Main Character Essays

  • Identifying the Main Character in The Use of Force

    510 Words  | 2 Pages

    Identifying the Main Character in The Use of Force Since Olson narrates the story, I was tempted to focus on his opinions and motives in accessing and handling the intense situation of diagnosing a sick child. Though tempted to focus on Olson, after meticulous analysis of the passage, I noted Matilda as the character that force is being applied to-clearly a manifestation of the title of this story. All attention and focus is on Matilda employing care to her appearance as well as her fluster

  • Alienation of the Main Character in To Build A Fire

    1506 Words  | 4 Pages

    Alienation of the Main Character in To Build A Fire In most novels and short stories, the emphasis lays on the main character. The author gives details on his personality, his skills, or his appearance one by one until we, as readers, get the final picture of what the protagonist looks like. However, this is not always the case; sometimes it seems in the writer's favor to limit the descriptions of the main character to a minimum, in order to allow him to put the emphasis on the theme. In the

  • The main techniques Fitzgerald used to introduce our main character Gatsby

    628 Words  | 2 Pages

    The main techniques Fitzgerald used to introduce our main character Gatsby Author's Techniques by Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald is a very diverse and interesting author to analyze. The techniques he uses for each character or theme that he wants to present is different from page to page, thus making him a multifaceted. When speaking of the title character of the book, Jay Gatsby, there are a few specific techniques used in the layout of his features. Gatsby doesn’t appear

  • The Character of Carol Kennicott in Main Street

    1390 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Character of Carol Kennicott in Main Street The protagonist in this story is Carol Kennicott. She is a young woman attending college in St. Paul Minnesota. She wants to go somewhere in her life. She has gone out and gotten a college education so that she won’t have to be a house wife. She has an outgoing personality and is continuously trying to change the things around her. She meets a man named William Kennicott. They fall in love and move to the small town of Gopher Prairie. While

  • charant Creon as the Main Character of Antigone

    1226 Words  | 3 Pages

    Creon as the Main Character of Antigone Throughout the Greek play Antigone by Sophocles, there exists a dispute as to who should receive the designation of main character. Antigone, the daughter of the cursed King Oedipus, as well as Creon, stately king of Thebes, both appear as the key figures in this historic play. I believe that Creon, king of Thebes, should be considered the main character in this work of Greek theater. Three points can be used to make this argument: Creon suffers greatly

  • Sympathy for the Main Character in Sophocles' Antigone

    788 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sympathy for the Main Character in Sophocles' Antigone Sophocles' play is named after its main character, Antigone, and for one the first times in Greek Tragedy it is a woman. In this play, Antigone is clearly the protagonist, as she is showed in her grief, seems sympathetic and the reader or spectator sees her from the beginning; it creates more impact and draws attention to the extremity of her

  • Billy Budd Essays: Three Main Characters

    746 Words  | 2 Pages

    Billy Budd:  Three Main Characters Billy Budd, a 19th century novel written by Herman Melville, involves three main characters: Billy Budd, John Claggart and Captain Vere. In the beginning of the novel, Melville portrays each character with distinct personality; Billy Budd is represented as the simple-minded sailor, Claggart is viewed as the villain, and Captain Vere is seen as the honorable superior of the ship. As the novel develops, the earlier images of these characters are contradicted as previously

  • Use of Setting to Reflect Main Character in "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant

    698 Words  | 2 Pages

    In “The Necklace,” Guy de Maupassant uses setting to reflect the character and development of the main character, Mathilde Loisel. As a result, his setting is not particularly vivid or detailed. He does not even describe the ill-fated necklace—the central object in the story—but states only that it is “superb” (7 ). In fact, he includes descriptions of setting only if they illuminate qualities about Mathilde. Her changing character can be connected to the first apartment, the dream-life mansion

  • Main Characters in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mocking Bird

    618 Words  | 2 Pages

    To Kill a Mockingbird - Main Characters The main characters of this book are Scout which is the narrator, her father (Atticus), her brother (Jem), her friend Dill. A few other characters are Tom Robinson, Boo Radley, and Bob Ewell. Scout is the narrator of the story and she is telling the story from the past point of view. She started talking about the summer when she first met Dill and they went on adventures with her older brother Jem. Scout is only eight years old at the time, and she

  • Comparison of the Main Characters in To Kill a Mockingbird and I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

    624 Words  | 2 Pages

    “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings”. After reading these two great pieces of literature I dare to compare the main characters, Scout from “To Kill a Mockingbird” and Maria from “I know why the caged bird sings”. The main intentions of this two books are to teach lesson to their readers whether they could be children or adults. In the story “To Kill a Mockingbird” Scout is the main character from the story. She is a 7 year old child, who lives with her father Atticus and her brother Jim. Her mother

