that is prominent in his writings. Born and raised in
Ireland, he excelled in his education at Dublin University and Campbell College before moving to
Paris in 1928. Here he was introduced to the profound Irish author, James Joyce, who is regarded as
one of the most influential and important authors of the 20th century. Beckett and Joyce assisted in
each other's writings, including the book, Finnegans Wake (1939). Finnegans Wake shows some of
Beckett's darkness with its themes of sin interpreted in a dreamlike state. This book also inspired
Beckett's more comedic approach to the dark and depressing themes in most of his works.
Assumption (1929), written by Beckett, was his first of many stories. Consisting of various themes
of human nature and Irish folklore, this story was the first of many that could be considered as
difficult to understand or just gibberish, due to its syntax being strained to incomprehensibility. The
story contains
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Summary : General Psychology. Landon Horsch. Apa Style...
Article Summary
General Psychology
Landon Horsch
APA Style Citation:
Saive, A., Royet, J., Garcia, S., Thévenet, M., & Plailly, J. (2015). "What–Where–Which" episodic
retrieval requires conscious recollection and is promoted by semantic knowledge. Plos ONE, 10(12),
1–13. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0143767
Summary:
I. Abstract Pg.1
– The conscious retrieval of events from the past is defined as episodic memory
– Having a recollective experience or a feeling of knowing may not be sufficient, but it remains
unresolved
– The experiment to investigate the controlled cue–retrieval of episodes composed of odors, certain
location, and with context
– The study demonstrates that the accurate odor–evoked retrieval of complex episodes required
conscious recollection
– Even with high confidence and a feeling of knowing did not accurately generate episodic retrieval
– This study demonstrated that recollection of odor retrieval–cue brought about more familiarity and
the ability to describe
II. Introduction Pg.1&2
– "Episodic memory is defined as the conscious retrieval of personal experiences occurring within a
specific context"
– Recognition memory is known to have at least two different states of awareness: recollection and
feeling of knowing or a sense of familiarity
– The participants must say if they recognize items based on remembering rich details or
associations to it
– "These two states of awareness represent two different cognitive processes that rely on partially
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Examples Of Supernatural In Jane Eyre
In Jane Eyre, the theme of the "Supernatural" is used quite often. It is a rather interesting theme
when reading; it grabs your attention and pulls you in. No one can resist a good supernatural theme,
examples of some rather famous novels and/or films are: Star Wars, Star Trek, Harry Potter,
Divergent, etc. "Shaking my hair from my eyes, I lifted my head and tried to look boldly round the
dark room: at this moment a light gleamed on the wall. Was it, I asked myself, a ray from the moon
penetrating some aperture in the blind? No; moonlight was still, and this stirred; while I gazed, it
glided up to the ceiling and quivered over my head. I can now conjecture readily that this streak of
light was, in all likelihood, a gleam from a lantern, carried by someone across the ... Show more
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and so are sympathies; and so are signs; and the three combined make one mystery to which
humanity has not yet found the key. I never laughed at presentiments in my life, because I have had
strange ones of my own. Sympathies, I believe, exist (for instance, between far–distant, long–absent,
wholly estranged relatives asserting, notwithstanding their alienation, the unity of the source to
which each traces his origin) whose workings baffle mortal comprehension. And signs, for aught we
know, may be but the sympathies of Nature with man." (Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, Chapter 21,
pg. 222) Foreshadowing's an odd thing too, as is symbolism, also are little hints from the author
about supernatural tricks she'll use later to bring the protagonists back together when they're dozens
of miles apart. Erm, what's that called? Yeah, a deux ex machina. This passage is noteworthy
because it's one of the only moments that Jane actually claims to the reader that she believes in some
kind of supernatural foreknowledge and, a psychic connection between people. Still, Jane proposes
that these seemingly supernatural connections may have natural explanations that we just aren't
aware
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Codependency in Samuel Beckett's Endgame Essay
Codependency in Samuel Beckett's Endgame
"Clov asks, "What is there to keep us here?" Hamm answers, "The dialogue."" In the play Endgame,
Samuel Beckett demonstrates dramatically the idea of codependency between the two focal
characters who rely on each other to fulfill their own physical and psychological needs. Beckett
accomplishes this through Hamm, who assumes the identity of a kingly figure, and his relationship
with Clov, who acts as his subject. In Endgame, this idea is established by tone and humor in the
dialogue amid Hamm and Clov.
Samuel Beckett was an Irish–born poet, novelist, and foremost dramatist of the theater of the absurd.
His surreal writings mixed humor into a world paralyzed and grief stricken with pain ... Show more
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and later an M.A. in Romance languages. Beckett moved to Paris, France, where began his writing
career. It was here that he developed and perfected his absurdist style, and began to write novels and
plays alike with his bleak outlook on the core of human existence. His literature ultimately sought to
expose this concept of a wretched solitary self which was representative of quite literally
nothingness. (Encarta) Beckett created four major works including; his trilogy Molloy (1951),
Malone Dies (1951), and The Unnamable (1953), novels that he considered his greatest
achievements; and the play, Waiting for Godot (1952) which critics acclaim as his masterpiece. He
also won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969. Samuel Beckett's writings were a reflection of his
mastery of the written word, and laid the foundations of a long continuance of the absurdist
tradition.
In Antony Easthope's article he remarks on Hamm and Clov's relationship in the play and analyzes
Beckett's dramatic method. Easthope's explanation of Endgame's plot is focused around one pivotal
question: Will Clov leave Hamm? Thus, he asserts that there is no resolution, as the play ends with
Clov standing in front of the door, all packed to go, but unable to leave. Therefore, to be able to
recognize Beckett's dramatic method he states that it becomes necessary to look at Hamm and Clovs
relationship, from which it arises. Easthope believes that Clov is only a pawn dominated by Hamm's
active
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Freedom And The Pursuit Of Identity. From The Beginning
Freedom and the Pursuit of Identity From the beginning of the novel, Antoine battles the governing
forces of both the absolute and the relative for any aspect of individuality in an overwhelmingly
meaningless world. He fights passionately and dizzily against the physical nausea that stirs in him,
existence being both superfluous and erratic, and the unscrupulous monster (time) that conspires
against freedom. Throughout the novel, Sartre never directly defines freedom because doing so
would be contradictory to freedoms organic and unnamable nature, leaving the reader to discover
freedom alongside Antoine. Antoine, after acknowledging his innate purposelessness, realizes that
within the insignificance of life lies the potential for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
At the end of the novel Antoine understands that human beings are the unintentional consequence of
meaningless existence. However, his journey through the novel has taught him to no longer allow
absolute purposelessness to consume him and to not drown in the nausea the way he had been doing
for so long. Roquentin comes to terms with the nothingness that manifests into his life as deep
existential agony. The aimless essence of the universe is actually what inspires action regardless of
its futility and in the end, Antoine understands that he must accept his inability to understand
existence and that he doesn't have to understand it. He begins the process of pulling himself out of
the relentless war between the boundaries of his mind and the boundless nature of existence and
decides that he should create art. He finds that art is not a distraction from existence but a means of
survival in a blurry reality. He enacts his freedom to individual identity by writing a novel and in
essence defeating the atrocious aspects of existence that have haunted him by no longer devoting his
life to them. In order for Antoine's life to have any true intentionality, he must kill the overpowering
ego in him that craves enlightenment and accept his humanity. As Nausea comes to a close, Antoine
says that: "[he
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Social Norm In Moby Dick
"All men live enveloped in whale–lines. All are born with halters round their necks; but it is only
when caught in the swift, sudden turn of death, that mortals realize the silent, subtle, ever–present
perils of life." (Melville, 1851) The creation of Moby Dick was a significant turning point for
American literature. Melville's application of intense symbolism, challenging themes, and
extraordinary allusions contrast with that of typical American writings of that time. In fact, many
Americans rejected the novel due to the fact Moby Dick explicates realism that many Americans
neglected to comprehend in the 19th century; many Americans were not aware the immoral social
norms they practiced. In this way, Melville utilized Moby Dick as an allegory ... Show more content
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Additionally, Melville addressed allusions to Greek Mythology including the three Fates who
conducted the strings of life and destiny. In Moby Dick, the crew seized destiny into their own
hands; however, in the end, life and death were augured by the harpoon ropes. "Ahab stooped to
clear it; he did clear it; but the flying turn caught him round the neck, and voicelessly as Turkish
mutes bowstring their victim, he was shot out of the boat, ere the crew knew he was gone. Next
instant, the heavy eye–splice in the rope's final end flew out of the stark–empty tub, knocked down
an oarsman, and smiting the sea, disappeared in its depths." (Melville, 1851) Despite the attempt of
the crew, they were not the deciders of fate. On the other hand, this was similar to Americans at the
time. Americans used God to justify their iniquities including treatment of races and expansion. As
stated previously, America's justified the Manifest Destiny as God's word; thus, generating a strong
sense of nationalism. Americans concluded God constructed them as the superior nation, and many
Americans grew audacious. In fact, many felt America should only be for Americans, not foreign
immigrants. Some went as far as violence to voice their opinion, similar to Ahabd's revenge against
the whale. At the same time, Americans also removed Native Americans and enslaved African
Americans. Needless to say,
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Analysis Of Edgar Allan Poe 's ' The Imp Of The Perverse '
Mariana Falossi
Professor O'Brien
LTEN 176
November 8 2017
The Imp of the Perverse American writer and critique Edgar Allan Poe is very well known for his
gothic tales of mystery, suspense, and horror. While his impressive collection of work carry thrilling
themes of fear, death, and tragedy, Poe's work goes beyond the purpose of literary entertainment and
revealing his own inner demons. His writing may be heavily influenced by his own dark and tragic
experiences and losses, but it also reveals unique characteristics of the disturbing nature of all
people in general. One of these characteristics is explained in his short murderous tale The Imp of
the Perverse. This tale explains how a significant part of human nature is driven by ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
"In the consideration of the faculties and impulses –– of the prima mobilia of the human soul, the
phrenologists have failed to make room for a propensity which, although obviously existing as a
radical, primitive, irreducible sentiment, has been equally overlooked by all the moralists who have
preceded them" (____) The narrator explains how this is a failure which leaves room for error, and
believes that root of impulsive behavior leading people to experience perversion for example is
prima mobilia, which is in fact a part of the soul. He defines perversion as the impulse of doing
something counterintuitive to to self help. Overall the idea of acting on impulse was not being
studied and ignored. The narrator feels strongly that people should study and understand all sides of
man, and especially the perverse side. He believes that the way men live should be based on nature
rather than how they "should be living." This is not to say that men should commit murder, rather
simply understand what they are capable of and to explain the natural desire to do so. "It would have
been wiser, it would have been safer, to classify (if classify we must) upon the basis of what man
usually or occasionally did, and was always occasionally doing, rather than upon the basis of what
we took it for granted the Deity intended him to do)____)
Idealistically people
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Character Analysis: F. Jasmine
In part two chapter one, Frankie character changes. The narrator now refers to Frankie as F. Jasmine.
F. Jasmine is the grown up, sophisticated name Frankie gave herself in part one. Calling Frankie by
this name shows the change that Frankie has grown from a little girl to a woman. F. Jasmine, now
refers to her younger self as "old Frankie" (52). I think she calls her self "old Frankie" because she
wants to draw a line in her head as to the differences between the young Frankie, or old Frankie, and
the older Frankie, or F. Jasmine. Referring to the times in her life with two different names, helps
her differentiate where she was with where she wants to be. At first, Frankie was scared to grow up,
however, in part two, she wakes up the morning before the wedding ... Show more content on
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In part one, Frankie so desperately wanted to still be able to play with her younger friends, but in
part two, Frankie refers to these friends as merely "swarming children" (49). By stating her prior
friends are now just children, represents how Frankie now feel superior to them. Yesterday she
wanted to be a child, but today she feels they are inferior to her grown up self. Another example of
Frankie specially separating herself from children, was when she enters the Blue Moon Bar. The
narrator expounded on how Frankie has never entered this bar because "she had known in an
unworded way that it was a forbidden place to children" (53). However, "the old laws she had
known before meant nothing tp F. Jasmine, and without a second thought she ... went inside" (53).
