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Biographies Creative Writing European Literature North American World Literature Book Reports Mythology Poetry English Novels
| "Splits." This essay discusses the Breedlove family from the novel The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. |
Category: /Literature
their ugliness, too, and therefore they know loneliness, hardship, and misery. Their poverty envelops them in shame, forcing them to accept their defect. The Breedloves find the confinement of their poverty distressing, frustrating, and oftentimes infuriating.
Details: Words: 1147 | Pages: 4.9 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| Airport Security Is there too much or to little? Is there need for change? These are the questions I am going to answer. |
Category: /Literature
is looked at in many different ways. Is there too much? Is there too little? Is there a need for change? Who's responsible for leaks in Airport Security? Are Airports safe? If they are not, how can we make them safe? These are the questions
Details: Words: 1855 | Pages: 7.9 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| Character Sketch of Odyssey Character Telamakhos |
Category: /Literature
role in the Odyssey. Though he was only involved in two main parts of the story, he played an important role helping Odysseus regain dominance in Ithaca. His role in the beginning was less significant because character development took awhile of himself.
Details: Words: 626 | Pages: 2.7 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| What events show Odysseus as an epic hero and what traits of an epic hero do they detail? |
Category: /Literature
Odyssey, is an appropriate hero and ruler of Ithaca. He does not act irrationally but contemplates his actions and their implications. Odysseus is an appropriate hero because he embodies the values of bravery, intelligence, astuteness, and competency.
Details: Words: 704 | Pages: 3.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| Literary Analysis Paper for the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: What is the effect of having Huck, a naïve boy, and not an omniscient narrator, tell the story? |
Category: /Literature
determine Jim's fate, he eventually tears it up and thinks that he will 'go to hell'. Such a rash act followed by a wild assumption is one of the many examples that show Huck as a naïve boy. Mark Twain, the author of The Adventures of Huckleberry
Details: Words: 2037 | Pages: 8.7 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| Study Notes for the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Useful for students having seminars on this book, but only notes, not an essay. (Two-Column Notes Style). |
Category: /Literature
the narrator of the novel. He's rebellious, opposing the ways of Widow Douglas, and preferring not to be neat and tidy all the time, and not following customs of the society. He seems to be more materialistic than religious, but he has a sense of
Details: Words: 1645 | Pages: 7.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| The Great Gatsby - Nick's Attitude |
Category: /Literature
towards Gatsby may seem to be ambiguous because of varying tones he uses in his narration. But when one analyzes the speaker's implied tone through the use of specific and individual words, it is evident that Nick had a clear stance and view of Gatsby,
Details: Words: 654 | Pages: 2.8 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| Fitzgerald's use of diction in The Great Gatsby. |
Category: /Literature
The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, uses a specific choice of words along with selection of detail to develop the characters of Tom Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson. This essay will cite specific examples that correspond to Fitzgerald's use
Details: Words: 726 | Pages: 3.1 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| The Great Gatsby - Significance of Title |
Category: /Literature
of the word "great" is ambiguous before reading the novel The Great Gatsby. It can imply that Gatsby is a superb individual, or it can mean great in the sense of a misfortune. It is only after reading the novel that the reader is able to perceive
Details: Words: 374 | Pages: 1.6 (approximately 235 words/page)
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| "The Skating Party" by Merna Summers |
Category: /Literature
desires, until the time that one realizes that he/she has lost it. Following is an analysis taken from the story "The Skating Party" in which the author Merna Summers considers the life-changing journey of one of the chosen characters during the process
Details: Words: 973 | Pages: 4.1 (approximately 235 words/page)
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