  • Shakespeare's Language and the Main Characters' Views About Love

    2215 Words  | 5 Pages

    Shakespeare's Language and the Main Characters' Views About Love The language of Shakespeare's characters within Romeo and Juliet is entirely different between each character. The characters' language provides the reader, occasionally subtle, but present information of their experiences and views of love. At the start of the play, in Act 1 Scene 1, there is a theme of mystery, as none of the Montagues, as well as Mercutio, can appreciate the meaning of Romeo's sadness and solitariness

  • James Joyce's Araby and Eveline

    1063 Words  | 3 Pages

    James Joyce's "Araby" and "Eveline" In 'Araby' and 'Eveline' Joyce uses religious symbols to show the importance of the Catholic religion in both of the main characters' lives. Both of these stories take place in Dublin, Ireland, a place that is very strong in its belief in the Catholic religion. In 'Araby,' the imagery of the infamous 'Fall' is presented to the reader within the second paragraph to indicate its importance. The themes of religious masses can be found in 'Eveline.' The concept

  • 19th Century Reviews of Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

    1685 Words  | 4 Pages

    biggest arguments. The fact that people are still feeling the sting and abuse from the creation of this slang word is understandable. The other problem that many people have is that Jim, the black main character, was played off as a comical, half-wit character. This didn't help much when this character was used as the icon for the early minstrel shows of the 20th Century. Both of these arguments have been used since the 50's as reasons to ban the book and never have it in any public facility.

  • The Tragedy Of Romeo And Juliet-Critical Lens Essay

    985 Words  | 2 Pages

    reason that motivates characters in literature." This means that all literature is an expression of emotion and it is the emotion that is the main character, and often the setting and theme as well. It is not the reasoning within the story that draws you in, but rather how the story deals with the emotions we all have felt. It provides us with a possible scenario of the impact of focusing only on emotion and losing focus on reason. The power of emotion driving literary characters to see their emotions

  • Heaven and Hell Divided in C. S. Lewis's The Great Divorce

    1002 Words  | 3 Pages

    In this story, the narrator and main character, embarks on a bus ride from the twilight of Hell to the outskirts of Heaven. Here he encounters many people, called ghosts, who have also been in Hell. The narrator observes their struggle with whether to stay in Heaven, or hold onto their petty sins and return to the lonely darkness of Hell. C. S. Lewis' descriptions and characters are what really make this story incredible. The main character of the story never receives a name

  • Ralph Ellison’s Prologue to the Invisible Man

    1128 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ellison, an African American writer of the 20th century, whose stories tended to focus on racial issues. The main character of this story’s prologue is anonymous and unseen. He resides in a basement and lives off stolen energy in Harlem New York. Throughout the essay it is hard to determine whether he prefers to be this way or not, but he does describe that he loves light and warmth. He is a character that most audiences can easily feel sympathetic for. Although the essay is a narrative story, on a more

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

    743 Words  | 2 Pages

    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  struggles with the tremendous impact of social constraints on their lives but their is a great difference between repression and oppression. In the book Ethan Frome, the main character, Ethan, is oppressed in many different ways.  First of all, Ethan’s wife, Zeena, has become a burden on Ethan psychologically and finacially.  Zeena seems

  • Macbeth - Power Shifts

    953 Words  | 2 Pages

    DRAMA OFTEN EXAMINES THE WAYS INDIVIDUALS STRUGGLE TO DOMINATE AND/OR MINIPULATE EACH OTHER. DISCUSS THE TECHNIQUES USED IN ONE OR MORE PLAYS, WHICH DRAW OUT ATTENTION TO THE POWER SHIFTS BWTWEEN CHARACTERS. The text Macbeth by famous playwright William Shakespeare portrays a dramatic power struggle by the careful employment of various literary techniques. "Authority poisons everybody who takes authority on himself" (Vladimir Ilyich Lenin) aptly describes this prominent theme of Macbeth. Techniques

  • The Static Character in Homer’s Odyssey

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Static Character in Homer’s Odyssey The Odyssey, by Homer, translated by W.H.D. Rouse (between 900 and 700 BC.) is "The best story ever written" (7). This is a story about a man named Odysseus Laertiades who went off to war. After winning the war, he and his men were heading home when their ship got off track. They ended up in the land of the Cyclops. They were held captive by a god's, Poseidon Earthholder, son. Odysseus came up with a plan to get out of there which involved poking the Cyclops'

  • Fight Club

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Fight Club, directed by David Fincher, constructs an underground world of men fighting with one and other to find the meaning to their lives. Ed Norton and Brad Pitt are the main characters who start the fight club. They make a set of rules in which everyone must follow. The fight club exists because individuals get weighted down by possessions causing them to miss the deep meaning of life. Most of the people in the fight club hold service jobs or lower level management jobs that are meaningless