In this scene, Frankie took note that this bar was no place for children, nevertheless, she went inside
because she does not think of herself as a child. Going into the bar represents the passage of
becoming an adult. As Frankie stands on the sidewalk, peering into the bar, she is a child. Thus,
walking into the bar signifies her walking away towards childhood and into
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is The Difference Between Hinduism And Confucianism
Hinduism is a major religion in India as well as Nepal and a few other Asian countries. It has more
than 900 million followers throughout the world but interestingly, this religion has no single
founder, no single scripture and no single set of teachings that are uniformly believed and followed
by all Hindus. Hinduism is said to exist as a supreme being while both Buddhism and Confucianism
are based on the teachings of a man while Taoism revolves around a concept.1 (Kokemuller, J.) All
of them have similarities and differences to a great extent. Buddhism is an offshoot of Hinduism and
it's founder Gautama lived the life of a Hindu. Both religions share a few common features. Both
religions originated in the Asian sub–continent, both religions believe in reincarnation and both
believe that there can be different paths taken to attain enlightenment. Both religions feel that we
suffer from our attachment to worldly things and people. Both religions believe in meditation and
different forms of yoga.5 (C. Lester, R, 1993) ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Both Hinduism and Taoism believe that the individual goal of a person is to realize their self. Both
religions promote good health and vitality. In Hinduism the ultimate goal of a person is to achieve
unity with Brahman who is unnamable and likewise in Taoism the main goal in a person's life is to
work towards unifying with the Tao which is the same as being unified with the world.2
(Ramanan.)Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism are all eastern religions and, in fact,
have been practiced by millions and millions of people for many
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is The Purpose Of This Poem
Next to of course God America I Sir Ahmad Salman Rushdie, a novelist, essayist and a Fellow of
the British Royal Society of Literature, explains the purpose of poetry "[a] poet's work . . . [is] to
name the unnamable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world and stop it
from going to sleep" ("Salman Rushdie"). In order to reach their goals, poets use specific techniques
to convey their messages. These techniques are –but not limited to–form, meter, rhyme scheme,
enjambment, content, themes, images and metaphors, language and tone. Therefore, analyzing the
poet's style in approaching the poem's subject is imperative to understand its aim. For that reason,
the analyzing the structure and content of the poem "Next to ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Analyzing these contents propose that the narrator of the poem is likely a politician, a corrupted
politician. This is because he kept on jumbling his ideas throughout his speech; it is a speech
because of the quotation marks. First, the politician declared his love to god and America, which he
described it as the land of Pilgrims, and dismissed to continue saying "so forth" as if he is saying to
his audience that they know the usual boring mantra. Afterwards, as if the word "America" is the
trigger; the national anthem of the United State of America is being sung. Next, he started yet
another patriotic song about America "My Country, Tis of Thee" which is used to be the national
anthem of the country before adopting the current one (The Gilder Lehrman). In the sixth line, the
farce of speech reaches a point that is best describe as "[h]is view that the hearing impaired and the
mute speak a different language is outrageously offensive" ("Next to of Course"). Then, the speaker
starts using a sophisticated ward "thy" to give his speech an appearance of eloquence, covering the
meaning with the words. Thereafter, another song that was popular in 1919 called "Oh by Jingo!"
(Wikipedia). Jingo is a political terminology that means "a person who professes his or her
patriotism loudly and excessively, favoring vigilant preparedness for war and an aggressive foreign
policy; bellicose chauvinist" ("jingo"). This definition is also describing the narrator's false
patriotism. After that, the lines from 9 to 13 are about the veterans who die in wars in the name of
their country; the honor of these soldiers' death is being claimed by the politician, who all he does is
a verbal action, while the other party is serving their country by physical actions. The line "then
shall the voice of liberty be mute?" is a confirmation of his verbal contribution to his country, which
he thinks it should not be muted as it
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Anne Sexton Wanting To Die
What comes to mind upon hearing the word death? "Wanting To Die" by Anne Sexton is a poem is
confessional poetry, which describes the obsession of death due to the stress and depress on life of
the author. [Create a more engaging/imaginative opening] Besides that, back to those years,
confessional poetry is always the announcement of the death of poets who want to end up their life
due to unhappiness, loneliness or depression like Anne Sexton. Anne Sexton draws a picture of her
life with full of loneliness, unhappiness and confusions that had led her to the thought of death as
the only way to be free from her depressing life which is foreseeable in her poems at her crisis time,
such as "Wanting to die". She provides many different reasons on why she wanted to end her own
life, even though her own life had so much to offer and she had her own family. Furthermore, she
wants to make the reader understand that she was not a happy person. [Don't focus on the poet's life;
instead, focus on introducing how the poem deals with the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
For instance, the image of "the book carelessly open. / Something unsaid, the phone off the hook"
(31–32) tends to show the unfinished works or actions, which she has not done yet while she is still
alive. For example, the unfinished things can be her job, her responsible with her kids or parents and
a relationship with her friends or family. Besides that, Anne Sexton knew that her death could cause
sadness and regret for people who love her such as her family and friends and even her co–worker
but with her death is a freedom and peace. Therefore, she skillful does not to use the word sadness
together with her death by using a metaphor "the love whatever it was, an infection" (33) to describe
for the sadness which can actually destructs the relationships with people who had loved her before
she gone
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Emily Dickinson's I Heard A Fly Buzz
I Heard A Fly Buzz, describes the stark reality of death. Emily Dickinson uses the fly as a symbol of
her impending doom and ultimate death. As she lay in bed dying in what her mind may be a
peaceful death, is disturbed by the presence of the fly disrupting the serenity of the room comparing
that disturbance to the moment to the stillness in the air just before the storm. Dickinson in my
mind, before her death, had never considered whether or not she really wanted to die or what her
death really meant. In the second stanza Dickinson says. "For that last Onset – when the King be
witnessed." I believe she is trying to explain that something is coming for her, some otherworldly
being who will steal her away from this world. She doesn't explain who or what this being is but
does ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He is trying to tell us that we are more that the information recorded in our files.
The Snow Man, is a very elegantly written piece about how we tend to take life for advantage and
refuse to see things for their true beauty when in unpleasant situations. Stevens use of winter is a
wonderful example because many people do not appreciate this cold time of the month with its long
nights and short days and frigid temperatures that'd make any sane person retreat back to their
homes.
Stevens tries to teach us to find beauty in everything, no matter how horribly a situation may be, as
long we keep our humanity and ability to love and express emotion is the most important part about
living. If we only see things for their negative values we are not truly living, we remain stuck in this
phase of our lives and are unable to move on. It's simply a waste of our time here on Earth to
constantly complain and be sorry for ourselves when there's a whole world of ideas and possibilities
right in front of
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Music Concert Critique
The Lyrique Quintette, Stella Boyle Smith Concert Hall
Leonard Bernstein stated, "Music can name the unnamable and communicate the unknowable"
(Wandberg, 2001, p. 16). This means that music has the power to transmit, inspire passion and
sensations that mere words will not do. As a part of the curriculum for the class Music Lecture
(MLIT 1003), it was required to attend a classical music concert in order to perceive and analyze
distinctive elements of the performance.
On Tuesday, March 31, 2016 at 7:30 p.m. the Lyrique Quintette performed three different
compositions. The first one was a piece named Le Grand Tango composed by Astor Piazzola with
arrangement for quintet for Sharretts. Secondly, they quintet performed Compass Kaleidoscope
written ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This concert opened with Le Grand Tango by the Argentine tango composer Astor Piazzola. Some of
the most relevant aspects that I noticed of this pieces were its arrangement, tempo and mood. Even
though this piece was originally composed for piano and cello, the arrangement made for quintet
added new combination of timbers. Also, it was noticed that Le Grand Tango' first section was
predominantly exalted by the rhythm. Nevertheless, the second section of the piece presented a
change of dynamic because of melancholic mood mixed with some jumps of expressivity. Finally
the last section's main attraction was the variable tempo providing a taste of excitement and energy.
The second piece analyzed was Quartet in E– flat Major op.51 movement 4 by Antonín Dvořák.
Before the performers started playing, one of them gave a brief story about this composition. There
are two factors that was relevant to me. First, this composition was not originally made for
woodwind quintet; however, one composer prepared this arrangement for them as a gift. As a second
factor, the whole Quartet in E–flat, Op. 51 by Antonín Dvořák presented Czech folk
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The Unnamables By Ellen Booraem
I recently got done reading a book called The Unnamables by Ellen Booraem, and I have read the
whole book. In that book, there were three main characters named Medford, Prudy, and Goatman.
This book is about an island, and everything on this island has a name. Things that are given a name,
are supposed to live up to that name and do nothing more or less than that name. For example, their
island is called Island, their city hall is called City Hall and so forth. People are also given names
that they are to live up to, like Baker, Pickler, Carver, and so forth. I think this book takes place in
the past. The reason I think this, is because the people in this story uses words like thou, thus, and
phrases like "I fare well". The main character,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Battle with Life in Wanting to Die by Anne Sexton Essay
A Battle with Life in Wanting to Die by Anne Sexton
The poem "Wanting to Die" by Anne Sexton, explores a battle with life which many people endure.
The speaker knows of the goodness of the world, yet she is unable to truly experience it because of
her suicidal tendencies. She understands her feeling as more of an obsession with death rather than a
hate for life. Though the speaker is still alive, she relapses, every so often, into the darkness of her
soul. Through her vivid use of imagery, Sexton creates and elucidates the speaker's susceptibility to
suicide.
It is apparent from the first stanza the speaker finds her life lacking. The first lines of the poem
describe the speaker's ordinary days: "Since you ask, most ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
the grass blades you mention... furniture you have placed..." ( 5–6) This person seemingly hopes, as
the reader does, for the speaker and wants for her every happiness. The next stanza invites the reader
into the speaker's mind and soul. We learn depression is more than a hate for life, it is something one
must experience to be able to relate to, as in line 7: "But suicides have a special language." This
stanza also alludes to the fact that when the speaker is suicidal she refrains from looking at the big
picture; instead she focuses on the few bad experiences which drive her that much deeper into
depression.
The following stanza invites the reader to learn about the suicide attempts of the speaker: "Twice I
have simply declared myself, / have possessed the enemy, eaten the enemy, / have taken on his craft,
his magic" (10 – 12). Here the reader learns of the speaker's two suicide attempts. This stanza also
implies the speaker's anger toward her illness. She associates her depression as the enemy, almost as
if depression were the devil in flesh coming to her, haunting her, luring her to death, a death of
submission.
The fifth stanza, with its vivid images, is exceedingly descriptive in its discussion of the speaker's
means of suicide: " In this way, heavy and thoughtful, / warmer than oil or water, / I have rested,
drooling
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Compare And Contrast Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde
In the novel "The strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde" there is a theme of good vs evil. Good
being Dr. Jekyll and evil Mr Hyde they have the inner fight between themselves, because they are
the same person.Robert louis Stevenson uses Diction,imagery,and details to contrast the character of
Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde Stevenson uses diction to contrast how Dr. Jekyll is a high qualified doctor,
and how Mr.Hyde is an evil man. "Henry Jekyll MD ,DLC, LLD,FRS, ." (11 Stevenson.) Dr. Jekyll
has many degrees in his field of work, and he is very qualified to be a doctor, Stevenson show that
he is very qualified by listing all of his medical degrees. "But it is more than ten years since henry
Jekyll became too fanciful for me". (12 Stevenson) ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Utterson saw Jekyll since they were good friends he saw that this person in front of him was not his
good friend. Dr.jekyll the good the kind and Hyde is turning him into a dark, and evil person. All
these things that are happening to Jekyll is making his body sick, deadly looking. "This master
Hyde, if he were studied though he , must have secrets of his own:black secrets, by the look of him;
secrets compared to which poor Jekylls worst would be like sunshine." (18 Stevenson) This quote
shows that Dr.jekyll is good,compared to Hyde he is good. Even Dr.Jekyll's Darkest deepest secrets
compared to Hyde's secrets Jekyll's look like sunshine, and cant even compare to Hyde's secrets.
