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Papers On Literature
Page 423 of 940
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Emily Dickinson & Nature
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A 6 page research paper/essay that discusses Emily Dickinson’s stance toward nature. Dickinson has moments of epiphany when she indicates a oneness with nature, but it is aggression, not passive receptivity that dominates these moments as she “wrests form nature the power to create her poems,” enduring “struggle and acute pain” when necessary (Diehl 36). This examination of Dickinson’s poetry substantiates this position, which is that Dickinson, on the whole, perceived nature as personified, rather than in the abstract, that is, she saw the natural world as Nature, with a capital “N,” an adversary and a mystery to be assailed, rather than embraced. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: khednat.rtf
EMILY DICKINSON AND RELIGION
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This 71/2 page paper takes a look at three works of Emily Dickinson and explains the poets views on religion. Specific examples are given on Alabaster, and Faith is a Fine Invention. Brief overview of the poet's life discussed. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: mbdickinson.rtf
Emily Dickinson's 'Love's Done'
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A four page paper discussing the biographical clues in Emily Dickinson's unusually obscure poem 'Love's Done When Love's Begun.' The paper concludes that she used legal terminology undoubtedly picked up from her lawyer-father in order to express her frustration in love. Bibliography lists three sources.
Filename: KBdicki6.wps
Emily Dickinson's "Master Letters": Lesbian Theory
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5 pages in length. The writer speculates as to who the individual was in Emily Dickinson's "Master Letters," paying particular attention to the lesbian theory. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Filename: TLCmster.wps
Emily Dickinson’s “A Narrow Fellow in the Grass”
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This 5 page
report discusses Emily Dickinson's “A Narrow Fellow in the
Grass,” originally published in 1866 as “The Snake.” “A Narrow
Fellow in the Grass” is a piece of poetry that is effective and
“works” on a number of levels -- visual, audio, psychological,
and even visceral. As a result it offers a measure of insight
into the psychology of both the poet and the reader. In it, she
describes a snake by using various techniques without once naming
the actual subject of the poem. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: BWfellow.wps
Emily Dickinson/ Fascicle 28
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A 14 page research paper that examines the poems in fascicle 28, a division that refers to packets of poems that Dickinson grouped together herself. The writer offers a brief explication of each poem, emphasizing thematic content and how the individual poems fit with the overall pattern. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: khfas28.rtf
Emily Dickinson/"After Great Pain…"
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A 5 page essay that offers an explication of Dickinson's poem "After Great Pain a Formal Feeling Comes." The writer argues that, in this poem, Dickinson indicates the various stages of recovery from traumatic pain. Her verse delineates the various stages that an individual goes through after experiencing great pain: the philosophical questions that one asks; the mechanical feeling of detachment; and, also, that the pain eventually ceases, if one survives it. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khagped.rtf
Emily Dickinson/Poems of the Self
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A 5 page essay that examines three of Dickinson's poems that deal with the self, how Dickinson saw herself and her society, "I'm Nobody! Who are You?," "Much Madness is divinest Sense," "The Soul selects her own Society." The writer argues that these poems give the reader insight into the remarkable personality of this nineteenth century poet. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khedself.rtf
Emily Dickinson: Comparison of Two Poems, Nature, Biography and Influences
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This is a 5 page paper discussing Emily Dickinson and two poems from her Nature class. Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) wrote well over 2,000 poems during her life in Amherst, Massachusetts but only seven were published while she was still alive. After her death, her poems were classified and published. Dickinson was heavily influenced by several factors in her life: the religion of her father, the impact of the Civil War, and nature. A look at two poems from her “Nature” class shows how Dickinson combines all of these symbolic elements to depict a time of loneliness, longing and false hope. Although the poems describe a time in nature when summer is just out of reach, the meanings run much deeper for Dickinson and her readers, as for her summer is a time of life, fruitfulness and happiness which has been lost.
Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: TJEDick1.rtf
Emily Dickinson: In Life And Love
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There are more than a few riddles
living within the literary world, perhaps none as compelling as the
story of the recluse spinster poet: Emily Dickinson. Her poems and
letters span the chasm between physical and religious passion while
giving rise to a plethora of questions as to the life and loves that
permeated her reality. This 5 page paper argues that the two 'passions'
(physical and spiritual) in Emily Dickinson's life were the primary
motivation for the way in which she lived that life. Bibliography lists
4 sources.
Filename: KTedlflv.wps
Emily’s Attitude: Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily”
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A 3 page paper which examines the attitudes of Emily in William Faulkner’s story “A Rose for Emily.” No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAem9.rtf
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