Interpretive Essays

  • Canterbury Tales Interpretive Essay

    628 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Evil Side of Human Nature Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales became one of the first ever works that began to approach the standards of modern literature. It was probably one of the first books to offer the readers entertainment, and not just another set of boring morals. However, the morals, cleverly disguised, are present in almost every story. Besides, the book offers the descriptions of the most common aspects of the human nature. The books points out both the good and the bad qualities

  • Interpretive Essay on Edward Taylor's Poem, Huswifery

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    Interpretive Essay on Edward Taylor's Poem, Huswifery In the poem, Huswifery, by Edward Taylor, a very severe shift seems to take place. The poem begins with an analogy between the writer and a spinning wheel. However, at the end of the poem suddenly he is no longer the spinning wheel, he is now a man wearing the cloth that was spun by the spinning wheel. How could the main analogy of the poem shift so drastically? Actually, upon closer inspection, the shift does not seem so bizarre. The main

  • Spotted Horses

    961 Words  | 2 Pages

    stories are both examples of interpretive literature, however "Spotted Horses" is a more interpretive short story than "Mule in the Yard because "Spotted Horses" fits Perrine’s profile of interpretive literature, and "Mule in the Yard" seems to replicate Perrine’s profile of escape literature. 	According to Laurence Perrine in his seventh edition of Literature: Structure, Sound and Sense he states the definition of interpretive literature is "Literature

  • Sociological Theory: Positivistic, Interpretative, And Critical

    1875 Words  | 4 Pages

    the three types of sociological theories, explain and argue, based on your library or Internet research, which type of theory is the most appropriate theory for sociology to adopt. The three general types of sociological theory are positivistic, interpretive and critical theory.In determining which theory is the most appropriate for sociology to adopt,a basic understanding of each theory's strengths and weaknesses is necessary.In defining each of these theories, it is important to determine the ontological

  • Aesthetics

    936 Words  | 2 Pages

    (acquired sensation). We may say that aesthetics is both the study of aesthetic objects and of the specific and subjective reactions of observers, readers, or audiences to the work of art. Aesthetics is necessarily interdisciplinary and may be interpretive, prescriptive, descriptive, or a combination of these. The big, obvious question about aesthetic value is whether it is ever ‘really in’ the objects it is attributed to. This issue parallels the realism/anti-realism debates elsewhere in philosophy

  • Spotted Horses vs. Mule in the Yard

    960 Words  | 2 Pages

    different stories. The stories are both examples of interpretive literature, however 'Spotted Horses'; is a more interpretive short story than 'Mule in the Yard because 'Spotted Horses'; fits Perrine's profile of interpretive literature, and 'Mule in the Yard'; seems to replicate Perrine's profile of escape literature. According to Laurence Perrine in his seventh edition of Literature: Structure, Sound and Sense he states the definition of interpretive literature is 'Literature written to deepen and

  • Epic of Beowulf - Themes of Beowulf

    1522 Words  | 4 Pages

    procedure, the more likely is he to be not “finding” but forming those very intratextual orders by projecting into the poem his own historical assumptions or the contemporary ideological and generic habits of his own reading. . . .Perhaps the central interpretive claim for B is that the monsters are “evil” and the hero “good,” and that the poem is articulated by a thematic conflict between good and evil. . . . (111-112). H. L. Rogers in “Beowulf’s Three Great Fights” expresses his opinion as a literar

  • Nothing is Something in King Lear

    1183 Words  | 3 Pages

    boiled-down version of basic tenets that discuss impossibly cloudy concepts like destabilized centers and traces and referents. Though I try to wrap my brain around these ideas, I inevitably fail to get to the heart of what Cowles means. My own interpretive inadequacy feeds on irony, because deconstruction theory itself warns that we cannot "get" to the transcendental center of meaning. King Lear, in its puzzling glory, is like my reaction to Cowles' attempt to explain deconstructive abstraction

  • Religion, Barnard College Women, War, and Evangelical Biblical Interpretation after 9.11

    2488 Words  | 5 Pages

    and now maybe Iraq, with very little public outcry. I’d like to suggest that behind the apathy, certain traditions of Christian biblical interpretation may be at work, traditions that feature feminine figures in very particular ways. These are interpretive traditions around salvation history, and apocalypse. Of course, one of the reasons that many people, particularly liberals, have not opposed the war is the discourse of saving Afghan women. There have been a number of insightful postcolonial

  • Reality in Wallace Stevens’ The Man with the Blue Guitar

    2487 Words  | 5 Pages

    is a long poem that allows Stevens to change perspectives and create abstract realities. Parataxis in such a long poem allows for the decreation of reality and the relation of imagination. In his book, The long poems of Wallace Stevens: An interpretive study, Rajeev S. Patke describes varied progression within “The Man with the Blue Guitar” as “an indefinite improvisatory series. In such a series the unitary sections lose their independent status as poems, and their masks and metaphors become