"Now that that evil influence had been withdrawn, a new life began for Dr.Jekyll."(31
Stevenson)This Quote shows that Mr. Hyde is evil. Hyde's evil influence on Dr.jekyll who was a
good man and Mr.Hyde was turning him into something evil. With his evil influence gone Dr.Jekyll
can be himself; a good man."It turns me to think of this creature stealing like a thief to harry's
bedside; poor harry what a wakening!" (18 Stevenson)This quote shows that everyone had a bad
feeling about Mr.Hyde, Utterson knew that Hyde was bad, and evil. Utterson hated to see his oldest
friend Dr.jekyll get his life ruined by a a thief and and
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Amanda Aurigemma. Gill 5Th Hour. Ap Literature. 24 February
Amanda Aurigemma
Gill 5th Hour
AP Literature
24 February 2017
Nature's Truth in Wuthering Heights The metaphors drawn from nature in Wuthering Heights drive
the plot primarily through characterization. Rarely does the story venture outside, containing almost
exclusively scenes leading up to a character's departure and the response to his/her journey. The
absence of tangible nature in a book so driven by its symbolism seems peculiar at first. Why does
the author not provide the reader any detail of Heathcliff's struggle against the storm after he departs
in heartbreak? By narrating the storm in terms of how it is observed from inside, the reader loses the
expected description of the storm's intensity. Even Catherine's diary, the most ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Heathcliff personifies nature combating the human attempt to confine it in his stark contrast to the
civilized Lintons. Unlike any other character in the novel, Heathcliff remains authentic to nature and
does not try to fully domesticate its furious beauty. Where most people are more prone to suppress
their natural inclinations in favor of culture, Heathcliff is willing to defy societal standards, even if
the results are destructive. His revenge is not rooted in the evils of man, but rather cataclysmic
nature as driven by psychology. As Abraham Maslow argues in his "A Theory of Motivation," any
danger to our basic needs or the defenses that protect them impose a psychological threat, bringing
about emergency reactions that could potentially be destructive. Heathcliff 's experiences align with
the deprivation of these "basic needs," and his revenge can therefore be seen as an entirely natural
inclination. The five basic needs in order of primacy are physiological needs, safety needs,
love/belonging needs, esteem needs, and self–actualization needs. The most pressing need will
overtake and individual's consciousness and organize their capacities. The less pressing needs are
minimized, even forgotten or denied. However, when a need is satisfied, the next higher need
emerges (Maslow –– find citation). In order to most effectively analyze Heathcliff's revenge, it is
important to study this hierarchy of needs in ascending order in relation to their
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Displaying Self Harm In Dostoyevsky's Notes From The...
Displaying self harm is the men's way to prove their toughness, another aspect society portrays men
to be. In the beginning of Notes From the Underground, the Underground Man is afraid he is
severely sick, but does nothing about it. Instead, he complains and ignores his sickness. "However, I
know nothing at all about my disease. and do not know for certain what ails me. I don't consult a
doctor for it, and never have" (Dostoyevsky 91). Later on the Underground Man described his
reluctance to seek medical help came from him believing he did not need it due to the fact that he
was tough enough to endure the pain it brought. The Underground Man uses his free will to decide
for himself not to seek assistance. This free will came from wanting to ... Show more content on
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As one attempts to have a closer and more personal relationship, the other pulls back. Estragon fears
becoming too intimate with Vladimir because he wants to keep his masculinity. The chasm between
Vladimir and Estragon continued to grow throughout the play. Within Fight Club, the characters
show love but in a sense of ownership in order to hold their masculine title. They also are afraid to
love in hopes of becoming vulnerable. Palahniuk wrote, 'This isn't about love in caring. This is about
property as in ownership" (Palahniuk 14). This view of love is not positive, as it is used to control
others. However, there is irony within this because none of the characters within the novel want to
be controlled. Not falling in love can also serve as a reason to uphold masculinity. The readers could
tell that the narrator was head over heels for Marla Singer, one of the few female characters in the
novel, but he refuses to approach it. He said, "I tell Tyler, Marla Singer doesn't need a lover, she
needs a care worker. Tyler says, 'Don't call this love'" (Palahniuk 62). The narrator and Tyler agree
with each other that they are most certainly not in love with Marla, but the readers know he is.
Another example is present when the narrator believed he liked Marla but claimed he did not love
her. "It's not love or anything . . . But I think I like you, too" (Palahniuk 205). In the world of Fight
Club, liking
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Literary Analysis On 1984 By George Orwell
Felics Sparks Madden LA Period 2 1 / 21 / 2016 Written Task 2 (SL) 1984 by George Orwell,
published in 1948. Orwell uses the dystopian genre to conceive an exemplification of life in the
future based on conformity, dependence of technology, and the absolute control of the state over the
people, their rights, and their history. The dystopian genre has been classified to have constraints
upon the structure of the storyline; variations of such plots come through in different ideas, but all
adhere to: conformity, surveillance / invasion of privacy, a terrible / unnamable past which lead to
the dystopia's creation, a futuristic setting, lack of rights / freedom / expression for the people, and a
distinct segregation of the higher and lower classes.How ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Orwell uses the dystopian genre to conceive an exemplification of life in the future based on
conformity, dependence of technology, and the absolute control of the state over the people, their
rights, and their history. The dystopian genre has been classified to have constraints upon the
structure of the storyline; variations of such plots come through in different ideas, but all adhere to:
conformity, surveillance / invasion of privacy, a terrible / unnamable past which lead to the
dystopia's creation, a futuristic setting, lack of rights / freedom / expression for the people, and a
distinct segregation of the higher and lower classes.How does the text conform to, or deviate from,
the conventions of a particular genre, and for what purpose? Also use examples from the text to
support my ideas and what they're supposed to be
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Molloy Response Essay
Samuel Beckett's Molloy is divided into two parts. The first part begins with the narrator, Molloy,
who is being driven to write for an unknown reason and by an unknown person. At the end of the
first paragraph, Molloy says: "Here is my beginning" (Beckett 8). Molloy's account of "what
happens" isn't organized as a narrative; in a way; Molloy is Beckett's portrait of what would happen
if someone who didn't tell stories was compelled to tell one. He begins not even with the pseudo–
quest of going to see his mother but with some observations of two people, A and C. From there, he
tells of the pleasures of being on his bicycle, which he says he will not call a bike. It is after these
accounts that he reveals a fraught relationship with his mother; ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
It wasn't until I listened to the audiobook while driving. I don't know what it is, but I think being so
concentrated on driving and listening to the story at the same time really helped me focus on what
the story was about. My opinion of the novel as a work of imaginative literature would be that
Molloy can be interpreted in many ways; some may have interpreted Molloy in a completely
different way than I did. Personally, I found the novel to have many depressing and unfortunate
events, but someone else may have thought of these events differently. Molloy is definitely one of
those novels that can have different meaning depending on who's reading it. I remember listening to
the novel while my boyfriend was asleep thinking to myself "Oh man what in the world is going on
in this story?" and once I put the recording on pause my boyfriend woke up and asked me why did I
turn it off because he was actually enjoying the novel in his sleep. I thought that was quite
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Robin Morg A Truly Inspiring Woman
Robin Morgan is thought of as a truly inspiring woman. When she was just a couple of months old,
she starred in prize baby contests and transitioned into modeling as a toddler. In 1945, at a young
age, she had a nationally syndicated radio show before she delved in acting where she became
immensely successful. Against the will of her mother, at the young age of fourteen, she left acting to
pursue a career in writing, having had the dream of being a writer since she was four years old. At
the age of seventeen, she published several of her poems in various literary magazines. She went on
to write numerous diverse styles of successful works and quickly became highly regarded by several
organizations. Our such organization, The Women 's Media Center, stated, "An award–winning
author, feminist activist, political analyst, and journalist, and a recipient of the National Endowment
for the Arts Prize (Poetry) with a host of other honors, Robin Morgan has published more than
twenty books, including poetry, fiction, and the now–classic anthologies Sisterhood Is Powerful,
Sisterhood Is Global, and Sisterhood Is Forever. Her work has been translated into 13 languages." In
the year 2010, Morgan was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease. Since that diagnosis, she has
dedicated herself to not only continuing her writing, but to "...applying her intellect and organizing
skills to Parkinson's research and gender bias". In her speech, 4 Powerful Poems About Parkinson's
and Growing Older, Robin
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Samuel Beckett¨s Novel Molloy and Its Particular Style,...
There's no question Samuel Beckett was deeply influenced by the avant–garde style of fellow Irish
novelist James Joyce when writing Molloy. Both Beckett and Joyce allude to the classics (Dante's
Purgatorio and Homer's Odyssey, respectively) and both extensively employ interior monologue to
often similar effect. Even so, Beckett, ever aware of the shadow cast by his former mentor, also
attempted to eschew Joycean tendencies in his works, as demonstrated in Molloy. Here, not only
does Beckett entirely deny readers the luxury of context, he deconstructs the very fundamentals of
novel and narrative. Distinctly metafictional in form, Molloy self–consciously underlines its own
artificiality and, on a universal level, that intrinsic to fiction itself. Like the titular allusion of Joyce's
Ulysses, the two protagonists in Molloy also embark on a voyage of sorts, albeit the nature of which
is even more so internalized. As a result, there's not much by way of plot or setting, which remain
intentionally hazy. Still, the novel moves, sometimes at a dizzying pace, in part to its frequent
digressions and elision of so many vital answers: Are Molloy and Moran the same character? Is it
possible Molloy may not even be a person altogether but rather an alter ego of Moran? Is Molloy a
state of mind? What exactly does it mean to be "searching for Molloy"? These questions stem from
the novel's vague definition of physical space and time, leading some readers to interpret the novel's
second
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An Analysis Of Anne Sexton's Freedom To Die
Yug Patel
Clay Holliday
Course Number
10/25/17
Freedom to die
In "Wanting to die", Anne Sexton illustrates an analogy that compares her desire to commit suicide
and an addiction. Sexton writes this confessional poem to clearly and powerfully express her
feelings for death and how she perceives it. Sexton is obsessed with death and believes that it gives
her purpose which is why she has to commit suicide. Sexton believes that death will put her to rest
and that she is meant to be with it, as if it were alive.
Throughout the poem, Sexton says how much and why she desires death like how people desire
love. In the first stanza, Sexton talks of how her present state of mind is towards suicide. Sexton is
describing how her thoughts aren't clear ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The narrator describes death as something she longs for because of how death gives her hope of
being at rest. Sexton continues to reflect upon her attitude and behavior to thoughts of suicide. The
narrator says how she "did not think of my body at needle point" and that "suicides have already
betrayed the body" (16–18). With this, Sexton emphasizes that her body alienates her. That her body
and mind are out of sync. She wants to die, but does not see the physical signs or symptoms of the
toll death is taking on her. Sexton says that suicide becomes the person it is affecting. It consumes
them entirely, both physically and mentally. And although not all suicides are successful, the rush
from it is as addictive as a drug on its own which is why she said "a drug so sweet" (20). In the lines
"still–born, they don't always die, / but dazzled, they can't forget a drug so sweet", Sexton describes
how failed suicide attempts can affect the mind by explaining how it tends to leave the victim
fascinated in awe after one's close encounter with death (19–20). A suicidal person's first
confrontation with death can be closely paralleled with one's first encounter with a highly addictive
drug. Most commonly, this sort of encounter leads one into a sort of curious state of mind. Like a
suicidal person, it leaves them in a position where the idea of relapse
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Native American Storytelling Lit Paper
Native American Storytelling November 12, 2012 ENG/301 Native American Storytelling Native
American literature is the root of cultural storytelling, which is told through oral tradition, this
consist of stories and songs verbally. Native American literature use literary conventions in the root
of myth and symbolic examples in storytelling. The book "Native American Literature: A Brief
Introduction and Anthology" gives good insight into the Native American ways of life and how
storytelling is a part of that life. Short stories by Simon Oritz and Luther Standing Bear share life
experience and cultural diversity. The reader can see how historical, social and political, and cultural
ways play a role in the Native Americans storytelling. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
252). Tricksters come in many forms "such as Raven, Spider and Coyote are characters in Native
American mythology who represent the underside of human nature" (Sinnaeve, 2012). "In this
literary critical context, a trickster uses sleight of hand and tongue to evade, manipulate, and subvert
the colonial world" (Cox, 2005, p. 252). In the poem "My Father's Song" written by Simon Ortiz,
the poem speaks of the importance of creation. The creation of life, land, and plantation, the story is
about a boy who is learning to planet corn. "We planted corn one spring at Acu – we planted several
times but this one particular time I remember the soft damp sand in my hand" (Ortiz, 1981/1995, p.
