Tarzan's Quest Essays

  • John Derek's Tarzan the Ape Man

    759 Words  | 2 Pages

    perfect primitive savage. A person, particularly a woman, would not see a man thrashing at an animal with blood flying everywhere, as an attractive scene. Since this film is a woman’s fantasy, Derek leaves out the knife for it is an impurity to Tarzan’s appealing role. At the conclusion of the fight with the snake, Tarzan carries Jane into the jungle to safety where Tarzan himself passes out. The first sign of Jane’s infatuation with Tarzan is revealed as she comforts him. While Tarzan is unconscious

  • The Quest for Meaning in Moby Dick

    2644 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Quest for Meaning in Moby Dick "To produce a mighty book, you must choose a mighty theme. No great and enduring volume can ever be written on the flea, though many there be who have tried it" states the narrating character Ishmael as he attempts to justify his reasoning on writing such a lengthy novel. Indeed, the whale may be the most complex and grandiose mammal on earth, yet one may still question the ulterior motive of Melville for explicating every detail of a whaling journey in Moby

  • Quest for The Dream in Black Girl Lost and Makes Me Wanna Holler

    1857 Words  | 4 Pages

    Quest for "The Dream" in Black Girl Lost and Makes Me Wanna Holler Donald Goines Black Girl Lost (1973) and Nathan McCall's Makes Me Wanna Holler (1994) are two works written by male authors who have first hand knowledge about the African American experience. A difference between the two works is that McCalls story is an autobiography of his life growing up in the streets/ghetto and Goines is a fictional story about growing up in the streets/ghetto, but from a young black female perspective

  • Quest for Self-Determination in I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings and Lakota Woman

    2718 Words  | 6 Pages

    Quest for Self-Determination in I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings and Lakota Woman During their growing up years, children struggle to find their personal place in society. It is difficult for children to find their place when they are given numerous advantages, but when a child is oppressed by their parents or grandparents, males in their life, and the dominant culture, the road to achieving self-identity is fraught with enormous obstacles to overcome. Maya Angelou's I Know Why The Caged Bird

  • Rev. Arthur Dimmesdale and Hester’s Quest for Identity in Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter

    2491 Words  | 5 Pages

    Dimmesdale and Hester’s Quest for Identity in The Scarlet Letter While allegory is an explicit and tempting reading of Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, I see in this novel also the potential of a psychological reading, interpreting it as a search for one’s own self. Both Arthur Dimmesdale and Hester Prynne goes through this process and finally succeeded in finding the duality of one's personality, and the impossibility of complementing the split between individual and community identity. However

  • Gilgamesh and the Quest for Immortality

    1044 Words  | 3 Pages

    Gilgamesh and the Quest for Immortality The stories of the hunt for immortality gathered in the Epic of Gilgamesh depict the conflict felt in ancient Sumer. As urbanization swept Mesopotamia, the social status shifted from a nomadic hunting society to that of a static agricultural gathering society. In the midst of this ancient "renaissance", man found his relationship with the sacred uncertain and precarious. The Epic portrays the strife created between ontological nostalgia for a simpler time

  • Jack Kerouac’s On The Road - The Spiritual Quest, the Search for Self and Identity

    1323 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Spiritual Quest in On the Road A disillusioned youth roams the country without truly establishing himself in one of the many cities he falls in love with. In doing so, he manages with the thought or presence of his best friend. What is he searching for? While journeying on the road, Sal Paradise is not searching for a home, a job, or a wife. Instead, he longs for a mental utopia offered by Dean Moriarty. This object of his brotherly love grew up in the streets of America. Through the hardships

  • Lobotomy and the Quest for the I-Function

    2324 Words  | 5 Pages

    A large concern of the field of neurobiology seems to be finding and understanding a connection between the structure and function of the nervous system. What tangible system of tissues is responsible for creating a given perceived output? Some outputs can be more easily traced back to a specific 'motor symphony' and the involved structures isolated. This problem has obsessed generations of scientists. One of the first of this generation of researcher was F.J. Gall who promoted the idea that observable

  • The Quest: An Archetype in Various Cultural Myths

    2248 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Quest Archetype When examining various cultural myths, one archetype keeps repeating—the image of the quest. This archetype functions with various different mythologies as a method of learning about the world, both its external features and what is inside the self. The quest comes from ancient origins and is found in Classical Western culture, but has been fine tuned through the generations. In its most modern interpretations, there are continuing elements of the age old myth, where extenuating

