Many Ways Essays

  • Brilliant Lies - In many ways, Susy is just like Gary. Do you agree?

    656 Words  | 2 Pages

    Brilliant Lies - In many ways, Susy is just like Gary. Do you agree? In many ways, Susy is just like Gary. Do you agree? Susy Conner, and Gary Fitzgerald. Both are Brilliant liars - and seemingly total opposite gender counterparts of each other. To say however, that they are alike simply because they are liars is to place them into a frame that is far too restricting and incomplete. No, the similarities - and even differences - between Susy and Gary lie beneath the surface. It is in these

  • The Variety of Characters in Shakespeare's Othello

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Variety of Characters in Othello William Shakespeare has many ways of illustrating his characters through way of dialogue and language patterns. This is his trademark and it is his ultimate strategy for drawing his reader closer, until they are completely immersed in his play. In Othello we see that a character like Iago has been given a very rough and coldhearted aura about him, which in time shows us as readers how cruel he really is. On the contrary Othello himself is rather noble in his

  • Health Professions

    1264 Words  | 3 Pages

    realized that I was, in many ways, different from all the other kids in school. Gradually, I became less confident and more isolated. One day in the schoolyard, while I was playing hopscotch alone, a girl named Becca walked up to me and asked if she could join in. Although we had difficulty understanding one another's speech, we had no problem communicating through gestures and expressions. We soon realized that we had different ways of playing hopscotch. I watched her way and she watched mine; presently

  • Free Essays: The World of the Odyssey and Today's Society

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    punishments, and this shows in many ways how the present differs from the past. That is why many leaders of the past couldn't be successful leaders in running today's society.  Odysseus went by his own rules and made up his own rights, which he lived by, and would set the tone for the rest of his crew.  Odysseus would be a poor leader in today's society based on his leadership skills in the book. Odysseus would be a terrible leader today because his way of being just and solving problems

  • Cry , the Beloved Country: Post-Colonial Literary Theory

    569 Words  | 2 Pages

    Country by Alan Paton is a perfect example of post-colonial literature. South Africa is a colonized country, which is, in many ways, still living under oppression. Though no longer living under apartheid, the indigenous Africans are treated as a minority, as they were when Paton wrote the book. This novel provides the political view of the author in both subtle and evident ways. Looking at the skeleton of the novel, it is extremely evident that relationship of the colonized vs. colonizers, in this

  • College Admissions Essay: Music is Life

    680 Words  | 2 Pages

    school I have developed areas of service and leadership through interests in children and gardening, which will continue to be major parts of my life. I began taking violin lessons at the age of four and have since shared my music with others in many ways. I have been in the community orchestra at Jacksonville University and am in the first violin section of the University of North Florida's string ensemble. When I performed on violin for 4-H's Share the Fun event, I placed first at the county and

  • Catch-22 and the Theme of Death

    885 Words  | 2 Pages

    Catch-22 and the Theme of Death There are many ways for a man to die, but there is no way to bring him back after he has entered the world of dead. Catch-22 is a novel satirizing war, and because of this, it inevitably has a strong underlying theme of death. But unlike many war novels, Catch-22 doesn't use violent depictions of fighting or bloody death scenes to denounce the evils of war; it utilizes humor and irony to make an arguably more effective point. And even more importantly, Catch-22

  • The Power of Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles

    3599 Words  | 8 Pages

    Darwin, and social thinkers, such as John Stuart Mill, affected his thoughts and writings. Writers rarely wrote about these subjects in such a way during Victorian times. The Victorian times and attitudes victimize Tess, despite the fact that she possesses high morals and standards. The aim of this paper is to show how Hardy illustrates this in many ways. Her family, social, and economic background provide the reader with a perspective of living as a poor woman during the Victorian Era. Another

  • Tyrant and Martyr in Sophocles' Antigone

    753 Words  | 2 Pages

    Tyrant and Martyr in Antigone "The tyrant dies and his rule ends,the martyr dies and his rule begins."  Soren Kierkegaard  This quote applies to Sophocles’ play Antigone in many ways. The two lines can be used to describe the opposition of the two main characters in the play, Creon and Antigone. One is a king new to the throne who will not be ruling for long, and the other, a martyr whose strong convictions will live on even after her death. In the first line of his quote, Kierkegaard states that

  • Analysis of Robert Frost's Fire and Ice

    1075 Words  | 3 Pages

    emotion into so few words.  This essay will focus on one particular poem, the meaning of which has been much debated due to the quantity of words used, or the lack there-of. There have been many readers of Frost's poem "Fire and Ice", thus being interpreted in many ways. Many readers would interpret the poem to mean something about 'the physical end of the world, or the end of the physical world' (1).  Lawrence Thompson views the poem as hinting at the destructive powers

  • Dreams and Success in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

    1758 Words  | 4 Pages

    Dreams and Success in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman In Arthur Miller's play, Death of a Salesman, Miller probes the dream of Willy Lowman while making a statement about the dreams of American society. This essay will explore how each character of the play contributes to Willy's dream, success, and failure. Willy is the aging salesman whose imagination is much larger than his sales ability. Willy's wife, Linda, stands by her husband even in his absence of realism. Biff and Happy follow

  • Technology and Morality in Shelley's Frankenstein - Is Knowledge Always Evil?

