Category: Literature 5177
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Fanny Price in Jane Austen’s “Mansfield Park”
Fanny Price, the heroine of the novel Mansfield Park by Jane Austen, is one of those characters who are always correct and perceives, think, do, and speaks, as she ought to. She is a perfect picture of virtue and morality. That is why she is referred to as “prim, proper, and priggish” (Emsley 107). The…
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Romanticism in British Literature
The Romantic period was shaped by the social and political events of the end of the 18th and the beginning of the 19th century. The French and American revolutions announced a radical break in historical continuity that was accompanied by the birth of democratic and egalitarian ideas (Damrosh et al. 7). The literature of that…
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The Play “Ghosts” by Henrik Ibsen
The play “Ghosts” by Henrik Ibsen is a play depicting the immorality that was inherent in the society during his time. Set in a country side home, the play revolves around a dramatic turn of events. It seems the events are in some way interconnected and tied up together by one single and common factor.…
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Don Quixote in Literature of the Western World
Introduction The term Quixotism is used to describe a form of impulsive behavior. The concept is closely related to over-idealism. Persons who exhibit this trait often lose contact with reality. In most cases, they approach romance and life in general from an ‘impractical’ and illogical perspective. As such, they make irrational decisions without taking into…
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Vanity, Evil, Immortality in “The Picture of Dorian Gray” by Oscar Wilde
Table of Contents Introduction Oscar Wilde and the Victorian Society The Plot of The Picture of Dorian Gray Analysis of the Main Themes: Vanity, Evil, and Immortality Conclusion Works Cited Introduction The Picture of Dorian Gray is arguably Oscar Wilde’s most well-known and most debated work. Set in Victorian England, the story revolves around Dorian…
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American Dream in “Their Eyes Were Watching God”
The American Dream is one of the founding concepts of the United States, yet it takes on different forms. As each person perceives the world differently, one may have particular desires and aspirations that do not correspond with the majority’s view. In “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” Zora Neale Hurston portrays the American Dream of…
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West-African Traditions in “The Epic of Son-Jara”
The Epic of Son-Jara is an epic set in West Africa in the thirteenth century. It describes the rise to power of Son-Jara, also spelled as Sundiata, who founded the Mali Empire, which was the largest and the most influential state in the region and existed for more than four centuries falling only in 1670.…
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Violence and Generational Trauma in There There by Orange
“He did what? I’m sure that’s not true, he is not that type of person. I’ll talk to him and see what really happened.” The majority of sexual violence cases often go unreported in the United States. This may be due to society doubting the victim when they come forward as they continue to relieve…
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Rip Van Winkle and Anton Rosicky: Similarities Between the Two Characters
Introduction The paper focuses on singling out the similarities between two famous short story characters: Washington Irving’s Rip Van Winkle from “Rip Van Winkle” and Willa Cather’s Anton Rosicky from “Neighbour Rosicky.” The main emphasis is made on such features pertaining to the two men as independence, intelligence, and life journey. The introduction offers a…
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The Idea of Robert Frost’s Poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay”
The poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay” by Robert Frost is only nine lines long, but the author discusses complex topics through it. In early spring, the golden buds appear on the trees, but soon their color fades. Then flowers bloom, but they also soon turn into fallen leaves, reminiscent of humanity, which were banished from…