Strange Land Essays

  • Stranger in a Strange Land

    1908 Words  | 4 Pages

    Stranger in a Strange Land Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein takes the themes portrayed in the book and directly criticizes the Western Culture. As Heinlein said, "My purpose in this book was to examine every major axiom of western culture, to question each axiom, throw doubt on it" (Jelliffe 161). These axioms are where feels the Western Culture fails and so he uses the themes to criticize humans of the Western Culture by pointing out these faults. The themes of the story portray

  • A Stranger In A Strange Land by Robert Heinlein

    1012 Words  | 3 Pages

    Robert Heinlein is often thought of as one of the greatest science fiction writers of all time. His most popular book; A Stranger in a Strange Land; created a counter cultural revolution. Which resulted in many cults built around his fictitious culture that challenges every axiom of society. *Note that this book was written in the 1960's when "free love" was widely accepted by the younger generations. It arguably influenced the "free love" movement and the "sexual revolution "in general. Valentine

  • Strange Lands

    1143 Words  | 3 Pages

    The world is a strange place, full of strange people, strange customs, and strange ideas. Jonathan Swift understood that and chose to write down just how strange and absurd the world was, satirizing the customs of civilization and humanity by crafting strange lands with strange people and strange customs that oddly mirrored the world he lived and explained them from the point of view of Lemuel Gulliver, a man who fit into Swift’s time and Swift’s world but whose views of his world are changed by

  • A Strange Land Satire

    1231 Words  | 3 Pages

    Robert Heinlein’s Stranger in a Strange Land is many things at once: a science fiction epic, a tale of spiritual awakening, and critical commentary on politics, religion, and media. It tells the story of Valentine Michael Smith, a human who was brought to Earth in early adulthood, after being born on the planet Mars. The novel describes Smith’s early interactions with his new environment, and the way he struggles to understand the social mores and prejudices of human nature. Using the knowledge he

  • Stranger in a Strange Land

    842 Words  | 2 Pages

    The dark, black sky was covered with a million bright shining stars. The moon shimmered above a small town in the suburbs of London. The gentle wind swept past the bare trees and danced with the leaves below it, creating a colourful array of orange, yellow, red and brown. Across the street, a light was on in a small house where a tall, dark haired woman stood, talking to her two children Nicola and Erin. While she was tucking them in Erin asked, “Mummy, will you tell us a story please?”

  • Dracula

    824 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jonathan Harker’s second encounter with strangers, in a strange land, in which he was confronted in this manner. He had three such encounters, all of which he nonchalantly dismissed. During his first encounter, the people simply refused to answer any of his questions. In his third encounter, strangers made the sign of a cross and pointed at him. During all of this, Jonathan had no clue why these people were acting in this strange way, nor did he have a notion to question why. Even though he

  • Free Essays - The Themes of Oedipus the King (Rex)

    719 Words  | 2 Pages

    Corinth and only fate can make Oedipus turn to the road where he kills his true father. Leaving Corinth makes Oedipus lose his childhood by making him worry of such issues young people should not have to worry about and becoming a king of a strange land. Last of all, Oedipus carries the last part of the prophecy out, marrying his mother. " I would... never have been known as my mother's husband. Oedipus has no control over the outcome of his life. Fate causes Oedipus to have known the answer

  • The Necessity of Violence in Native Son by Richard Wright

    1514 Words  | 4 Pages

    rings in the beginning of the novel is a symbol. It is a symbol Wright uses as a "wake up" call to a society that remains locked in illusions regarding its creation of race relations that makes Bigger always someone who is "following a strange path in a strange land" (Wright 127). This is why Bigger's communist lawyer tells the court that Bigger is incapable of killing because he is already dead as he is forced to exist in a society that refuses him any affirmation of life. Bigger is a displaced

  • Living With Different Customs, Practices, and Values

    1917 Words  | 4 Pages

    Practices, and Values One of the greatest aspects of people from anywhere in the world is culture. Customs, practices, and values are all apart of culture that identify who we are as a person and where we come from. Being a stranger in a strange land has its basis of showing where you have come from and what your cultural backgrounds are. It is just as important to express the culture from where you have come from as it is to practice the culture to where you have immigrated. It is 1988

  • Russel Conwell Acres of Diamonds

    1077 Words  | 3 Pages

    diamonds can be found in the river that runs through white sand between two high mountains. The Persian sells his farm, leaves his family in the care of a neighbor, and travels the world in search of the diamonds. In the end, Hafed faces death in a strange land all in search of the diamonds that had been in his own back yard the entire time. The man who bought Hafeds farm was the one who profited from them in the end. The moral of this story is that anyone has the opportunity to become wealthy if they