  • E.P Thompson's The making of the English Working Class

    1113 Words  | 3 Pages

    McClelland, ‘the obligatory starting point for any contemporary discussion of the history of the working-class formation.’ This gives us the indication that Thompson had not just written another piece on the concepts of class but that his book ‘opened interpretive eyes to a new way of seeing class.’ In his book Thompson’s main purpose was to write adjacent to the grain of economic history by implying that ‘the working class did not rise like the sun at the appointed time. It was present in its own making

  • Point of View and Theme in Heart of Darkness

    1028 Words  | 3 Pages

    Point of View and Theme in Heart of Darkness In Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness the story of Marlow, an Englishman travelling physically up an unnamed river in Africa and psychologically into the human possibility, is related to the reader through several narrational voices. The primary first-person narrator is an Englishman aboard the yawl, the 'Nellie', who relates the story as it is told to him by Marlow. Within Marlow's narrative are several instances when Marlow relies upon others

  • Literally Speaking in Quentin Tarantino's film Pulp Fiction

    3042 Words  | 7 Pages

    are human and integrating a name and personality is difficult, it is only genius for every name to be significant and meaningful. Yet, it may be surprising ho w well thought out the naming of the characters is. Pulp Fiction also touches on the interpretive value of words. Oftentimes, a person or group of people may understand the same definition of a word but interpret it differently. Language is prim arily a means of communicating ideas. The film makes an interesting point of how the actual words

  • Interpretive Sociology

    785 Words  | 2 Pages

    come up with a variety of approaches in order to attain information and share it, based on how they perceive it to be best achieved. In the discipline of sociology, there are three major ways to conduct research about the social world: positivist, interpretive and critical sociology. These three research orientations differ in a few ways, and a sociologist may prefer to use one over another, but not one method could empirically be considered better than the other, because they are each unique in the

  • Clint Eastwood's Changeling

    2320 Words  | 5 Pages

    Disempowerment of women, abuse from authoritarians, violence, corruption and discrimination; these are the tenacious themes of the 2008 American drama film based on a true story and directed by Clint Eastwood, Changeling. Changeling portrays the story of a working-class, single mother named Christine Collins, losing her child Walter to abduction. Soon after Christine had reported her son missing, the Los Angeles Police Department indeed found a boy who they and the boy both stated was hers, but clearly

  • Reader Response Criticism

    967 Words  | 2 Pages

    Reader Response Criticism is composed of two interdependent ideas: first, that the meaning of texts is shaped by the reading experience itself, and second, that these meanings cannot be judged to be correct or incorrect, but merely belonging to one “interpretive community” or another. The first idea may be identified as the executive aspect of Reader Response Criticism because it analyzes the act of reading, while the second idea is the epistemological aspect of the theory because it circumscribes the

  • Interpretive Framework For Ideology

    1855 Words  | 4 Pages

    that others’ lenses are varying shades of wrong. This fact, in a nutshell, is the source of all political conflict, as holders of different ideologies clash over their seemingly incompatible views of the world and how it ought to be.’ (Varrato) An Interpretive Framework for Ideology It is a fact that ideas have consequences, sometimes dire consequences,

  • Qualitative Research And Interpretive Paradigm

    1639 Words  | 4 Pages

    research methodology. Therefore, the research paradigm that will be applied in this research is interpretive paradigm. The aim of interpretive research is to understand how people in everyday natural settings create meaning and interpret events of their world. The interpretive research approach is the most closely connected with the specific research methods discussed in this chapter. An interpretive researcher, a vital role is played as an integral part of the data, without the active participation

  • Emily Dickinson's Interpretive Lens

    1338 Words  | 3 Pages

    What does it mean to combat heteronormative convention within the realm of academia? For Emily Dickinson scholars, deconstructing heteronormative tendencies entails a constant reevaluation of one’s interpretive lens. Martha Nell Smith makes a similar claim in “Gender Issues in Textual Editing of Emily Dickinson,” concluding that “hiding, overlooking, or ignoring Dickinson’s love for women … cloaks Dickinson in mystery, befuddles critics, confuses issues,” and ultimately “[diminishes her] radical

  • Designing Interpretive Signs: A Reflection

    1235 Words  | 3 Pages

    Reflection Week Four: Interpretive Signs After class, when I reflected the lecture, I felt very excited because I understood how to design interpretive signs. Before I joined this lecture, I did not know there are many principles in design interpretive signs. I just thought that these signs are explanation boards which have some information, tell us some stories, and let us pay attention to them. I learned a lot in this lecture, especially how to design a good sign. When I learned some principles