Plot Essays

  • Hamlet Plot

    987 Words  | 2 Pages

    HAMLET PLOT The play opens during the evening watch at the castle of Elsinore in Denmark. The last two nights, a ghost dressed in the dead King Hamlet’s armor has appeared as the clock strikes one. Three men, Horatio (Hamlet’s friend), Marcellus, and Bernardo, are talking, when the ghost appears once more. Horatio tries to talk to the ghost, but the ghost is silent and then disappears. The men try to figure out why the ghost has returned and decide that Hamlet should speak to his father’s ghost.

  • Platoon Plot

    1002 Words  | 3 Pages

    Platoon is a story of a soldier’s perspective of the Vietnam War. The movie is for the most part told out of the eyes of members of one platoon of the 25th Infantry Division. It is a movie dedicated to all of the people who fought in the Vietnam War. In the movie, Chris Taylor is a young man from a wealthy family, but while in college, chooses to help his country and do his duty in the Vietnam War. He is sent to Vietnam gets put in the 25th Infantry Division. Chris first has some rough times while

  • Cloud Atlas Plot

    943 Words  | 2 Pages

    reader from the beginning, weave plots that are both entertaining and suspenseful, and end the book with the reader asking, “How in the world did he do that?” David Mitchell does just that in his award-winning novel, Cloud Atlas. Cloud Atlas is a science-fiction book that employs six different plots simultaneously yet separately. Mitchell utilizes different settings that span across ages and continents, shapes multiple plots, and alludes to the separate plots to link them together across the novel

  • Hamlet Plot Theory

    805 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rachel Bilderback Professor Lake 5 April 2014 Richard Tyre’s Six Point Plot Pattern in Hamlet and Boy in the Summer Sun Richard Tyre explains in his essay You Can’t Teach Tolkien that almost every work of fiction that involves a journey contains six different plot points that follow a certain pattern. Tyre begins by explaining the popularity of the Lord of the Rings books, which has to do with multiple journeys. Tyre says, “Ask each member of the class to name the novel or long fiction or biographical

  • Sub-plots in Hamlet

    1108 Words  | 3 Pages

    Sub-plots in Hamlet There are many things that critics say make Hamlet a "Great Work," one of which is the way that Shakespeare masterfully incorporates so many sub-plots into the story, and ties them all into the main plot of Hamlet’s revenge of his father’s murder. By the end of Act I, not only is the main plot identified, but many other sub-plots are introduced. Among the sub-plots are trust in the Ghost of King Hamlet, Fortinbras, and the relationship between Hamlet and Ophelia. These three

  • Merchant of Venice: Comparison of the Marriage Plot and the Trial Plot

    865 Words  | 2 Pages

    marriage and trial plots in The Merchant of Venice. The antagonists of the respective plots have similar goals; they seek access to power and privilege. However, the types of power they seek is very different. The methods they use of gaining power are also differ. Bassanio succeeds with his intent, but Shylock fails. Focusing on the before mentioned plots, one may draw some conclusions concerning the reasons of success and failure in this play. Let us look at the marriage plot. Already in I,i Bassanio

  • The Cybernetic Plot of Ulysses

    2941 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Cybernetic Plot of Ulysses A paper delivered at the CALIFORNIA JOYCE conference (6/30/93) To quote the opening of Norbert Wiener's address on Cybernetics to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in March of 1950, The word cybernetics has been taken from the Greek word kubernitiz (ky-ber-NEE-tis) meaning steersman. It has been invented because there is not in the literature any adequate term describing the general study of communication and the related study of control in both machines

  • Plot of The Return of The Native

    977 Words  | 2 Pages

    A reddleman is traveling with a young woman, across Egdon Heath on a November day, when he crosses the path of a stranger on the road and keeps the woman’s identity a secret. The two talk and eventually depart when they split paths to rest at night. From there the reddleman notices many figures on a hilltop and later finds out that these people are the heath folk who have come to start a fifth of November bonfire. The Reddleman safely returns Thomasin Yeobright, to her aunt, Mrs. Yeobright. Thomasin

  • Richard Ii - Silence Is The Plot

    580 Words  | 2 Pages

    search for those "hidden meanings".For the ordinary reader, who does not search, the text clearly states that the fight for innocence is distinctly between Bullingbrook and Mowbray. Such an example can be found in Act I: "Bull: That he [Mowbray] did plot the Duke of Gloucester's death,Suggest his soon-believing adversaries,And consequently, like a traitor coward,Sluic'd his innocent soul through streams of blood." The rest of the dialogue converses back and forth between Bullingbrook and Mowbray, each

  • Siddhartha Plot Analysis

    798 Words  | 2 Pages

    Siddhartha Plot Analysis Siddhartha decides to join the Samanas. “Tomorrow morning, my friend, Siddhartha is going to join the Samanas. He is going to become a Samana.” Govinda blanched as he heard these words and read the decision in his friends. Determined face, undeviating as the released arrow from the bow. Govinda realized from the first glance at his friends face that it was now beginning. Siddhartha was on his own way, his destiny was beginning to unfold itself, and with his destiny, his