  • Native Son Essay: The Quest for Identity

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    frustration as wanting to "blot out" those around him, as they have effectively blocked him out of their lives by assuming that he will fail in any endeavor before he tries. He has feelings, too, of fear, as Wright remarks "He was following a strange path in a strange land" (p.127). His mother's philosophy of suffering to wait for a later reward is equally stagnating -- to Bigger it appears that she is weak and will not fight to live. Her religion is a blindness; but she needs to be blind in order to survive

  • Cross-Dressing in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night and As You Like It

    1737 Words  | 4 Pages

    erotic investments" (Traub 17). They can only acts this way when they are dressed as men. They return to their passive and nonsexual ways when they change back to women's clothing. In both plays the women are not in their own lands, Viola being shipwrecked on a strange land and Rosalind being banished from the court and wandering in the forest. Both women disguise themselves as men for protection. On the way to the forest Celia says to Rosalind, “Now go we in content/ To liberty and not to banishment”

  • True Love in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night

    1979 Words  | 4 Pages

    true nature and loves him for who he really is, while the other characters in the play seem to be in love with an illusion. Viola's love for Orsino does not alter during the play, nor is it transferred to another person. Viola, alone in a strange land, disguises herself as a man in order to gain access to Duke Orsino's palace. She plays the role of Orsino's servant, Cesario, to be near him for she knows that he is the man who can help her in Illyria. On first hearing Orsino's name, Viola says:

  • Flowers For Algernon by Daniel Keyes

    1309 Words  | 3 Pages

    all previous Hugo winners in each of the established categories. In three of the four fiction categories the results were rather close; there was little distance in the novel category between The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, Dune, and Stranger in a Strange Land; in the novelette category, "The Big Front Yard" was only just ahead of "The Bicentennial Man", "Sandkings", "Unicorn Variations" and "Blood Music"; and in the Short Story category, "I Have No Mouth and I must Scream" was a little more convincingly

  • Our Journey to Strange Lands- Narrative

    1858 Words  | 4 Pages

    We grew up in a land where the sun never sets. The Mother Earth fed us generously. Wild strawberries, blueberries and blackberries fruited every night in the nearby forests. Rivers and streams were abundant in numerous fish species that voluntarily plunged into our nets. Loaves of bread and jars full of the sweetest milk and honey hung on the trees. We played together with bees, cows, sheep and goats in the flowery meadows that never withered. We used to put twigs back on branches to not let trees

  • Women on the Edge of Time and Stranger in a Strange Land

    1251 Words  | 3 Pages

    The novel Women on the Edge of Time and Stranger in a Strange Land have some similarities. They both depict how the gender socialization process is bias and a catalyst to gender disparity in the society. Both stories bring to light how men are given privileged as compared to women in the society. Analyzing the two stories and using outside sources I will draw a conclusion on how gender and power ideologies have equality impacted our society. “Women on the Edge of Time” is a book written by Marge

  • Analysis Of Indigenous People In A Land So Strange

    1207 Words  | 3 Pages

    Although A Land So Strange focuses on 16th century America and Jacksonland focuses on 19th century America, both works feature men who were willing to sacrifice Indigenous lives for the acquisition of land and resources. However, Indigenous peoples did not simply let this occur. In A Land So Strange, multiple Indigenous groups told Narváez embellished tales about prosperous lands in order to prevent him from intruding on their settlements. In Jacksonland, the Cherokee created their own constitution

  • Strangers In A Strange Land: Code Name Maris

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    Strangers in a Strange Land: Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein Code Name Verity is a story about friendship, loyalty, and alienation. It is inspiring and easy to relate to. From the characters we learn how to persevere in a culture where people define others based on religion, looks, hobbies, and much more. Code Name Verity teaches that “There’s glory and honour in being chosen. But not much room for free will.”(Wein 140). Like Maddie and Julie, the narrators of Code Name Verity, we often have

  • Small Treasure Box

    709 Words  | 2 Pages

    sea. Looking out of her balcony, into the ocean she remembered that there might have been human forms, with just no legs. For there where legend of years ago that they had to chooses between the sea and land. They had chosen the sea rather then the land for it was safer out in the water then in land. For what they chose they would give up the ability to walk but they received fins so they could swim. The myth her grandma had told her made her wonder about many things she saw. She became as curious

  • The Significance of the Coin Flips in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern

    605 Words  | 2 Pages

    Flips in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern At the beginning of the play "Rosencrantz and Guildensten," one of the two characters found a gold coin during their journey through the desert.  He immediately began to flip the coin to see what side it would land on.  By the seventh flip, two tails turned up.  Every flip after was heads.  The characters fliped the coin over 157 times, and they each after the seventh flip turned up heads.  The significance of the coin flips in this play was not ever specified