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The Photographs Of Margaret Bourke-White: A Review

... her pictures, she enjoys photographing people’s emotions and feeling. Many of her subjects are taken from right out of the very poverty stricken, ignorant, communities they have endured their whole lives. One technique I noticed in her work is the ability to show a grand view by including a person with a smaller object to compare it by. Another technique I recognized was the texture. White does a good job of getting to a good angle in order to include as much detail as possible. I think it is very interesting looking at her pictures taken fr ...

Number of words: 499 | Number of pages: 2

A Dolls House 3

... her the tarantella. Nora pretends that she needs Torvald to teach her every move in order to relearn the dance. The reader knows this is an act, and it shows her submissiveness to Torvald. After he teaches her the dance, he proclaims "When I saw you turn and sway in the tarantella-my blood was pounding till I couldn't stand it", showing how he is more interested in Nora physically than emotionally. When Nora responds by saying, "Go away, Torvald! Leave me alone. I don't want all this", Torvald asks, "Aren't I your husband?" By saying thi ...

Number of words: 683 | Number of pages: 3

Madame Bovary: The Theme Of Fantasy

... for a life with passion, exitement, and bliss. She was blind to the world around her, she longed for the romantic fantasy life she had dreamed about since she was a child. She found her life dull and unfullfilling and was constantly trying to change reality. Emma wanted a dreamlover. She wanted a man to fullfill all her fantasys, a man to rescue her from the life she was living and to take her into her fantasy world. Emma went through many lovers, searching for the one love that would last always. She wanted to live through her ...

Number of words: 217 | Number of pages: 1

Crucible Character Analysis On

... save his wife from being hung, trying to prove the children as frauds, and not confessing to practicing witchcraft once he was accused. Proctor is a tragic hero in his efforts to save his wife. Proctor’s first display of trying to save his wife is shown when the Court officials come to take Elizabeth away. Proctor is so infuriated by this assault on his house that he rips the warrant and tells them to leave rather forcefully saying, “Damn the Deputy Governor! Out of my house!”(77), demonstrating his intense love for his wife. Proct ...

Number of words: 712 | Number of pages: 3

The Sword In The Stone

... is the ruler. This fish takes what he wants because of his size. In a speech about power, he tells Wart that, "Might is right," and might of the body is greater than might of the mind. Because of the way the fish-king rules, his subjects obey him out of fear for their lives. Wart experiences this firsthand when the fish-king tells him to leave. He has grown bored of Wart, and if Wart does not leave he will eat him. The king uses his size as his claim to power, therefore his subjects follow him out of fear. In Wart's next transformat ...

Number of words: 886 | Number of pages: 4

Transcendentalism In Moby Dick

... spiritual person. In the very beginning of the story, Ismael is frightened to share a bed with a cannibal, but after a night of being cuddled by the tattooed harpooner, Ishmael becomes one of the first people to recognize the transcendental qualities in Queequeg. Another example of his spirituality is the Ramadan. During this time, Queequeg spends an entire day in solitude and stillness to honor the god of his native island Yojo. Even though this god was not one of Christian influence, the element of worship to a higher power shows that he ...

Number of words: 568 | Number of pages: 3

Blood Justice

... African American lawyer represented Parker. On April 13th an all white grand jury indited Parker for rape and two counts of kidnapping. On April 17th Parker pleaded not guilty to each charge. Next Parker’s trial date was set for April 27th. Then Brown asked Judge Sebe Dale’s to drop the case because a black man was not on the grand jury. Brown did this because of a recent ruling made by the 5th U.S. circuit court of Appeals. The ruling stated that it was unconstitutional for a jury of an all white people to convict a black man. The ruling ...

Number of words: 1065 | Number of pages: 4

Downfall Of The American Dream

... The most prominent and influential symbols are the green light, Gatsby’s shirts, and the Valley of Ashes. When Gatsby is first seen, “he stretched out his arms toward…a single green light, minute and far way, that might have been the end of a dock.”(Fitzgerald 26) The green light that he appears to be reaching for is the light on Daisy’s dock. In Gatsby’s early life he had a romantic relationship with Daisy. However, he went away to war and when he came back she was married to an extremely wealthy ma ...

Number of words: 858 | Number of pages: 4

Objectivism In The Founterhead

... Howard Roark. He gave up his soul to make others happy. At a party he engaged in a conversation with Roark and said, “It’s a secret Howard. A rare one. I’ll give it to you free of charge with my compliments: always be what people want you to be. Then you’ve got them right where you want them” (261). Keating was so narrow-minded that he did not know that that secret was not a rare one at all. Much of the world knew and exercised this information everyday. Keating said that if you became what people wanted you to be then you wo ...

Number of words: 1201 | Number of pages: 5

Of Mice And Men: Burdens Of Responsibility

... not bother to improve oneself but eradicate those around him or her that serve as a frustration or nuisance. An ideal example of this would be Curley when he decides to target Lennie as a'frustration' and subsequently attacks him with no real valid reason apart from jealousy and spite. The last option concerns Candy and Crooks to an extent. They live a fairly meaningless life void of love and affection. They have few friendships and cling to anyone who shows them sincere attention. An example of this is when Lennie has a conversation with ...

Number of words: 1029 | Number of pages: 4

Catch 22: What’s Fair Isn’t Fair

... we learn this commonly held belief may be largely (if not entirely) off-base. Through the portrayal of the military, we see it is not comprised of honest, crisp men whose altruistic nature motivates them to serve their country as a destroyer of evil and preserver of justice (although, through our insanity, we may speak of it as such); rather, the military actually operates as a huge business machine, whose operators’ primary concern lies in that of personal advancement instead of the well-being of their country. Although the title of Gene ...

Number of words: 2358 | Number of pages: 9

The Great Gatsby: Nick Versus Gatsby

... He also is the only character that changes in the novel from the beginning to the end. Nick is the literary device that is employed to learn about Gatsby, which ultimately tells the theme of the story. Throughout the novel, flashbacks are inserted, courtesy of Nick, to reveal piece by piece about the mysterious Gatsby. Nick patches the pieces of the puzzle together regarding Gatsby's past and lack of a future. Nick is like the box of a puzzle; the puzzle is impossible to put together without it. Without Nick, the reader's opini ...

Number of words: 1018 | Number of pages: 4

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