    961 Words  | 2 Pages

    Frankenstein we learn very quickly how Frankenstein's search for knowledge turned him from an "intelligent being" to a fearful and hateful madman. At the same time, Frankenstein created a being who was able to develop an intelligence far greater than many "naturally created" beings. The process that Frankenstein used to create the daemon / monster, as he was referred to, involved his removal from his family and society to the point where he "...seemed to have lost all soul or sensation but for this

  • All Quiet on the Western Front Essay: Effective Criticism of War

    1310 Words  | 3 Pages

    unwarranted. These were students like Paul, farmers like Detering, and other ordinary men who were enlisted and taken to the front, not really knowing what they were fighting for, stripped of even their humanity. At one point Paul even said "[i]n many ways we are treated quite like men" (91). However, they were men, even though they were made to feel like animals. They were still men. Remarque effectively used Paul's experiences to illustrate his criticism of World War I, showing the destruction

  • The Fool as a Playwright in Twelfth Night

    2845 Words  | 6 Pages

    Feste, the fool character in Twelfth Night, in many ways represents a playwright figure, and embodies the reach and tools of the theater. He criticizes, manipulates and entertains the other characters while causing them to reflect on their life situations, which is similar to the way a playwright such as Shakespeare interacts with his audience. Furthermore, more so than the other characters in the play he accomplishes this in a highly performative way, involving song and clever wordplay that must

  • Griffin's Black Like Me and Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible

    2317 Words  | 5 Pages

    plight of African Americans (Bain 195). His book is a true account of his experiences as a black man. Kingsolver writes of a man who, in many ways, made a similar journey. Nathan Price, a white Baptist missionary in The Poisonwood Bible, moves his wife and four daughters to the Congo of Africa with hopes of spreading the teachings of Christianity and baptizing many. Although Kingsolver's story is fiction, her development of the Congo's history and culture are based on recorded history and her own

  • The Satire of Gulliver's Travels

    794 Words  | 2 Pages

    royalty and the upper class (McKendrick,2).  As a result, English society held themselves in very high regards, feeling that they were the elite society of mankind.  In his novel, Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift satirizes this English society in many ways.  In the novel, Swift uses metaphors to reveal his disapproval of English society.  Through graphic representations of the body and it's functions, Swift reveals to the reader that grandeur is merely an illusion, a facade behind which English

  • Comparing History And Tragedy In Richard II

    2054 Words  | 5 Pages

    History and Tragedy in Richard II         An attempt to sort Shakespeare's plays into neat categories may appear to have its benefits when striving to understand his work, but even a superficial reading of Richard II indicates that this approach is largely futile and sometimes misleading. While it cannot be doubted that the play is of a historical nature, based on events recorded in Holinshed's Chronicles of 1577 and named after an actual king, a sense of true Shakespearean tragedy is

  • Assisted Suicide, A Better Way to Go

    581 Words  | 2 Pages

    Assisted Suicide - A Better Way to Go Doctor Kevorkian and other so-called "death doctors" should be permitted to assist in the premature deaths of the terminally ill.  Although many states outlaw assisted suicides, nevertheless, they should by made legal for terminally ill patients.  These patients may not want to suffer a long, painful death.  The terminally ill will not get well, they might decide to make the decision of ending their life alone if they cannot receive proper

  • The Power of Love in Louisa May Alcott Little Women

    1842 Words  | 4 Pages

    her corner . . . . Jo immediately sat up, put her hands in her pockets, and began to whistle. 'Don't Jo-it's so boyish!'{Amy said} 'That's why I do it'" (p.3-4). Though different in many ways, they all loved each other. It was, however, love from, and for, other people that changed them all in so many ways. Being the oldest sister, Meg felt a lot of pressure on her to marry into the right class. She longed for pretty things and large house. She wasn't as conceited as Amy, but continually

  • Free Essays: Oppression in Ethan Frome and Their Eyes Were Watching God

    743 Words  | 2 Pages

    Repression and Oppression in  Ethan Frome and Their Eyes Were Watching God In society, people are oppressed in many ways, such as blacks not being able to vote back in the 60’s, or women not having as many rights as men.  There are many social constraints that hold people back from their dreams and desires.  The two novels, Ethan Frome, by Edith Wharton and Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, both accurately portray the power of social constraints.  In  each novel the main character