260). Within the field the boy and his father found a nest of mice, the father showed the boy how to
gentle pick them up, and take them to the end "of the field and put them in the shade" (Ortiz,
1981/1995, p. 260). The purpose of literary conventions in storytelling helps to educate the new
generation, "These stories have been carried down orally for generations, often by parents teaching
their children about fundamental cultural truths" (Sinnaeve, 2012). The Native American people
went through many changes throughout history, social and political, and cultural events. A social
and political event was the education of young Native Americans. In 1879, many Native American
children were
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Ignorance Is Eyewitness
The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that in an isolated system, there will be a natural
tendency towards a more disordered state. When things or ideas are separated from each other, they
are perceived to be organized. On the other hand, when things or ideas are all mushed together, they
are deemed unorganized. The proverb, "Ignorance is bliss", represents a very orderly state where
opposites are separated. In contrast, the proverb, "The truth shall set you free", signifies a disordered
state where opposites are mixed together. Therefore, according to The Second Law of
Thermodynamics, there is a natural tendency for opposites to combine. The Book of Job features
many instances of the mixing of opposites, which leads Job to see the world differently. The first
time opposites combined occurs during the very beginning of the book. Job begins with a large
amount of animals and plenty of children, however a few moments later, Job loses everything that
he had and suffers. This already changes the way Job thinks, which could be seen when Job said,
"We have accepted good fortune from God, surely we can accept bad fortune too" (8). Before Job
loses everything, he does not know what bad ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The prophecy that Oedipus is "the man who should marry his own mother" shows opposites
combining since he would be producing children with the person who made him. Even though
Oedipus runs away from his "family" to prevent this from happening, it still happens anyways
because he cannot evade fate. When Tiresias tells Oedipus, "You are the murderer whom you seek"
(20), Oedipus rejects the idea that the murderer and him are the same person by saying, "Now twice
you have spat out infamy [...] Whatever you say is worthless" (20). Later on in the story, Oedipus
finds out that he is the murderer of his father, which also demonstrates how fate and the combination
of opposites is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Hindu Perspective: Hinduism And The Religion Of Hinduism
Hindu Perspective
Hinduism is the religion of Hindus and it is also one of the oldest religion in the world. This religion
is also known as Sanatana–Dharma which means an eternal religion. Not because it is eternal only,
but also because of it is protected by their own God (Jayaram, n.d.). Other than that, Hinduism is
also known by the name of Vaidika–Dharma. Vaidika–Dharma is the religion of the Vedas. The
foundational scriptures of Hinduism are the Vedas. In Hinduism education is an important means to
achieve the four aims of human life. Vidya or also called as education means to perform his
obligatory duties with a sense of detachment and devotion to God an individual must improve the
right knowledge, know to control his wishes and learn, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Tao Te Ching has their own meaning which is Tao or Dao can be translated as a "way" which means
the universe unnamable process, whereas Te or De is a "virtue" or "personal character" that means a
now–archaic sense of inner potency. For Ching or Jing means a "great book" or "classic". Thus, if
we combined all the words it can be translated as "The Book of the Way of Virtue" or "The Classic
of the Way's Virtues". This holy book can be divided into 81 chapters. The chapters also are divided
into two halves. The first halves consists of 37 sections formed the upper section and was called as
the "Classic of the Tao" because the initial word of the text is "Tao". The second halves were called
as the "Classic of Te" due to the second key term of the text is "Te". They believe that Tao Te Ching
is important and essential as guidance for them in living full spiritual and ethical life. Tao Te Ching
has been written in classical Chinese. The concept of Tao Te Ching also focuses on education and
knowledge. For example, in chapter forty–eight which is the pursuit of the Way is not like the
pursuit of information. The meaning of this phrase is learning can be improved if we put more effort
on it day by day (Eno, 2016,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Metaphors
Metaphors by Sylvia Plath was written in 1959. It is a lyric poem that uses metaphors to create a
riddle, as she states in line one. Plath is using a narrator voice in her poetry to describe her
pregnancy with the use of metaphors and her ambivalence to her current state. The narrator is
mocking herself and I find her mocking tone to pregnancy as something I want to incorporate in my
writing when writing about my character's eating disorder.
The poem starts with the narrator announcing herself as a riddle in nine syllables. The nine syllables
is the first hint that the poem is going to be about pregnancy. Plath correlated the use of the word
'nine' to the length of a pregnancy, giving the reader an inkling of what is to be expected of the
poem. The narrator then goes on to describe herself as an elephant, then a house, two very
distinctively large objects. She is now mocking the weight gain caused by pregnancy and she
furthers this by comparing herself to a melon, strolling on two tendrils. These lines give the reader a
vivid imagery of someone that has become stout and is struggling to do normal tasks such as walk.
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the poem she uses vivid imagery to convey the feelings of emotional suicide. The poem begins
with an answer to the question "why do you want to die?" she answers this question by starting the
poem with "since you ask" and takes the reader through a journey where the final destination is
committing suicide. In her poetry, she does not use the voice of the narrator like the way Plath does,
instead it is more of a conversational piece. Her poetry is confessional and written in her point of
view, whereas with Plath's poems I've mentioned before, there is a disconnect where the reader reads
it in the voice of the narrator, instead of Plath's voice. In the poem, she notes that her body is a
physical " bad prison" that should be emptied completely in order to finally be
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Analysis Of When Breath Became Air

  • 1. Analysis Of When Breath Became Air Jake McKenna Mr. Incorvaia APLAC Summer Assignment Period 1 9/1/17 When Breath Becomes Air (G to N) Essay One day we will all face the inevitable guest of death. But nevertheless, there are many options when a terminal illness strikes you or someone you love. For example, you may choose to fight and attempt to move forward with a sense of hope or allow the prognosis to paralyze you, and eventually give up on life. Paul Kalanithi, the author and main character of the autobiography, When Breath Becomes Air, was faced with this choice after being diagnosed with lung cancer at the age of 36. Paul did not have a clear vision of the future, but he deemed himself worthy to go on. When Breath Becomes Air chronicles Kalanithi's transformation ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He knows that he will die, possibly very soon, but he conveys a great strength and spirit of hope. He goes back to performing operations, only doing one operation a day. During his first operation he feels faint and needs his attending surgeon to step in while he gains his strength back. Over time with the help of physical therapy, Paul gains his strength back and is able to complete operations, working 15 hour days with the hope of completing his residency. Paul believes in tomorrow and this hope helps him move forward. Soon after, he graduates and decides to start a family with his wife. Nine months later he was handed a blanket with his daughter wrapped inside, "Feeling her weight in one arm, and gripping Lucy's hand with the other, the possibilities of life emanated before us." Paul chose to make the most of his life with the short time he had left. Paul's first ambition, writing, would become his final task. When Breath Becomes Air, was unfinished and derailed because of Paul's rapid decline. But this is an essential component of the truth of the reality Paul faced. "During the last year of his life, Paul wrote relentlessly, fueled by purpose, motivated by a ticking clock." This example taken from the epilogue directly shows Paul's strength and his ability to never ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. My Antonia Essay: The Spirit of Antonia The Spirit of Antonia in My Antonia The life of Antonia Shimerdas, the main character in Willa Cather's My Antonia, could easily be judged a failure. Perhaps measures of wealth, career, beauty and love fall short when held next to Antonia. If one could categorize life by that unnamable light or spirit which Antonia never loses, she would surpass all who belittle her achievements in other areas. Where the spirit comes from, no one can say. "Perhaps an ethereal or god–like being takes residence in the person's heart"(Helmick 46). Some may say it's simply the chemistry of human beings to vary in levels of energy, which manifests itself as vigor and enthusiasm for living. "But even one who attributes the undying light to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... But unlike Jim and the neighbors who look disapprovingly at tasks which Antonia performs for the livelihood of her family, Antonia, with a daring abandonment of social uprightness, takes to her new chores with the same ardor she's always possessed. Unlike most women of her time, Antonia feels what it is to push her body and feel pride in "how much she could lift and endure" (Cather 121). While other young girls of her age hide from the rays of the sun, Antonia reflects them as she returns home from her work, "shouting to her beasts, sunburned, sweaty, her dress open at the neck, and her throat and chest dust–plastered" (Cather 121). With an inner and outer strength, Antonia thrashes the fields of Red Cloud, Nebraska, leaving her mark not only on the land, but also on all who meet her. From a detached and unfamilar perspective, however, this life seems to only have detrimental effects on Antonia's character. When the Harlings, a family in town, take on Antonia as help, they hope "the girl will be happy here, and she'll forget those things" (Cather 149). While they succeed in taming Antonia in the kitchen, they cannot bridle the spirit which leads her to the town dance pavilion every week. In this rhythmic environment, the able muscles in Antonia's body outshine those of the affluent town girls, who had ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Childrens Literature and the Holocaust Essay Children's Literature and the Holocaust During the 1940's Jewish Europeans experienced an unthinkable and atrocious collective trauma. In her work "Survivor–Parents and Their Children" taken from the anthology Generations of the Holocaust, Judith S. Kestenberg has argued that regardless of location, the effects of the Holocaust are felt on survivors parenting. The children of survivors receive a secondary traumatic impact by being forced to deal with the impact the Holocaust had directly on their parents. The novel Briar Rose by Jane Yolen is an example of a Holocaust survivor sharing her experiences through a fictionalized tale made for young adults. Some may believe that a traditional, educationally ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... People can either have "the ability to say 'it could have been me, it was me, also' and at the same time 'that it was not me'" or the line between the witness and the listener can be blurred and the historical trauma interiorized. Hirsch identifies a negative identification with trauma as idiopathic or "self–sameness" (408). An over–identification with trauma causes the witness to act out and become a victim. As Hirsch writes, "Acting out is based on tragic identification and the continuation of one's self as a surrogate victim. It is based on over identification and repetition. Keeping the wounds open, it results in retraumatization" (414). It is because of these reasons that painful histories must be carefully passed on with the witness's welfare in mind. Anyone who hears a first hand account about the Holocaust may experience trauma. According to Judith S. Kestenberg, author of "Survivor–Parents and Their Children," first hand witnessing of the Holocaust has long–term traumatic effects that are passed down through generation. As shown through out the studies and cases discussed in the anthology Generations of The Holocaust, the "psychological task" children of survivors have to face is dealing with the trauma handed down from their parents as a result of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. 1984 Dystopian Essay In 1948, George Orwell published 1984; Orwell twists the dystopian genre to depict an exemplification of life in the future based on conformity, dependence upon technology and the absolute control of the state over the people, their rights, and their history. Orwell follows the dystopian genre to the basics: a futuristic setting, uniform obedience, and clearly separated classes. However, Orwell also warps these concepts in ground breaking manners to fit his own idealization: the disturbing ways futuristic technology is used to infringe upon the rights of the people, the fear– tactics used in order to keep the people of Oceania in complete order, and how the higher Inner Party Members claim the luxuries that Outer Party Members do not even dare thinking of lest they be taken and "vaporized" by the thought police. The dystopian genre used in 1984 has been recognized to have harrowing storylines based on mental and psychological strife. No matter the variations of the plot, most–to–all dystopian stories contain: adherence to conformity, a horrific and unnamable past which lead to the creation of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Orwell hiself saw the horrors of war and the cold control that the wealthy capitalist had over thousands of people, tricking them into going to war and killing themselves needlessly so he wants to instil a fear of technology into his early age readers about the uses of techonlogy and how such technology could be used to hurt others and control them. The telescreens grind on people's primary need for privacy and safety within their own homes. The microphones solidify that lack of safety. With the dial–thing that Obrien had, it was showing that no one's thoughts were safe, and that everyone could eventually find out someone's true inner thoughts. "[T]here was always the danger of concealed microphones by which your voice might be picked up and recognized;" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. The Accusing Angel versus the Serpent in The Book of Job... The Accusing Angel versus the Serpent in The Book of Job The Book of Job is a very complex translation in which two images of evil are presented. Steven Mitchell calls them the Accusing Angel (Accuser) and the Serpent. They are both very powerful and portrayed as supernatural beings. His first reference to the Accusing Angel appears early on, however references throughout the story do not exist. Unlike the Accusing Angel, the Serpent is mentioned throughout the book. Disturbing imagery and ideas from the unnamable voice from the whirlwind help to give the reader an accurate perception of the Serpent. Although the context in which they are presented is different, the way that both are talked about, and defined, are very similar ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Even though Satan and Lucifer may seem like synonyms, there is a slight difference in their definitions. Satan is defined as "the adversary of God and lord of evil" while Lucifer is defined as "a fallen rebel archangel, the Devil." By these definitions it is possible to give either name to the Accusing Angel. The Accusing Angel fits the description of "the adversary of