  • Brave New World Plot Analysis

    970 Words  | 2 Pages

    Brave New World is a novel with a very unconventional plot structure, containing several plot structures within the single work. Because Aldous Huxley expresses many complex ideas in the piece, form initially seems to follow function in regard to standard plot structure. However as the piece develops it is clear that the variety of plots Huxley employs, he employs with intent. The episodic feel of the repeated rising and falling action throughout the work, the parallel nature of the presence that

  • Gilgamesh and Enkidu Character Building Plot

    1297 Words  | 3 Pages

    Gilgamesh and Enkidu Character Building Plot Gilgamesh and Enkidu: Character Building Plot The creation of an intriguing plot must involve at least one major character whose own actions and external interactions dictate his or her development. External interactions between round characters, static characters, and environmental or supernatural activities, within the plot affect the decisions of the major character, providing the foundation for the story line to proceed. These decisions also

  • Vlad Dracula - A Makeup Plot

    504 Words  | 2 Pages

    Character Analysis – Count Vlad Dracula The man known as “Dracula” was Vlad Tepes (the Impaler) - a king in one of the historical parts of Romania. Born in 1431 in Sighasoara, Transylvania, Tepes grew up in a Germanic, and later Turkish atmosphere (as a prisoner from 1444 to 1448), became a tyrannical ruler that was feared throughout the lands, then died in 1476 in a fight defending his country. Based off of the motion picture “Bram Stoker’s Dracula”, Count Vlad denounced God after the death of

  • Dialogue and Plot in Soap Opera Literature

    637 Words  | 2 Pages

    that left readers with cliffhangers after each book. Those then turned into soap opera novels and soap opera television series that One of the most important things in literature is dialogue. Dialogue is what connects characters and adds depth to the plot. Comic books are known for their picture strips with a few words on each picture. This means that it’s difficult for comics to be compared to today’s soap operas on television because of the lack of communication with the characters. This contradicts

  • The Parallel Plot Lines in Slaughterhouse-Five

    1211 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Parallel Plot Lines in Slaughterhouse-Five Kurt Vonnegut is and will always in my eyes and in the eyes of many others the writer who made the science-fiction genre safe for not only mainstream appeal, but also critical acclaim and intellectual contemplation. Even though Arthur C. Clarke's 2001: A Space Odyssey and Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker series were released in roughly the same timeframe as Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, none has held the same aura of

  • Plots, Characters, and Relationships in Anna Karenina

    1657 Words  | 4 Pages

    Plots, Characters, and Relationships in Anna Karenina "Reason has been given to man to enable him to escape from his troubles."1 These words, spoken by an unknown woman on a train minutes before Anna took her own life, proved cold comfort for Vronsky's mistress. Unable to reason her way out of her despair, she flung her body under a train in an act of vengeance and escape. She failed in her personal quest, one for fulfillment that she shares with the other main protagonist in the novel, Levin

  • Hamlet - Plot Summary

    2443 Words  | 5 Pages

    Act 1 Scene 1 The scene is the Castle at Elsinore. Bernardo relieves Francisco, at about midnight. Marcellus who joins Bernardo in the watch along with Horatio who was told of the appearance the previous night. Horatio believes it to be a illusion until it appears. You learn that the ghost has appeared twice in the same armor that the king wore to fight Fortinbras, king of Norway, and the Poles who he defeated. The ghost appears again and again Horatio challenges it to speak. At the crow of the cock

  • Macbeth and the Gunpowder Plot of 1605

    4665 Words  | 10 Pages

    Macbeth and the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 Shakespeare’s Macbeth was influenced by the gunpowder plot of 1605. The equivocation that was inspired by this event played an important role in the play. The general theme of Macbeth reflects the mood of society at the time that it was written. This relationship is a direct reflection of the mimetic theory. This paper will examine the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 and the role of equivocation in the subsequent prosecutions during the time that Shakespeare was

  • Significance of the Plot within Brave New World

    951 Words  | 2 Pages

    consideration into the plot of their story; it is the very basis of their text and shapes what the reader perceives of, and gets from, the story. The plot must be arranged not only to provide the frame of the story, but also to make it flow and transition effectively, creating a figurative storyline within the mind of the audience. In order to achieve this, there are a variety of common plot templates that authors may choose to follow. Aldous Huxley takes a unique approach to his plot in Brave New World

  • The Effect of Opening Scenes on Plot Setting and Characters

    841 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Effect of Opening Scenes on Plot Setting and Characters The opening scenes of a feature film can play a major role in establishing key elements that parallel throughout the rest of the film. The three key elements are settings, characters and plot. The film "Dead Poet's Society" shall be used as an example throughout this essay. The first scene in "Dead Poet's Society" is in a dim room with a candle being lit by boys in school uniform. Although very brief, this scene is symbolic of many