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Cultural Literacy According To E.D. Hirsch

... people has been rapidly declining. The long range remedy for restoring and improving American literacy must be to "institute a policy of imparting common information in our schools." In short, according to Hirsch - the answer to our problem lies within the list. Hirsch's book explains the importance of the need of a higher level of national literacy. His main argument is that cultural literacy is required for effective communication and the "cooperation of many people..." Communication is what Hirsch sees is essential for success in ...

Number of words: 940 | Number of pages: 4

The Life Of Eveline

... Her promise is to support her family. Supporting a family today is admirable, but yesteryear saw famine, unemployment, and disease at far greater levels than today. A woman’s job was in the home raising the children, very much dependent on the male to bring home the money. In Eveline’s situation, there is no male to help out. Eveline maintains a job at the “Stores” giving all of her hard-earned seven shillings to her father. Jobs were not abundant for women, and considerably smaller when divided amongst four people. Financia ...

Number of words: 547 | Number of pages: 2

The Catcher In The Rye: Unreachable Dreams

... He hopes to freeze the children in time, as wax figures are frozen in a museum. After interacting with Phoebe, his younger sister, Holden realizes that this goal is quite unachievable. Holden wants to be the Catcher in the Rye, then realizes it is an unreachable ideal. Holden begins his story misguided and without direction. After flunking out of the Pencey School, Holden decides to leave early. Before he leaves, though, he visits his teacher, Mr. Spencer. Mr. Spencer and Holden talk about his direction in life: “‘Do you feel abs ...

Number of words: 1054 | Number of pages: 4

Candide By Voltaire

... happens for the better, because "Private misfortunes contribute to the general good, so that the more private misfortunes there are, the more we find that all is well" (Voltaire, p. 31). Pangloss, the philosopher, tries to defend his theories by determining the positive from the negative situations and by showing that misfortunes bring some privileges. As Candide grows up, whenever something unfortunate happens, Pangloss would turn the situation around, bringing out the good in it. Candide learns that optimism is "The passion for maintainin ...

Number of words: 1495 | Number of pages: 6

The Jungle: Character Analysis

... Jurgis about Socialism. There are also the members of Ona’s family, each of whom play minor roles in the story. The story opens with the feast at Jurgis and Ona’s wedding in America, but soon flashes back to the time before they left Lithuania. Jurgis met Ona at a horse fair, and fell in love with her. Unfortunately, they were too poor to have a wedding, since Ona’s father just died. In the hopes of finding freedom and fortune, they left for America, bringing many members of Ona’s family with them. After arriving in America, the ...

Number of words: 1871 | Number of pages: 7

Uses And Abuses Of Information

... members are the policy makers and number relatively few. Below them are the members of the Outer Party, who are educated and work in governmental departments. It is this group which Winston Smith belongs to. Underneath them are the proletariat, the uneducated masses that made up 85% of the population. The life of a party member involves being constantly subjected to government propaganda by the medium of the telescreen. This is a device similar to a television placed in the home and workplace of Party members, unlike a television it canno ...

Number of words: 2261 | Number of pages: 9

Old Man And The Sea 2

... humble despite a past of glorious fishing and being "El champion" of the village. Santiago is no longer interested in glories which are pushed out with the coming of old age and true wisdom; he is content with life as it is and dreaming of lions and reading about baseball. The old man is unlucky, he hasn't caught a fish in eighty-four days and he is poor that he must rely on a boy to provide for him his necessities of life. The boy is attached to the man but his parents will not let him fish with the man because he has become so unlucky. So ...

Number of words: 737 | Number of pages: 3

Paul Edgecombe: An Excellent Character

... with. He was a hard worker and seemed to care about all of the individuals on E Block, not just his co-workers, excluding Percy, but the prisoners also. One event that showed he cared about his job is how he came in to work when he was in almost too much pain from his bladder infection to even stand up. I don’t think he went to work just because he didn’t want to go to the doctor, he went in because he knew there were things that needed to be done. There were new prisoners coming in, and he had to make sure everything was running smooth ...

Number of words: 791 | Number of pages: 3

Camus's The Stranger: The Sun

... point he could say that the sun was the one who provoked and threatened him. Being that the whole point of this confrontation was the fact that he could not stand the heat of the sun. Proving that the sun did provoke him in more than one way. Another example of the way Camus uses the sun as an influence on Meursaults reactions and emotions is when he pours with sweat, symbolizing the flow of emotions. Meursault constantly thinks about the sun when one would expect him to be mourning his dead mother. He says, "I was surprised at how fast the s ...

Number of words: 422 | Number of pages: 2

Review Of Hemmingway's "In Our Time"

... to show it. An analytical study done with the female characters in the book would show that females are never main characters, usually do not have any names and are of basically no significance. In Hemmingway's defense, however, there is the difference in time periods between now and the earlier views of sexism in the beginning of the twentieth century. But the question that arises is whether Hemmingway is acting as a man of the times or is he still overly "masculine" or sexist in his own nature? Although the book does not have any seque ...

Number of words: 1929 | Number of pages: 8

David Burn's Feeling Good: Depression

... and Barbara Serason (1996) suggest that at least 90 percent of all suicide victims suffer from a diagnosable psychiatric disorder at the time of their death. Irwing and Barbara Serason (1996) also state that one of the risk factors in committing suicide is the presence of mood disorder. Silverman (1993) states that suicide among young people 15 to 19 years of age has increased by 30 percent from the years 1980 to 1990. In my opinion David Burns brings up a valid issue in addressing the pertinence of depression as it pertains to peoples tend ...

Number of words: 2565 | Number of pages: 10

Sheldon's If Tomorrow Comes: Hardships Of Tracy Whitney

... going to prison. Tracy receives a full pardon for saving the warden's daughter setting her free. Although she is free, her life still seems like a cell, no one will hire her because of her record and no one from her past wants anything to do with her. This leads Tracy to a life of deception and theft; however, this new life of crime leads Tracy to a newfound happiness. In Sidney Sheldon's book If Tomorrow Comes, the charact er Tracy Whitney endures many hardships and faces a major moral decisions that leads to Tracy's happiness, showing that t ...

Number of words: 1259 | Number of pages: 5

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