God" because he is sent to torment Job and test his faith. The Accusing Angel could also be depicted as an adversary because of the way he tempts God into allowing him to test Job. The Accusing Angel says that Job must be protected by some kind of divine power and that if he was to fall into hard times, he would "curse [God] to [His] face." The Accusing Angel also fits the definition of Lucifer because of the idea that the Accusing Angel is a fallen angel. Thus, the definition of Accusing Angel is a combination of Satan and Lucifer. Mitchell also uses the image of a Serpent to portray evil in his rendering of The Book of Job. The Serpent is not described in great detail until later in the story, but the description given is extensive. The first mention of the Serpent is by Job when he issues his "curse." Job says, "Let the sorcerers wake the Serpent to blast [the day I was born] with eternal blight." Job introduces the Serpent as extremely powerful, but does not give the reader any information regarding ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Why Roselily, Doesn T Crime Pay? The short story entitled, "Roselily" attacks the masculine agenda as it regards women the secondary beings and places them next to the men in hierarchy. The men enjoy supremacy and take relative freedom in their relationship with women, ignore and abandon them without any obligation to their duties. The sexual behavior of men highly pressurizes Roselily under the burden of four children, each by different father and the fourth one taken away by the child's father. The men burden Roselily with motherhood and desert her. The reasons behind it might be the racial turmoil of the time but it breeds the irresponsible behavioral pattern in them and they simply drift apart. Roselily's new husband is a Black Muslim. He expects her to give him "Babies" ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is "a nightmarish account of a black man who represses his rage before white people and turns it on his women" in the family. (Mickelson 158) The unnamed father fiercely loves his sister, Daughter in his childhood and unwittingly contributes in her destruction. Daughter is a "sexually free woman in a sexually repressive time" and does give away her love to the white man who enslaves her brother in the land and treats him worse than a beast. (Gillespie 221) When the family members discover the reason of her illness, they tie her to the bed and treat her worse "as if she were an animal." (Walker 38) The family ostracizes Daughter for taking a white lover and punishes her severely. Would she have been a man, the family would not have treated her like a beast and driven her to death. Her father, the patriarch harshly beats her with his belt and does not let her set free. She knocks her brother down, the moment he sets her free and disappears in the night. She is found dead the next day on the fence post near the house. The father carries the brunt of his sister's death all his life and vows not to trust any woman in future. After marriage, he victimizes his wife and punishes her severely. He cripples her down so that she cannot return to the imaginary advances of the landlord; he thinks she is engaged in. It compels her to end her life. The brutal cycle of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. What Are The Similarities Between Hinduism And Confucianism Hinduism is a major religion in India, Nepal and a few other Asian countries. It has more than 900 million followers throughout the world nonetheless this religion has no individual founder, no singular scripture, no single set of teachings that are uniformly believed and followed by all Hindus. Hinduism is said to exist as a supreme being while both Buddhism and Confucianism are based upon the teachings of a man. Taoism revolves around a concept (Kokemuller, 2005). All of them have significant similarities and differences. Buddhism is an offshoot of Hinduism, and its founder Gautama lived as a Hindu. Both religions share common features such as place of origin, belief in reincarnation, and belief in different paths taken to attain enlightenment. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Nevertheless, this quotient is slowly changing in the cities as more and more women join the working force. They have even started to earn more than the man in the house. This has led to an understanding between the genders. The modern husband and wife have begun to work a strategy to manage housework and office work in a peaceful manner that would not stress either. In fact, there are thousands Hindu men who working chores that were previously dominated by women such as cooking to maintain a healthy work–life ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. Ambiguity In Dave Egger's What Is The What? ' Instability and uncertainty, though culturally subjective, are ubiquitous to humankind. The abstraction of life and death has engendered religions, music, art, and folklore. In Dave Egger's What is the What?, a narrative recount of the life of Sudanese refugee Valentino Achak, the motif of the unknown, the enigmatic What, subtly guides the child and adult Achak in Africa and the United States respectively. Introduced by Achak's father as part of a creation tale, the What serves as a mysterious and unseen force in the lives of the African refugees. It is the embodiment of variable ambiguity, with neither consistent definition nor closure. Achak's lack of an understanding of the What parallels his lack of understanding of his surroundings ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is this negation that proves the What is a malleable force dependent on the nature of its people. The What of Africa and the What of the United States stem from completely different narratives. Egger puts a human face to the struggle of facing the unknown; Valentino, despite all his adversities, chases this indefinable substance with hope and appreciation of the value of history and experience in his attempts to balance the suffering of his youth with the fortune of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Tattered Identity : Tatycoram's Temper In Little Dorrit Tattered Identity: Tattycoram's Temper in Little Dorrit Identity is intangible, yet easy to manipulate, distort and obscure. Charles Dickens, in his novel Little Dorrit, explores many understandings of identity: he explores a deluded idea of one's own identity through Flora Finching and the creation of a new identity through Rigaud. With Tattycoram, however, he explores the conditions in which one may choose to actively suppress one's own identity. Tattycoram may be most easily characterized by her short temper and irritability. Her body language is relatively early on in the novel described as "contemptuous" and "impatient" and she was–according to her adopted family, the Meagles–prone to outbursts (Dickens 212; 213). Yet, her body language itself seems to communicate an additional layer to Tattycoram which surpasses Dickens' adjectives or the Meagles' descriptions–namely, that she is constantly trying to contain her emotions, her anger and irritability. Dickens writes that "Tattycoram set her full red lips together, and crossed her arms upon her bosom" and later in the same scene that "[s]he pressed her lips together again, and took a long deep breath" (214). This scene, in which the Meagles repeatedly question Tattycoram about the mysterious Miss Wade, the reader gets a sense that Tattycoram is trying to keep her composure, suppressing her desires to show her emotions. She "pressed her lips together" to avoid saying something unpleasant, while she "crossed her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Reading A History Pioneers Of Psychology By R. Fancher And... While reading A History Pioneers of Psychology By, R. Fancher and A. Rutherford, in chapter 12, I came across Gordon Willard Allport who was an American psychologist. Allport is known as a "trait" psychologist, who was one of the first psychologists to focus on the study of the personality and in 1937 became editor in chief of the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology. Interesting enough to draw my attention other than Sigmund Freud, even though his meeting with Freud was quit "insightful" as Allport told Freud the story of this "anal retentive boy". Allport and his student Henry Odbert a Dartmouth student who followed Allport to obtain his PHD, publish the 1936 monograph "Trait names: A Psycho– Lexical Study". A fascinating read 178 pages article. Allport made a hallmark on personality trait, in last pages of this article, Allport provided a list of personality which I will discuss along with a summary of the article. In the first section of the article Allport introduce Jeremy Benthan and his confused proceed of naming. The introduction of trait name can be seen to follow this principle of culture (not psychology) determination to a striking degree. Allport and Odbert also spoke about what Astrological superstition and Galenian medicine contributed to personality trait with name such as mercurial, and good and bad humor. They also added that political upheaval which are responsible for trait name such as democrat and troy. Trait name are invented in accordance ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. What Is Daoism? After researching potential cultures and religions, I chose to do my project on Taoism, also known as Daoism. Taoism doesn't have an absolute being such as Christianity with god. Instead, Taoism follows Tao which is "the source of creation, the ultimate, the inexpressible and indefinable, the unnamable, the natural universe as a whole, and the way of nature as a whole." Tao is everything and nothing by including the universe but being intangible at the same time. I still find it difficult to completely wrap my head around this term. The most prominent part of Taoism which is also part of Tao, is Yin Yang, which are a principle of two opposite forces working in harmony. Taoists also have a collection of texts and teachings known as the Daozang. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. The Awakening Chapter 1 Summary 1. The Awakening, Kate Chopin: Reading Journal 1, ch 1–13 2. In chapter one the reader meets Edna when she and her husband Mr Potellier arrive at the porch. Mr Pontellier goes to the country club. In chapter 2, the reader learns that Edna's sister is getting married, and that Robert may be interested in Edna. In chapter 3, Mr Pontellier calls Edna a bad mother, and she cries on the porch as a result. In chapter 4, the reader meets Adele, somewhat of a foil to Edna. Adele loves being a mother and respects all of the conventions of society. In Chapter 5, Edna and Robert begin to flirt, but it quickly becomes clear that anything beyond casual courtship would be scandalous in the eyes of society. In chapter 6, Edna begins to truly 'awaken'. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Madame Antoine– woman who Edna and Robert visited when Edna feels faint at the Sunday service on the island of Chênière Caminada] Mariequita– young, pretty Hispanic girl. She is very flirtatious and has a crush on Robert. Etienne and Raoul– Edna and Léonce's two sons, four and five years old, respectively. 4. The novel takes place in late 19th century New Orleans, Grande Isle. Social interactions are highly structured and conventionalized. 5. The caged bird in the novel symbolizes the oppressed role of women in this society. The bird is unable to communicate and has limited freedom trapped in that cage, as did the women of this time, they were all expected to be devoted mothers who would do anything for their husband and family. Edna's swim in the water is symbolic of her awakening, and her fear of having to swim back to shore is symbolic of the early stage of development she is still at. The swim also functions as foreshadowing to Edna's eventual drowning. 6. unnamable– not able to be named, especially because too bad or horrific. Prudery– the characteristic quality or state of a prude Muslin– lightweight cotton cloth in a plain ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. The Absurd Geniuses Of All Time Samuel Beckett, regarded as one of the best Theater of the Absurd geniuses of all time, is an Irish playwright and director of the avant–garde. Living in Paris France for the majority of his life, he wrote in both English and French. Using bleak and hopeless themes, his works depict a harsh attack on realism and challenge the very meaning of life. Beckett's works opened the world of theater to many interesting possibilities in drama and fiction. He introduced to theater and novel the idea that the existence of human life is absurd, an idea that is prominent in his writings. Born and raised in Ireland, he excelled in his education at Dublin University and Campbell College before moving to Paris in 1928. Here he was introduced to the profound Irish author, James Joyce, who is regarded as one of the most influential and important authors of the 20th century. Beckett and Joyce assisted in each other's writings, including the book, Finnegans Wake (1939). Finnegans Wake shows some of Beckett's darkness with its themes of sin interpreted in a dreamlike state. This book also inspired Beckett's more comedic approach to the dark and depressing themes in most of his works. Assumption (1929), written by Beckett, was his first of many stories. Consisting of various themes of human nature and Irish folklore, this story was the first of many that could be considered as difficult to understand or just gibberish, due to its syntax being strained to incomprehensibility. The story contains ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Summary : General Psychology. Landon Horsch. Apa Style... Article Summary General Psychology Landon Horsch APA Style Citation: Saive, A., Royet, J., Garcia, S., Thévenet, M., & Plailly, J. (2015). "What–Where–Which" episodic retrieval requires conscious recollection and is promoted by semantic knowledge. Plos ONE, 10(12), 1–13. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0143767 Summary: I. Abstract Pg.1 – The conscious retrieval of events from the past is defined as episodic memory – Having a recollective experience or a feeling of knowing may not be sufficient, but it remains unresolved – The experiment to investigate the controlled cue–retrieval of episodes composed of odors, certain location, and with context – The study demonstrates that the accurate odor–evoked retrieval of complex episodes required conscious recollection – Even with high confidence and a feeling of knowing did not accurately generate episodic retrieval – This study demonstrated that recollection of odor retrieval–cue brought about more familiarity and the ability to describe II. Introduction Pg.1&2 – "Episodic memory is defined as the conscious retrieval of personal experiences occurring within a specific context" – Recognition memory is known to have at least two different states of awareness: recollection and feeling of knowing or a sense of familiarity – The participants must say if they recognize items based on remembering rich details or associations to it – "These two states of awareness represent two different cognitive processes that rely on partially ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. Examples Of Supernatural In Jane Eyre In Jane Eyre, the theme of the "Supernatural" is used quite often. It is a rather interesting theme when reading; it grabs your attention and pulls you in. No one can resist a good supernatural theme, examples of some rather famous novels and/or films are: Star Wars, Star Trek, Harry Potter, Divergent, etc. "Shaking my hair from my eyes, I lifted my head and tried to look boldly round the dark room: at this moment a light gleamed on the wall. Was it, I asked myself, a ray from the moon penetrating some aperture in the blind? No; moonlight was still, and this stirred; while I gazed, it glided up to the ceiling and quivered over my head. I can now conjecture readily that this streak of light was, in all likelihood, a gleam from a lantern, carried by someone across the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... and so are sympathies; and so are signs; and the three combined make one mystery to which humanity has not yet found the key. I never laughed at presentiments in my life, because I have had strange ones of my own. Sympathies, I believe, exist (for instance, between far–distant, long–absent, wholly estranged relatives asserting, notwithstanding their alienation, the unity of the source to which each traces his origin) whose