Category: Literature 5177

  • Aspects of Sophocles Oedipus’s Cycle

    Introduction Sophocles is a contemporary of the golden age of Athens; his writings reflect the ideals of polis democracy. These are the political equality and freedom of all full-fledged citizens, selfless service to the motherland, respect for the gods, and the nobility of people’s aspirations. Independence in their decisions and readiness to take responsibility for…

  • Collins and Moore Works on Poetry Review

    Despite the fact that poems “Introduction to Poetry” by Billy Collins and “Poetry” by Marianne Moore are concerned with the same subject matter (poetry), they provide readers with diametrically opposite outlook on what, according to both poets, poetry should be all about. Whereas, Moore insists that the key to poetic finesse is semantic clarity: In…

  • “Motorcycles and Sweetgrass” by Drew Hayden Taylor

    Drew Hayden Taylor uses comic to explore community politics, intergenerational legacies, identity, and traditions in his book Motorcycles and Sweetgrass. I believe his primary theme is rational because it emphasizes the dire need to balance the modern world’s realities and culture. The author presents a troubled woman, Maggie, to demonstrate the challenges experienced by single…

  • Cheever’s The Enormous Radio Stylistic and Character Analysis

    The Enormous Radio – the short story by John Cheever in the 20th century – covers the themes of privacy and has an exceptional plot with underlying irony. The writer narrates the story from the third perspective to portray the life of a happy first-glance family. The reader witnesses how the average married couple becomes…

  • The “Blissfully Blended Bullshit” Book by Ecker

    While “Blissfully Blended Bullshit” by Rebecca Ecker may be divisive for several reasons, it is still an exciting voyage into the author’s experience of family mixing because of its ruthless honesty. Some important themes throughout Ecker’s life are discrimination, favouritism, and romanticized views of relationships. The author’s unfiltered, raw writing style conveys these characteristics, and…

  • Supernatural in the “Oedipus Rex” Play by Sophocles

    The Oedipus Rex by Sophocles is a classical Greek tragedy. The roots of tragedy can be traced all the way back to ancient Greek culture. In the traditional meaning, it is a play that deals with weighty topics, as opposed to the lighter fare of a comedy. All throughout the play, a supernatural concept of…

  • Psychology of the Colonizer: Orwell’s “Burmese Days”

    The purpose of this essay is to examine a topic of colonization and its psychological aspects in the selected bibliography of an English writer George Orwell. Most of his novels and essays focus on social criticism that are supported by his personal experience of working as a policeman in Burma, which was a British colony…

  • Emily Dickinson’s Poetry of Privation

    The collected poems of Emily Dickinson include joyful ones and despairing ones. Some two hundred of them are regarded as poems of despair, some of them about literary recognition, others about her inability to engage with formal religion but most are about the absence of love in her life. As far as literary recognition is…

  • Little Women by Louisa May Alcott: Jo and Amy’s Analysis

    Table of Contents Summary Feminism in Little Women Dismantling Gender Roles and Redefining Womanhood Feminism Values Explanation of Choice Works Cited Summary The novel Little Women, written by Louisa May Alcott, illustrates the struggles, difficulties, and characteristics that influence the lives of young women in society. Two characters that have been illustrated as ambitious and…

  • “Shooting an Elephant” by George Orwell

    George Orwell, the birth name Eric Arthur Blair, was a famous British author whose literary works showed his love for simplicity in language. Most importantly they reflect Orwell’s “profound consciousness of social injustice and belief n democratic socialism (Orwell Archives).” As Orwell states in his 1946 essay “Why I Write,” “Every line of serious work…