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How To Improve Your Study Habits

... schoolwork on time or have trouble getting started on your assignments, then your study habits could probably use some improvement. To study or do homework while watching television or talking on the phone are some bad examples of proper studying. Some people get tense or nervous about their performance in school and feel that they cannot get anything accomplished. This is an example of improper motivation. You also have to be motivated to improve your study habits. Once you make the decision that you want to improve your studying habi ...

Number of words: 504 | Number of pages: 2

Strong Before Their Time

... show the hardships the two women had to overcome and take a look at leaders blinded by sexism in a male dominated society. Both women were stubborn and headstrong. Neither of them believed they could be defeated. They fought for what they wanted and what they thought was just. Despite the subordinate roles of women in ancient Greek times, Antigone and Medea proved to be strong characters. Both Antigone and Medea had men they had to overcome in their quest for what they believed was right. Antigone’s main opponent is her uncle Creon ...

Number of words: 2038 | Number of pages: 8

Huck Finn

... has not before presented it to the imagination so distinctly nor so powerfully. 's voyage down the Mississippi with the run away nigger Jim, and with occasionally other companions, is an adventure fascinating in itself as any of the classic outlaw stories, but in order that the reader may know what the author has done for him, let him notice the impression left on his mind of this lawless, mysterious, wonderful Mississippi, when he has closed the book. But it is not alone the river that is indelibly impressed upon the mind, the life that went ...

Number of words: 696 | Number of pages: 3

Slaughter House-Five

... more descriptive details. This reflects man by saying that man lacks depth and is not well rounded. The book undermines the novel's conventional approach. These are some reasons for the undermining of the reader's expectations. The novel does not have smooth transitions from one event to the next one. "Billy blinked in 1958, traveled in time to 1961." After a chapter, "Billy Pilgrim nestled like a spoon with the hobo on Christmas night, and he fell asleep, and he traveled in time to 1967. When Billy is in 1958, he is busy talking about World ...

Number of words: 873 | Number of pages: 4

Review Of Ernest Hemingway And Writings

... of the understated prose style. The second of six children born to Clarence and Grace Hemingway, Ernest was born July 21, 1899 in Oak Park, Illinois. The society he grew up in was one of strict disciplinarians. His parents were no exception. In fact he spent much of his life trying to escape the "repressive code of behavior" (CLC, 177) that was pushed upon him as a child. After graduating high school in 1977 he chose not to go to college and instead became a reporter for the Kansas City Star, where he remained for seven months. His oppurt ...

Number of words: 1492 | Number of pages: 6

Silas Marner 2

... the theif and all around scoundrel blackmailed poor Godfrey to keep his secrets hidden. Silas was betrayed by his whole previous life. The church had let him down and his closest freind had robbed him. This supposed freind even set him up for an accusation of murder. To top it all off, Silas’s wife to be was also taken by this wolf in sheep’s clothing. This type of betrayal makes a person hate humanity especially in such a close knit community. Silas moved himself to the fringes of civilization. He cared for no one and want ...

Number of words: 791 | Number of pages: 3

The Count Of Monte Cristo

... Count of Monte Cristo is set within the nineteenth century of France in large and populous cities. This was a time of great disruption. There was confusion all over the land in regards to who led France, King Louis or Napoleon. The citizens of France became divided by the two ruling parties. Royalists and the Bonapartist cut at each others throats in order to declare that their ruler was supreme. This situation has a profound effect on the events of the story. Dantes' enemies used the rivalry between the two parties ...

Number of words: 1270 | Number of pages: 5

Gullivers Travels

... fought long ago, and guessed that it should have been for a good reason. Gulliver himself even showed the absurdity of war when he explained the reasons England would fight to Mistress or the Queen of Brobdingnag. His justifications to fight were simply because the enemy was weaker and they wanted more land. This shows Swift’s sympathy for Ireland at that time. Swift believed that politics and government were games. The “election” of “leaping and creeping” of the Lilliputians was the basis of choosing thei ...

Number of words: 576 | Number of pages: 3

Comparing William Faulkners Tw

... own decisions. Miss Emily lives with her father who prevents her from dating with any young man until she is thirty. Her father¡¦s deed enhances her thirst for love and security. After her father died, she finally has the freedom of love. When she meets Homer Barron and thinks that she has found her true love. But opposite of what she wants, Homer is a homosexual: ¡§¡Khe liked men, and it was known that he drank with the younger men in the Elks¡¦ Club --- that he was not a marrying man¡¨ (¡§A Rose for Emily¡¨, 126). To ...

Number of words: 1118 | Number of pages: 5

Thoreau: "Our Life Is Frittered Away By Detail"

... do anything "useful" with his life. He wasn't interested in making a living in society. He focused on discovering the "facts of life". Thoreau moved into the woods called Walden not far from his home. He felt that being alone with nature would enable him to think and write more clearly. One of the thoughts that came from his "higher thinking" was that "Our life is frittered away by detail". This quotation is important because it applies to all people, in Thoreau's time and in modern times. Thoreau is saying that all people, rich and ...

Number of words: 580 | Number of pages: 3

Epic Of Gilgamesh And The Bibl

... to help the reader acquire an understanding of the relationship between wisdom and suffering In The Bible, God creates Adam and Eve to till and watch over the beautiful land that he has created. In return for their obedience, he grants them everlasting life, fruit, and companionship. In The Epic of Gilgamesh, the goddess Aruru creates a wild creature named Enkidu to rival the great king Gilgamesh. In both cases, the people are created innocent, with no knowledge of complicated questions and issues, such as sexuality, that plague human ...

Number of words: 1347 | Number of pages: 5

The Crucible: Social Deteriora

... died so that children could protect their families' social status. Being isolated from any other group of people with different beliefs created a church led Puritan society that was not able to accept a lot of change. The church was against the devil, at the same time it was against such things as dancing and other premature acts. The reputation of the family was very important to the members of the community. When the girls were caught dancing in the woods, they lied to protect not just themselves but the reputation of their families. Th ...

Number of words: 832 | Number of pages: 4

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