workings baffle mortal comprehension. And signs, for aught we know, may be but the sympathies of Nature with man." (Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, Chapter 21, pg. 222) Foreshadowing's an odd thing too, as is symbolism, also are little hints from the author about supernatural tricks she'll use later to bring the protagonists back together when they're dozens of miles apart. Erm, what's that called? Yeah, a deux ex machina. This passage is noteworthy because it's one of the only moments that Jane actually claims to the reader that she believes in some kind of supernatural foreknowledge and, a psychic connection between people. Still, Jane proposes that these seemingly supernatural connections may have natural explanations that we just aren't aware ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Codependency in Samuel Beckett's Endgame Essay Codependency in Samuel Beckett's Endgame "Clov asks, "What is there to keep us here?" Hamm answers, "The dialogue."" In the play Endgame, Samuel Beckett demonstrates dramatically the idea of codependency between the two focal characters who rely on each other to fulfill their own physical and psychological needs. Beckett accomplishes this through Hamm, who assumes the identity of a kingly figure, and his relationship with Clov, who acts as his subject. In Endgame, this idea is established by tone and humor in the dialogue amid Hamm and Clov. Samuel Beckett was an Irish–born poet, novelist, and foremost dramatist of the theater of the absurd. His surreal writings mixed humor into a world paralyzed and grief stricken with pain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... and later an M.A. in Romance languages. Beckett moved to Paris, France, where began his writing career. It was here that he developed and perfected his absurdist style, and began to write novels and plays alike with his bleak outlook on the core of human existence. His literature ultimately sought to expose this concept of a wretched solitary self which was representative of quite literally nothingness. (Encarta) Beckett created four major works including; his trilogy Molloy (1951), Malone Dies (1951), and The Unnamable (1953), novels that he considered his greatest achievements; and the play, Waiting for Godot (1952) which critics acclaim as his masterpiece. He also won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969. Samuel Beckett's writings were a reflection of his mastery of the written word, and laid the foundations of a long continuance of the absurdist tradition. In Antony Easthope's article he remarks on Hamm and Clov's relationship in the play and analyzes Beckett's dramatic method. Easthope's explanation of Endgame's plot is focused around one pivotal question: Will Clov leave Hamm? Thus, he asserts that there is no resolution, as the play ends with Clov standing in front of the door, all packed to go, but unable to leave. Therefore, to be able to recognize Beckett's dramatic method he states that it becomes necessary to look at Hamm and Clovs relationship, from which it arises. Easthope believes that Clov is only a pawn dominated by Hamm's active ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Freedom And The Pursuit Of Identity. From The Beginning Freedom and the Pursuit of Identity From the beginning of the novel, Antoine battles the governing forces of both the absolute and the relative for any aspect of individuality in an overwhelmingly meaningless world. He fights passionately and dizzily against the physical nausea that stirs in him, existence being both superfluous and erratic, and the unscrupulous monster (time) that conspires against freedom. Throughout the novel, Sartre never directly defines freedom because doing so would be contradictory to freedoms organic and unnamable nature, leaving the reader to discover freedom alongside Antoine. Antoine, after acknowledging his innate purposelessness, realizes that within the insignificance of life lies the potential for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... At the end of the novel Antoine understands that human beings are the unintentional consequence of meaningless existence. However, his journey through the novel has taught him to no longer allow absolute purposelessness to consume him and to not drown in the nausea the way he had been doing for so long. Roquentin comes to terms with the nothingness that manifests into his life as deep existential agony. The aimless essence of the universe is actually what inspires action regardless of its futility and in the end, Antoine understands that he must accept his inability to understand existence and that he doesn't have to understand it. He begins the process of pulling himself out of the relentless war between the boundaries of his mind and the boundless nature of existence and decides that he should create art. He finds that art is not a distraction from existence but a means of survival in a blurry reality. He enacts his freedom to individual identity by writing a novel and in essence defeating the atrocious aspects of existence that have haunted him by no longer devoting his life to them. In order for Antoine's life to have any true intentionality, he must kill the overpowering ego in him that craves enlightenment and accept his humanity. As Nausea comes to a close, Antoine says that: "[he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Social Norm In Moby Dick "All men live enveloped in whale–lines. All are born with halters round their necks; but it is only when caught in the swift, sudden turn of death, that mortals realize the silent, subtle, ever–present perils of life." (Melville, 1851) The creation of Moby Dick was a significant turning point for American literature. Melville's application of intense symbolism, challenging themes, and extraordinary allusions contrast with that of typical American writings of that time. In fact, many Americans rejected the novel due to the fact Moby Dick explicates realism that many Americans neglected to comprehend in the 19th century; many Americans were not aware the immoral social norms they practiced. In this way, Melville utilized Moby Dick as an allegory ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Additionally, Melville addressed allusions to Greek Mythology including the three Fates who conducted the strings of life and destiny. In Moby Dick, the crew seized destiny into their own hands; however, in the end, life and death were augured by the harpoon ropes. "Ahab stooped to clear it; he did clear it; but the flying turn caught him round the neck, and voicelessly as Turkish mutes bowstring their victim, he was shot out of the boat, ere the crew knew he was gone. Next instant, the heavy eye–splice in the rope's final end flew out of the stark–empty tub, knocked down an oarsman, and smiting the sea, disappeared in its depths." (Melville, 1851) Despite the attempt of the crew, they were not the deciders of fate. On the other hand, this was similar to Americans at the time. Americans used God to justify their iniquities including treatment of races and expansion. As stated previously, America's justified the Manifest Destiny as God's word; thus, generating a strong sense of nationalism. Americans concluded God constructed them as the superior nation, and many Americans grew audacious. In fact, many felt America should only be for Americans, not foreign immigrants. Some went as far as violence to voice their opinion, similar to Ahabd's revenge against the whale. At the same time, Americans also removed Native Americans and enslaved African Americans. Needless to say, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Analysis Of Edgar Allan Poe 's ' The Imp Of The Perverse ' Mariana Falossi Professor O'Brien LTEN 176 November 8 2017 The Imp of the Perverse American writer and critique Edgar Allan Poe is very well known for his gothic tales of mystery, suspense, and horror. While his impressive collection of work carry thrilling themes of fear, death, and tragedy, Poe's work goes beyond the purpose of literary entertainment and revealing his own inner demons. His writing may be heavily influenced by his own dark and tragic experiences and losses, but it also reveals unique characteristics of the disturbing nature of all people in general. One of these characteristics is explained in his short murderous tale The Imp of the Perverse. This tale explains how a significant part of human nature is driven by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "In the consideration of the faculties and impulses –– of the prima mobilia of the human soul, the phrenologists have failed to make room for a propensity which, although obviously existing as a radical, primitive, irreducible sentiment, has been equally overlooked by all the moralists who have preceded them" (____) The narrator explains how this is a failure which leaves room for error, and believes that root of impulsive behavior leading people to experience perversion for example is prima mobilia, which is in fact a part of the soul. He defines perversion as the impulse of doing something counterintuitive to to self help. Overall the idea of acting on impulse was not being studied and ignored. The narrator feels strongly that people should study and understand all sides of man, and especially the perverse side. He believes that the way men live should be based on nature rather than how they "should be living." This is not to say that men should commit murder, rather simply understand what they are capable of and to explain the natural desire to do so. "It would have been wiser, it would have been safer, to classify (if classify we must) upon the basis of what man usually or occasionally did, and was always occasionally doing, rather than upon the basis of what we took it for granted the Deity intended him to do)____) Idealistically people ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Character Analysis: F. Jasmine In part two chapter one, Frankie character changes. The narrator now refers to Frankie as F. Jasmine. F. Jasmine is the grown up, sophisticated name Frankie gave herself in part one. Calling Frankie by this name shows the change that Frankie has grown from a little girl to a woman. F. Jasmine, now refers to her younger self as "old Frankie" (52). I think she calls her self "old Frankie" because she wants to draw a line in her head as to the differences between the young Frankie, or old Frankie, and the older Frankie, or F. Jasmine. Referring to the times in her life with two different names, helps her differentiate where she was with where she wants to be. At first, Frankie was scared to grow up, however, in part two, she wakes up the morning before the wedding ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In part one, Frankie so desperately wanted to still be able to play with her younger friends, but in part two, Frankie refers to these friends as merely "swarming children" (49). By stating her prior friends are now just children, represents how Frankie now feel superior to them. Yesterday she wanted to be a child, but today she feels they are inferior to her grown up self. Another example of Frankie specially separating herself from children, was when she enters the Blue Moon Bar. The narrator expounded on how Frankie has never entered this bar because "she had known in an unworded way that it was a forbidden place to children" (53). However, "the old laws she had known before meant nothing tp F. Jasmine, and without a second thought she ... went inside" (53). In this scene, Frankie took note that this bar was no place for children, nevertheless, she went inside because she does not think of herself as a child. Going into the bar represents the passage of becoming an adult. As Frankie stands on the sidewalk, peering into the bar, she is a child. Thus, walking into the bar signifies her walking away towards childhood and into ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. What Is The Difference Between Hinduism And Confucianism Hinduism is a major religion in India as well as Nepal and a few other Asian countries. It has more than 900 million followers throughout the world but interestingly, this religion has no single founder, no single scripture and no single set of teachings that are uniformly believed and followed by all Hindus. Hinduism is said to exist as a supreme being while both Buddhism and Confucianism are based on the teachings of a man while Taoism revolves around a concept.1 (Kokemuller, J.) All of them have similarities and differences to a great extent. Buddhism is an offshoot of Hinduism and it's founder Gautama lived the life of a Hindu. Both religions share a few common features. Both religions originated in the Asian sub–continent, both religions believe in reincarnation and both believe that there can be different paths taken to attain enlightenment. Both religions feel that we suffer from our attachment to worldly things and people. Both religions believe in meditation and different forms of yoga.5 (C. Lester, R, 1993) ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Both Hinduism and Taoism believe that the individual goal of a person is to realize their self. Both religions promote good health and vitality. In Hinduism the ultimate goal of a person is to achieve unity with Brahman who is unnamable and likewise in Taoism the main goal in a person's life is to work towards unifying with the Tao which is the same as being unified with the world.2 (Ramanan.)Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism are all eastern religions and, in fact, have been practiced by millions and millions of people for many ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. What Is The Purpose Of This Poem Next to of course God America I Sir Ahmad Salman Rushdie, a novelist, essayist and a Fellow of the British Royal Society of Literature, explains the purpose of poetry "[a] poet's work . . . [is] to name the unnamable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world and stop it from going to sleep" ("Salman Rushdie"). In order to reach their goals, poets use specific techniques to convey their messages. These techniques are –but not limited to–form, meter, rhyme scheme, enjambment, content, themes, images and metaphors, language and tone. Therefore, analyzing the poet's style in approaching the poem's subject is imperative to understand its aim. For that reason, the analyzing the structure and content of the poem "Next to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Analyzing these contents propose that the narrator of the poem is likely a politician, a corrupted politician. This is because he kept on jumbling his ideas throughout his speech; it is a speech because of the quotation marks. First, the politician declared his love to god and America, which he described it as the land of Pilgrims, and dismissed to continue saying "so forth" as if he is saying to his audience that they know the usual boring mantra. Afterwards, as if the word "America" is the trigger; the national anthem of the United State of America is being sung. Next, he started yet another patriotic song about America "My Country, Tis of Thee" which is used to be the national anthem of the country before adopting the current one (The Gilder Lehrman). In the sixth line, the farce of speech reaches a point that is best describe as "[h]is view that the hearing impaired and the mute speak a different language is outrageously offensive" ("Next to of Course"). Then, the speaker starts using a sophisticated ward "thy" to give his speech an appearance of eloquence, covering the meaning with the words. Thereafter, another song that was popular in 1919 called "Oh by Jingo!" (Wikipedia). Jingo is a political terminology that means "a person who professes his or her patriotism loudly and excessively, favoring vigilant preparedness for war and an aggressive foreign policy; bellicose chauvinist" ("jingo"). This definition is also describing the narrator's false patriotism. After that, the lines from 9 to 13 are about the veterans who die in wars in the name of their country; the honor of these soldiers' death is being claimed by the politician, who all he does is a verbal action, while the other party is serving their country by physical actions. The line "then shall the voice of liberty be mute?" is a confirmation of his verbal contribution to his country, which he thinks it should not be muted as it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Anne Sexton Wanting To Die What comes to mind upon hearing the word death? "Wanting To Die" by Anne Sexton is a poem is confessional