Every essay and term paper listed below can be purchased and downloaded instantly. If you can't find your exact topic our writers can write one from scratch just for you. Our Web site is open 24-hours so you can order at any time.
First Prev 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 Next Last| 1828.
16713 An Analysis of Exile in The Wife?s Lament, The Wanderer, and The Seafarer Elegies This paper will explain the main theme of exile in the renown Exeter texts: The Wanderer, The Wife?s Lament, and The Seafarer. By understanding the how lamentation for past lives creates sorrow for the author's of these texts, we can see how they feel exile from love, homelands, and relatives in their endless travels alone. By showing their isolation, we can see how they are exiled and seek to recover the love they have all lost in their lives.
|
| 1829.
16717 Feminine Stereotypes in Chapter 9 of Paradise Lost This 3 page, MLA style paper examines the use of feminine stereotypes in Milton?s Paradise Lost. The inappropriate use of stereotypes indicates almost a laziness on the part of the author because it leaves the impression that they simply couldn?t develop a real character. In the case of Milton?s Paradise Lost, Eve, as she appears in chapter nine, is a victim of very base stereotypes of femininity and women. Eve is a caricature of the weak woman who cannot fully exist without her mate, who cannot take care of herself.
|
| 1830.
16751 Gabriel?s Defense Mechanisms in James Joyce?s "The Dead" In this paper, we will deconstruct the defense mechanisms of the character Gabriel Conroy in James Joyce?s "The Dead". In this work, we find that Joyce?s technique of free indirect discourse is at work. Gabriel Conroy is the viewpoint character, and so we will examine the passages where he is "thinking to himself," but in a way that may contain subtle criticisms of which he seems unaware We will construct this analysis by identifying the main defense mechanisms which Gabriel seems to be using., and by describing ways in which the narrator's contributions to the free indirect discourse exposes and criticizes those defense mechanisms, though without Gabriel fully understanding what is going on. In sum, we will demonstrate how both the defense mechanisms and their critiques can operate simultaneously in the same passage.
|
| 1831.
16754 Argument Essay: A Central Theme of Leaving War Behind This paper addresses the books "Jarhead" by Anthony Swofford and Le Ly Hayslip's "When Heaven and Earth Changed Places". These books both share a theme of leaving war in one's past. Both memiors, Swofford defined himself as a marine and Hayslip was a Vietnamese peasant girl. As time progressed, the experiences of war detracted from their lives. They worked to put war behind them.
|
| 1832.
16756 A Psychoanalytic View of Death in Oliver Twist In this book, we may make a case for post-traumatic-stress-syndrome as it affects an entire society who has recently shifted from an agrarian life and mentality to an industrial one. The most prevalent psychological fascination for the author, and thus the overriding theme is death. It is the purpose, then, of this paper to demonstrate the psychology of death in Oliver
|
| 1833.
16762 Death and Dying in the Literary Works of Tolstoy This paper will examine that perspectives of death that occur within the novel War and Peace and The Death of Ivan Ilych by Leo Tolstoy. By understanding death from the dying, as well as the spectators that witness death in his novels, we can get different reasons as to Tolstoy's use of the theme of death in novel form. By understanding death, we can surely understand Tolstoy's grim style of writing.
|
| 1834.
16766 Questions on De Mortuis by John Collier This paper will seek to understand how the characterization, plot, and conflict buildings techniques used within De Mortuis by John Collier. By understanding the rash decisions of Buck and Bud in this tale, we can seek to understand why they make incorrect judgments against Dr. Rankin. They assume he has killed his wife, and much of this short story focuses around Buck and Bud's poor judgment by accusing the Doctor of this heinous act.
|


Last 5 Order



