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Papers On Literature
Page 777 of 940
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The “Beat” Poets: Ginsberg, Ferlinghetti, Snyder
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A seven page paper analyzing the kind of world that produced the rebellious “Beat” poets of the 1950s and 60s, as well as the way their iconoclastic ideologies affected American attitudes in their own time and later on. The paper concludes that the Beats went a long way toward transforming our society from the smug, narrow-minded, self-congratulatory people we were at the end of World War II, to the “inquiring minds” we are today. Bibliography lists five sources.
Filename: KBbeat2.wps
The “Communist Manifesto” and “All Quiet on the Western Front”
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This 3 page paper discusses the way in which the film “All Quiet on the Western Front” illustrates some of the points Karl Marx made in “The Communist Manifesto.” Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: HVAllQui.rtf
The “Debate About Women” in 16-18th Century Literature
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A two page paper examining the “querelle des femmes”, or “debate about women”, as manifested in Milton’s 'Paradise Lost,' Chudleigh’s “To The Ladies,” and Joseph Swetnam’s “Arraignment of Lewd, Idle, Froward, and Unconstant Women”. The paper gives examples of both sides of the debate. No sources.
Filename: KBmilt1.wps
The “Journey Motif” in Literature
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This 6 page paper discusses various journeys, spiritual, psychological and physical, in several works of literature. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Filename: HVjnymtf.rtf
The “Spring Songs” of Tennyson’s “In Memoriam”
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This 4 page report discusses the
“spring songs” of the poem’s sections 38, 83, 91 and 115. In each, Tennyson discusses
the return of spring, the possibility of rebirth, and a measure of hope and reassurance.
Bibliography lists only the primary source.
Filename: BWtenmem.rtf
The “We” in Comedy
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A 5 page paper which examines why “we” is an integral part of
comedy, as opposed to “I.” The paper uses two literary works to illustrate this argument. The
works discussed are “Leave it to Psmith” by P.G. Wodehouse and “All in the Timing” by David
Ives. No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAwe.rtf
The “Zen” of Daniel Quinn’s “Ishmael” and Alan Watts’ “The Book, On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are”
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A 5 page paper which examines how these books each provide an insightful perspective on daily living. No additional sources are used.
Filename: TGishtab.rtf
The ‘Injurious’ Institution of Slavery Discussed Within the Context of “The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass”
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A 4 page paper which examines how slavery was as injurious to the white slaveholders and overseers as it was to the slaves in the American South. No additional sources are used.
Filename: TGslaveinj.rtf
The "Moral" of Three "Canterbury Tales"
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A six page paper looking at
three of Geoffrey Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales" -- specifically, the Wife
of Bath's Tale, the Nun's Priest's Tale, and the Miller's Tale -- in
terms of whether they have a moral. The paper asserts that they do, and
that their morals are reflective not only of the individual stories but
of the storytellers themselves. Bibliography lists five sources.
Filename: KBcantb1.wps
The "Poem Of The Cid" Vs. Anthony Mann's Cinematic Achievement "El Cid"
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A 3 page paper that compares the epic "Poem of the Cid" with Mann's 1961 epic film, "El Cid." The author basis the comparison between these two on consideration of the definition and characteristics of epics and uses both cinematic and literary considerations of both. The nature of epics to exaggerate the truth or the history for the benefit of the story is a major point within this paper. No other sources cited.
Filename: Elcid.wps
The "underdog" John Irving drinks "cider."
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(5 pp.) According to Smith (1997), it was John
Irving's high-school wrestling coach, Ted Seabrooke,
who broke the news to him, that "talent is
overrated. That you're not very talented,
needn't be the end of it." Seabrooke also told him:
"An underdog is in a position to take a healthy
bite." And Irving, who counted himself neither a
born athlete nor a born writer - he was dyslexic
before that particular learning disability had been
identified by name - took Seabrooke's, words as a
kind of mantra. Irving chose to be inspired by
being told that he didn't have much talent. His
thought became, I may not have it right now -but I
will. How this author displays his "worked for"
talent, will be discussed in light of his 1994
novel Cider House Rules.
Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: BBcidhse.doc
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