poetry, which describes the obsession of death due to the stress and depress on life of the author. [Create a more engaging/imaginative opening] Besides that, back to those years, confessional poetry is always the announcement of the death of poets who want to end up their life due to unhappiness, loneliness or depression like Anne Sexton. Anne Sexton draws a picture of her life with full of loneliness, unhappiness and confusions that had led her to the thought of death as the only way to be free from her depressing life which is foreseeable in her poems at her crisis time, such as "Wanting to die". She provides many different reasons on why she wanted to end her own life, even though her own life had so much to offer and she had her own family. Furthermore, she wants to make the reader understand that she was not a happy person. [Don't focus on the poet's life; instead, focus on introducing how the poem deals with the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For instance, the image of "the book carelessly open. / Something unsaid, the phone off the hook" (31–32) tends to show the unfinished works or actions, which she has not done yet while she is still alive. For example, the unfinished things can be her job, her responsible with her kids or parents and a relationship with her friends or family. Besides that, Anne Sexton knew that her death could cause sadness and regret for people who love her such as her family and friends and even her co–worker but with her death is a freedom and peace. Therefore, she skillful does not to use the word sadness together with her death by using a metaphor "the love whatever it was, an infection" (33) to describe for the sadness which can actually destructs the relationships with people who had loved her before she gone ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. Emily Dickinson's I Heard A Fly Buzz I Heard A Fly Buzz, describes the stark reality of death. Emily Dickinson uses the fly as a symbol of her impending doom and ultimate death. As she lay in bed dying in what her mind may be a peaceful death, is disturbed by the presence of the fly disrupting the serenity of the room comparing that disturbance to the moment to the stillness in the air just before the storm. Dickinson in my mind, before her death, had never considered whether or not she really wanted to die or what her death really meant. In the second stanza Dickinson says. "For that last Onset – when the King be witnessed." I believe she is trying to explain that something is coming for her, some otherworldly being who will steal her away from this world. She doesn't explain who or what this being is but does ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He is trying to tell us that we are more that the information recorded in our files. The Snow Man, is a very elegantly written piece about how we tend to take life for advantage and refuse to see things for their true beauty when in unpleasant situations. Stevens use of winter is a wonderful example because many people do not appreciate this cold time of the month with its long nights and short days and frigid temperatures that'd make any sane person retreat back to their homes. Stevens tries to teach us to find beauty in everything, no matter how horribly a situation may be, as long we keep our humanity and ability to love and express emotion is the most important part about living. If we only see things for their negative values we are not truly living, we remain stuck in this phase of our lives and are unable to move on. It's simply a waste of our time here on Earth to constantly complain and be sorry for ourselves when there's a whole world of ideas and possibilities right in front of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Music Concert Critique The Lyrique Quintette, Stella Boyle Smith Concert Hall Leonard Bernstein stated, "Music can name the unnamable and communicate the unknowable" (Wandberg, 2001, p. 16). This means that music has the power to transmit, inspire passion and sensations that mere words will not do. As a part of the curriculum for the class Music Lecture (MLIT 1003), it was required to attend a classical music concert in order to perceive and analyze distinctive elements of the performance. On Tuesday, March 31, 2016 at 7:30 p.m. the Lyrique Quintette performed three different compositions. The first one was a piece named Le Grand Tango composed by Astor Piazzola with arrangement for quintet for Sharretts. Secondly, they quintet performed Compass Kaleidoscope written ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This concert opened with Le Grand Tango by the Argentine tango composer Astor Piazzola. Some of the most relevant aspects that I noticed of this pieces were its arrangement, tempo and mood. Even though this piece was originally composed for piano and cello, the arrangement made for quintet added new combination of timbers. Also, it was noticed that Le Grand Tango' first section was predominantly exalted by the rhythm. Nevertheless, the second section of the piece presented a change of dynamic because of melancholic mood mixed with some jumps of expressivity. Finally the last section's main attraction was the variable tempo providing a taste of excitement and energy. The second piece analyzed was Quartet in E– flat Major op.51 movement 4 by Antonín Dvořák. Before the performers started playing, one of them gave a brief story about this composition. There are two factors that was relevant to me. First, this composition was not originally made for woodwind quintet; however, one composer prepared this arrangement for them as a gift. As a second factor, the whole Quartet in E–flat, Op. 51 by Antonín Dvořák presented Czech folk ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. The Unnamables By Ellen Booraem I recently got done reading a book called The Unnamables by Ellen Booraem, and I have read the whole book. In that book, there were three main characters named Medford, Prudy, and Goatman. This book is about an island, and everything on this island has a name. Things that are given a name, are supposed to live up to that name and do nothing more or less than that name. For example, their island is called Island, their city hall is called City Hall and so forth. People are also given names that they are to live up to, like Baker, Pickler, Carver, and so forth. I think this book takes place in the past. The reason I think this, is because the people in this story uses words like thou, thus, and phrases like "I fare well". The main character, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. A Battle with Life in Wanting to Die by Anne Sexton Essay A Battle with Life in Wanting to Die by Anne Sexton The poem "Wanting to Die" by Anne Sexton, explores a battle with life which many people endure. The speaker knows of the goodness of the world, yet she is unable to truly experience it because of her suicidal tendencies. She understands her feeling as more of an obsession with death rather than a hate for life. Though the speaker is still alive, she relapses, every so often, into the darkness of her soul. Through her vivid use of imagery, Sexton creates and elucidates the speaker's susceptibility to suicide. It is apparent from the first stanza the speaker finds her life lacking. The first lines of the poem describe the speaker's ordinary days: "Since you ask, most ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... the grass blades you mention... furniture you have placed..." ( 5–6) This person seemingly hopes, as the reader does, for the speaker and wants for her every happiness. The next stanza invites the reader into the speaker's mind and soul. We learn depression is more than a hate for life, it is something one must experience to be able to relate to, as in line 7: "But suicides have a special language." This stanza also alludes to the fact that when the speaker is suicidal she refrains from looking at the big picture; instead she focuses on the few bad experiences which drive her that much deeper into depression. The following stanza invites the reader to learn about the suicide attempts of the speaker: "Twice I have simply declared myself, / have possessed the enemy, eaten the enemy, / have taken on his craft, his magic" (10 – 12). Here the reader learns of the speaker's two suicide attempts. This stanza also implies the speaker's anger toward her illness. She associates her depression as the enemy, almost as if depression were the devil in flesh coming to her, haunting her, luring her to death, a death of submission. The fifth stanza, with its vivid images, is exceedingly descriptive in its discussion of the speaker's means of suicide: " In this way, heavy and thoughtful, / warmer than oil or water, / I have rested, drooling ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Compare And Contrast Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde In the novel "The strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde" there is a theme of good vs evil. Good being Dr. Jekyll and evil Mr Hyde they have the inner fight between themselves, because they are the same person.Robert louis Stevenson uses Diction,imagery,and details to contrast the character of Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde Stevenson uses diction to contrast how Dr. Jekyll is a high qualified doctor, and how Mr.Hyde is an evil man. "Henry Jekyll MD ,DLC, LLD,FRS, ." (11 Stevenson.) Dr. Jekyll has many degrees in his field of work, and he is very qualified to be a doctor, Stevenson show that he is very qualified by listing all of his medical degrees. "But it is more than ten years since henry Jekyll became too fanciful for me". (12 Stevenson) ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Utterson saw Jekyll since they were good friends he saw that this person in front of him was not his good friend. Dr.jekyll the good the kind and Hyde is turning him into a dark, and evil person. All these things that are happening to Jekyll is making his body sick, deadly looking. "This master Hyde, if he were studied though he , must have secrets of his own:black secrets, by the look of him; secrets compared to which poor Jekylls worst would be like sunshine." (18 Stevenson) This quote shows that Dr.jekyll is good,compared to Hyde he is good. Even Dr.Jekyll's Darkest deepest secrets compared to Hyde's secrets Jekyll's look like sunshine, and cant even compare to Hyde's secrets. "Now that that evil influence had been withdrawn, a new life began for Dr.Jekyll."(31 Stevenson)This Quote shows that Mr. Hyde is evil. Hyde's evil influence on Dr.jekyll who was a good man and Mr.Hyde was turning him into something evil. With his evil influence gone Dr.Jekyll can be himself; a good man."It turns me to think of this creature stealing like a thief to harry's bedside; poor harry what a wakening!" (18 Stevenson)This quote shows that everyone had a bad feeling about Mr.Hyde, Utterson knew that Hyde was bad, and evil. Utterson hated to see his oldest friend Dr.jekyll get his life ruined by a a thief and and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Amanda Aurigemma. Gill 5Th Hour. Ap Literature. 24 February Amanda Aurigemma Gill 5th Hour AP Literature 24 February 2017 Nature's Truth in Wuthering Heights The metaphors drawn from nature in Wuthering Heights drive the plot primarily through characterization. Rarely does the story venture outside, containing almost exclusively scenes leading up to a character's departure and the response to his/her journey. The absence of tangible nature in a book so driven by its symbolism seems peculiar at first. Why does the author not provide the reader any detail of Heathcliff's struggle against the storm after he departs in heartbreak? By narrating the storm in terms of how it is observed from inside, the reader loses the expected description of the storm's intensity. Even Catherine's diary, the most ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Heathcliff personifies nature combating the human attempt to confine it in his stark contrast to the civilized Lintons. Unlike any other character in the novel, Heathcliff remains authentic to nature and does not try to fully domesticate its furious beauty. Where most people are more prone to suppress their natural inclinations in favor of culture, Heathcliff is willing to defy societal standards, even if the results are destructive. His revenge is not rooted in the evils of man, but rather cataclysmic nature as driven by psychology. As Abraham Maslow argues in his "A Theory of Motivation," any danger to our basic needs or the defenses that protect them impose a psychological threat, bringing about emergency reactions that could potentially be destructive. Heathcliff 's experiences align with the deprivation of these "basic needs," and his revenge can therefore be seen as an entirely natural inclination. The five basic needs in order of primacy are physiological needs, safety needs, love/belonging needs, esteem needs, and self–actualization needs. The most pressing need will overtake and individual's consciousness and organize their capacities. The less pressing needs are minimized, even forgotten or denied. However, when a need is satisfied, the next higher need emerges (Maslow –– find citation). In order to most effectively analyze Heathcliff's revenge, it is important to study this hierarchy of needs in ascending order in relation to their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. Displaying Self Harm In Dostoyevsky's Notes From The... Displaying self harm is the men's way to prove their toughness, another aspect society portrays men to be. In the beginning of Notes From the Underground, the Underground Man is afraid he is severely sick, but does nothing about it. Instead, he complains and ignores his sickness. "However, I know nothing at all about my disease. and do not know for certain what ails me. I don't consult a doctor for it, and never have" (Dostoyevsky 91). Later on the Underground Man described his reluctance to seek medical help came from him believing he did not need it due to the fact that he was tough enough to endure the pain it brought. The Underground Man uses his free will to decide for himself not to seek assistance. This free will came from wanting to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As one attempts to have a closer and more personal relationship, the other pulls back. Estragon fears becoming too intimate with Vladimir because he wants to keep his masculinity. The chasm between Vladimir and Estragon continued to grow throughout the play. Within Fight Club, the characters show love but in a sense of ownership in order to hold their masculine title. They also are afraid to love in hopes of becoming vulnerable. Palahniuk wrote, 'This isn't about love in caring. This is about property as in ownership" (Palahniuk 14). This view of love is not positive, as it is used to control others. However, there is irony within this because none of the characters within the novel want to be controlled. Not falling in love can also serve as a reason to uphold masculinity. The readers could tell that the narrator was head over heels for Marla Singer, one of the few female characters in the novel, but he refuses to approach it. He said, "I tell Tyler, Marla Singer doesn't need a lover, she needs a care worker. Tyler says, 'Don't call this love'" (Palahniuk 62). The narrator and Tyler agree with each other that they are most certainly not in love with Marla, but the readers know he is. Another example is present when the narrator believed he liked Marla but claimed he did not love her. "It's not love or anything . . . But I think I like you, too" (Palahniuk 205). In the world of Fight Club, liking ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Literary Analysis On 1984 By George Orwell Felics Sparks Madden LA Period 2 1 / 21 / 2016 Written Task 2 (SL) 1984 by George Orwell, published in 1948. Orwell uses the dystopian genre to conceive an exemplification of life in the future based on conformity, dependence of technology, and the absolute control of the state over the people, their rights, and their history. The dystopian genre has been classified to have constraints upon the structure of the storyline; variations of such plots come through in different ideas, but all adhere to: conformity, surveillance / invasion of privacy, a terrible / unnamable past which lead to the dystopia's creation, a futuristic setting, lack of rights / freedom / expression for the people, and a distinct segregation of the higher and lower classes.How ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Orwell