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Macbeth essay,
Tom Wolfe essay, Great Gatsby essay, Romeo and Juliet essay,
Frankenstein essay, Mockingbird essay, Othello essay, Catcher in the Rye essay
Scroll below to see the sample
essays
Shakespeare: Use of Natural Elements.
This five-page undergraduate paper discusses how William Shakespeare
used nature and natural phenomena for effects and environment in terms
of foreshadowing and mood in the plays "Romeo and Juliet", "A Midsummer
Night's Dream", and "Macbeth".
Tragedy: Literary Heroes.
A five-page paper defining classic Aristotelian form of tragedy and how
it is expressed in "Macbeth", "Death of a Salesman", "The
Metamorphosis", and "The Stranger".
Modern Day Heroes.
This three-page paper presents a critical analysis of the book, "The
Right Stuff" , by Tom Wolfe. The writer of this paper discusses the use
of plot, theme, and setting to provide a moving story. There was one
source used to complete this paper.
J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" and Tom Wolfe's "The Bonfire
of the Vanities".
This essay discusses J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" and Tom
Wolfe's "The Bonfire of the Vanities". It shows how Salinger's novel
portrays the challenging of authority during a period of Conservatism,
while Wolfe exposes the pathetic nature of the rich and famous cliques
of 1980s. 6 pgs. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Boats Against The Current: The Meaning of Meretricious Money in
Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby.
This paper's premise is that it is not the threat of losing money that
troubles the main characters, but rather the realization that the many
abstract things money seems to promiseůstatus, glamour, and an endless
carefree cruise through lifeůare merely worthless illusions.
Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" and the Human
Condition.
Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" explores the meaning of human nature in a
very profound way. She shows that human nature is to seek love and
companionship, yet that society can turn people into very wicked people. At the same time, she stresses that human nature cannot be changed and
that humans should not tinker with it or try to experiment with it. Mary
Shelley touches on the theme of how dangerous it is to play with human
nature. We see that humans are to be left alone and to be allowed to
take their own way.
To Kill a Mockingbird - Coming towards an age of
change.
To Kill a Mockingbird" is a novel set in the south during the openly
racist structures of a 1930s American southern culture. As if foreseeing
the age of a civil rights movement, Harper Lee composes a novel of
changes as seen through the eyes of a twelve-year old girl. In this
paper, setting the novel in a child's perspective is argued to be a
device that allows the author to draw the parallels of innocence and
freedom as both choices and as legal rights.
On The Theme of Self-Knowledge And Human Nature In
Shakespeare's Othello and Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness.
This paper is an analysis of William Shakespeare's Othello, and Joseph
Conrad's Heart of Darkness. Although both works were published over 300
years apart, it will be argued that they share in a number of themes. It
will be argued that both works are important to the question or problem
of self-knowledge, and further, it will be argued that this
self-knowledge is an extension of the awareness of 'evil' or 'cruelty'. Both works also display human nature at its very worst.
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