uses the dystopian genre to conceive an exemplification of life in the future based on conformity, dependence of technology, and the absolute control of the state over the people, their rights, and their history. The dystopian genre has been classified to have constraints upon the structure of the storyline; variations of such plots come through in different ideas, but all adhere to: conformity, surveillance / invasion of privacy, a terrible / unnamable past which lead to the dystopia's creation, a futuristic setting, lack of rights / freedom / expression for the people, and a distinct segregation of the higher and lower classes.How does the text conform to, or deviate from, the conventions of a particular genre, and for what purpose? Also use examples from the text to support my ideas and what they're supposed to be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. Molloy Response Essay Samuel Beckett's Molloy is divided into two parts. The first part begins with the narrator, Molloy, who is being driven to write for an unknown reason and by an unknown person. At the end of the first paragraph, Molloy says: "Here is my beginning" (Beckett 8). Molloy's account of "what happens" isn't organized as a narrative; in a way; Molloy is Beckett's portrait of what would happen if someone who didn't tell stories was compelled to tell one. He begins not even with the pseudo– quest of going to see his mother but with some observations of two people, A and C. From there, he tells of the pleasures of being on his bicycle, which he says he will not call a bike. It is after these accounts that he reveals a fraught relationship with his mother; ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It wasn't until I listened to the audiobook while driving. I don't know what it is, but I think being so concentrated on driving and listening to the story at the same time really helped me focus on what the story was about. My opinion of the novel as a work of imaginative literature would be that Molloy can be interpreted in many ways; some may have interpreted Molloy in a completely different way than I did. Personally, I found the novel to have many depressing and unfortunate events, but someone else may have thought of these events differently. Molloy is definitely one of those novels that can have different meaning depending on who's reading it. I remember listening to the novel while my boyfriend was asleep thinking to myself "Oh man what in the world is going on in this story?" and once I put the recording on pause my boyfriend woke up and asked me why did I turn it off because he was actually enjoying the novel in his sleep. I thought that was quite ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Robin Morg A Truly Inspiring Woman Robin Morgan is thought of as a truly inspiring woman. When she was just a couple of months old, she starred in prize baby contests and transitioned into modeling as a toddler. In 1945, at a young age, she had a nationally syndicated radio show before she delved in acting where she became immensely successful. Against the will of her mother, at the young age of fourteen, she left acting to pursue a career in writing, having had the dream of being a writer since she was four years old. At the age of seventeen, she published several of her poems in various literary magazines. She went on to write numerous diverse styles of successful works and quickly became highly regarded by several organizations. Our such organization, The Women 's Media Center, stated, "An award–winning author, feminist activist, political analyst, and journalist, and a recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts Prize (Poetry) with a host of other honors, Robin Morgan has published more than twenty books, including poetry, fiction, and the now–classic anthologies Sisterhood Is Powerful, Sisterhood Is Global, and Sisterhood Is Forever. Her work has been translated into 13 languages." In the year 2010, Morgan was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease. Since that diagnosis, she has dedicated herself to not only continuing her writing, but to "...applying her intellect and organizing skills to Parkinson's research and gender bias". In her speech, 4 Powerful Poems About Parkinson's and Growing Older, Robin ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Samuel Beckett¨s Novel Molloy and Its Particular Style,... There's no question Samuel Beckett was deeply influenced by the avant–garde style of fellow Irish novelist James Joyce when writing Molloy. Both Beckett and Joyce allude to the classics (Dante's Purgatorio and Homer's Odyssey, respectively) and both extensively employ interior monologue to often similar effect. Even so, Beckett, ever aware of the shadow cast by his former mentor, also attempted to eschew Joycean tendencies in his works, as demonstrated in Molloy. Here, not only does Beckett entirely deny readers the luxury of context, he deconstructs the very fundamentals of novel and narrative. Distinctly metafictional in form, Molloy self–consciously underlines its own artificiality and, on a universal level, that intrinsic to fiction itself. Like the titular allusion of Joyce's Ulysses, the two protagonists in Molloy also embark on a voyage of sorts, albeit the nature of which is even more so internalized. As a result, there's not much by way of plot or setting, which remain intentionally hazy. Still, the novel moves, sometimes at a dizzying pace, in part to its frequent digressions and elision of so many vital answers: Are Molloy and Moran the same character? Is it possible Molloy may not even be a person altogether but rather an alter ego of Moran? Is Molloy a state of mind? What exactly does it mean to be "searching for Molloy"? These questions stem from the novel's vague definition of physical space and time, leading some readers to interpret the novel's second ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. An Analysis Of Anne Sexton's Freedom To Die Yug Patel Clay Holliday Course Number 10/25/17 Freedom to die In "Wanting to die", Anne Sexton illustrates an analogy that compares her desire to commit suicide and an addiction. Sexton writes this confessional poem to clearly and powerfully express her feelings for death and how she perceives it. Sexton is obsessed with death and believes that it gives her purpose which is why she has to commit suicide. Sexton believes that death will put her to rest and that she is meant to be with it, as if it were alive. Throughout the poem, Sexton says how much and why she desires death like how people desire love. In the first stanza, Sexton talks of how her present state of mind is towards suicide. Sexton is describing how her thoughts aren't clear ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The narrator describes death as something she longs for because of how death gives her hope of being at rest. Sexton continues to reflect upon her attitude and behavior to thoughts of suicide. The narrator says how she "did not think of my body at needle point" and that "suicides have already betrayed the body" (16–18). With this, Sexton emphasizes that her body alienates her. That her body and mind are out of sync. She wants to die, but does not see the physical signs or symptoms of the toll death is taking on her. Sexton says that suicide becomes the person it is affecting. It consumes them entirely, both physically and mentally. And although not all suicides are successful, the rush from it is as addictive as a drug on its own which is why she said "a drug so sweet" (20). In the lines "still–born, they don't always die, / but dazzled, they can't forget a drug so sweet", Sexton describes how failed suicide attempts can affect the mind by explaining how it tends to leave the victim fascinated in awe after one's close encounter with death (19–20). A suicidal person's first confrontation with death can be closely paralleled with one's first encounter with a highly addictive drug. Most commonly, this sort of encounter leads one into a sort of curious state of mind. Like a suicidal person, it leaves them in a position where the idea of relapse ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Native American Storytelling Lit Paper Native American Storytelling November 12, 2012 ENG/301 Native American Storytelling Native American literature is the root of cultural storytelling, which is told through oral tradition, this consist of stories and songs verbally. Native American literature use literary conventions in the root of myth and symbolic examples in storytelling. The book "Native American Literature: A Brief Introduction and Anthology" gives good insight into the Native American ways of life and how storytelling is a part of that life. Short stories by Simon Oritz and Luther Standing Bear share life experience and cultural diversity. The reader can see how historical, social and political, and cultural ways play a role in the Native Americans storytelling. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 252). Tricksters come in many forms "such as Raven, Spider and Coyote are characters in Native American mythology who represent the underside of human nature" (Sinnaeve, 2012). "In this literary critical context, a trickster uses sleight of hand and tongue to evade, manipulate, and subvert the colonial world" (Cox, 2005, p. 252). In the poem "My Father's Song" written by Simon Ortiz, the poem speaks of the importance of creation. The creation of life, land, and plantation, the story is about a boy who is learning to planet corn. "We planted corn one spring at Acu – we planted several times but this one particular time I remember the soft damp sand in my hand" (Ortiz, 1981/1995, p. 260). Within the field the boy and his father found a nest of mice, the father showed the boy how to gentle pick them up, and take them to the end "of the field and put them in the shade" (Ortiz, 1981/1995, p. 260). The purpose of literary conventions in storytelling helps to educate the new generation, "These stories have been carried down orally for generations, often by parents teaching their children about fundamental cultural truths" (Sinnaeve, 2012). The Native American people went through many changes throughout history, social and political, and cultural events. A social and political event was the education of young Native Americans. In 1879, many Native American children were ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. Ignorance Is Eyewitness The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that in an isolated system, there will be a natural tendency towards a more disordered state. When things or ideas are separated from each other, they are perceived to be organized. On the other hand, when things or ideas are all mushed together, they are deemed unorganized. The proverb, "Ignorance is bliss", represents a very orderly state where opposites are separated. In contrast, the proverb, "The truth shall set you free", signifies a disordered state where opposites are mixed together. Therefore, according to The Second Law of Thermodynamics, there is a natural tendency for opposites to combine. The Book of Job features many instances of the mixing of opposites, which leads Job to see the world differently. The first time opposites combined occurs during the very beginning of the book. Job begins with a large amount of animals and plenty of children, however a few moments later, Job loses everything that he had and suffers. This already changes the way Job thinks, which could be seen when Job said, "We have accepted good fortune from God, surely we can accept bad fortune too" (8). Before Job loses everything, he does not know what bad ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The prophecy that Oedipus is "the man who should marry his own mother" shows opposites combining since he would be producing children with the person who made him. Even though Oedipus runs away from his "family" to prevent this from happening, it still happens anyways because he cannot evade fate. When Tiresias tells Oedipus, "You are the murderer whom you seek" (20), Oedipus rejects the idea that the murderer and him are the same person by saying, "Now twice you have spat out infamy [...] Whatever you say is worthless" (20). Later on in the story, Oedipus finds out that he is the murderer of his father, which also demonstrates how fate and the combination of opposites is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. Hindu Perspective: Hinduism And The Religion Of Hinduism Hindu Perspective Hinduism is the religion of Hindus and it is also one of the oldest religion in the world. This religion is also known as Sanatana–Dharma which means an eternal religion. Not because it is eternal only, but also because of it is protected by their own God (Jayaram, n.d.). Other than that, Hinduism is also known by the name of Vaidika–Dharma. Vaidika–Dharma is the religion of the Vedas. The foundational scriptures of Hinduism are the Vedas. In Hinduism education is an important means to achieve the four aims of human life. Vidya or also called as education means to perform his obligatory duties with a sense of detachment and devotion to God an individual must improve the right knowledge, know to control his wishes and learn, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Tao Te Ching has their own meaning which is Tao or Dao can be translated as a "way" which means the universe unnamable process, whereas Te or De is a "virtue" or "personal character" that means a now–archaic sense of inner potency. For Ching or Jing means a "great book" or "classic". Thus, if we combined all the words it can be translated as "The Book of the Way of Virtue" or "The Classic of the Way's Virtues". This holy book can be divided into 81 chapters. The chapters also are divided into two halves. The first halves consists of 37 sections formed the upper section and was called as the "Classic of the Tao" because the initial word of the text is "Tao". The second halves were called as the "Classic of Te" due to the second key term of the text is "Te". They believe that Tao Te Ching is important and essential as guidance for them in living full spiritual and ethical life. Tao Te Ching has been written in classical Chinese. The concept of Tao Te Ching also focuses on education and knowledge. For example, in chapter forty–eight which is the pursuit of the Way is not like the pursuit of information. The meaning of this phrase is learning can be improved if we put more effort on it day by day (Eno, 2016, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Sylvia Plath Metaphors Metaphors by Sylvia Plath was written in 1959. It is a lyric poem that uses metaphors to create a riddle, as she states in line one. Plath is using a narrator voice in her poetry to describe her pregnancy with the use of metaphors and her ambivalence to her current state. The narrator is mocking herself and I find her mocking tone to pregnancy as something I want to incorporate in my writing when writing about my character's eating disorder. The poem starts with the narrator announcing herself as a riddle in nine syllables. The nine syllables is the first hint that the poem is going to be about pregnancy. Plath correlated the use of the word 'nine' to the length of a pregnancy, giving the reader an inkling of what is to be expected of the poem. The narrator then goes on to describe herself as an elephant, then a house, two very distinctively large objects. She is now mocking the weight gain caused by pregnancy and she furthers this by comparing herself to a melon, strolling on two tendrils. These lines give the reader a vivid imagery of someone that has become stout and is struggling to do normal tasks such as walk. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the poem she uses vivid imagery to convey the feelings of emotional suicide. The poem begins with an answer to the question "why do you want to die?" she answers this question by starting the poem with "since you ask" and takes the reader through a journey where the final destination is committing suicide. In her poetry, she does not use the voice of the narrator like the way Plath does, instead it is more of a conversational piece. Her poetry is confessional and written in her point of view, whereas with Plath's poems I've mentioned before, there is a disconnect where the reader reads it in the voice of the narrator, instead of Plath's voice. In the poem, she notes that her body is a physical " bad prison" that should be emptied completely in order to finally be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...