  • Jamie's Quest in Their Eyes Were Watching God

    1267 Words  | 3 Pages

    themes in, "Their eyes were watching God" is Jamie’s undivided quest for love and independence. Jamie has a goal throughout the novel to find spiritual enlightenment and reach the "horizon". She went through several relationships and chimerical thoughts to do this, through her grandmother nanny and her three husbands. However, her third husband, tea cake plays a less substantial role in the novel but a significant role in Jamie quest to reach her dream of love, independency and security within herself

  • The End of Heroism

    955 Words  | 2 Pages

    loss of genuine heroism. Bowman states that: “Heroism can continue to exist only on a plane far removed from the daily lives of the audience.” True heroes are not violent warriors. They try to do what is right. Heroes, like Odysseus, have a noble quest: to get home. Heroes are clever, not contentious. Today’s view of ‘Heroism’ can only exist in fairy tales, for todays heroes only show bravery through violence. Even worse, these acts of bravery bring happiness to the hero. The pure heroism that comes

  • Quest Heroes

    1171 Words  | 3 Pages

    grit or perseverance is a common attribute of a quest hero as well, who is usually the star in quest novels. Charles Portis’s Mattie Ross from the quest novel True Grit undoubtedly falls under the quest hero category, and her supporting character Rooster Cogburn is clearly the wise old man type, with LaBoeuf fitting in as the assistant, or helper type. Mattie Ross, True Grit’s protagonist, clearly matches the quest hero description. One aspect of quest heroes is that they see the necessity for change

  • Labyrinth, by Jim Henson

    822 Words  | 2 Pages

    by her father and locked away in her house by her “wicked stepmother.”1 Then Propp’s necessary mediation happens, this one falling in the “the hero is dispatched directly category” 2 when Sarah is sent on her quest by the villain Jareth. She does this because she is a seeker hero, on a quest not for a “kidnapped princess”3 but for her kidnapped baby brother Toby, whom she accidentally banished to the goblin kingdom and whom Jareth will not give back. This is a modern interpretation of the classic

  • The Quest for the Ideal

    768 Words  | 2 Pages

    corrupting concept, yet countless individuals have attempted to strive for this unachievable goal. In literature, the quest for the ideal is commonly represented by the protagonist struggling for perfection with often insurmountable odds. The Lady of Shalott by Alfred Tennyson and Chicken Hips by Catherine Pigott and Constantly Risking Absurdity and Death by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, the quest for the ideal is a futile and challenging process which often results in failure and often proves to be damaging

  • Quest for Identity in Maxine Hong Kingston's Autobiography, The Woman Warrior

    2254 Words  | 5 Pages

    Quest for Identity in Maxine Hong Kingston's Autobiography, The Woman Warrior Maxine Hong Kingston's autobiography, The Woman Warrior, features a young Chinese-American constantly searching for "an unusual bird" that would serve as her impeccable guide on her quest for individuality (49). Instead of the flawless guide she seeks, Kingston develops under the influence of other teachers who either seem more fallible or less realistic. Dependent upon their guidance, she grows under the influence

  • Quest for Eternity in the Poetry of Dickinson

    3328 Words  | 7 Pages

    Quest for Eternity in the Poetry of Dickinson Over the past few decades, a considerable number of comments have been made on the idea of eternity in Emily Dickinson's poetry. The following are several examples: Robert Weisbuch's Emily Dickinson's Poetry (1975), Jane Donahue Eberwein's Dickinson: Strategies of Limitation (1985), Dorothy Huff Oberhaus' Emily Dickinson's Fascicles: Method and Meaning (1995), and James McIntosh's Nimble Believing: Dickinson and the Unknown (2000). However

  • A Women's Quest in The Odyssey, A Room Of One's Own, and Northanger Abbey

    1362 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Women's Quest in The Odyssey, A Room Of One's Own, and Northanger Abbey A quest is a tale that celebrates how one can cleverly and resolutely rise superior to all opposition.  Yet as fresh prospectives on history now suggest,  in this search for freedom and order,  the masculine craving for adventure, demanded restrictions upon women,  forcing her into deeper confinement, even within her limited province.  Thus the rights of a man are separated by the expectancies of a woman.   Each

  • How True Grit by Charles Portis is like The Dark Knight Rises

    718 Words  | 2 Pages

    Batman, Robin , and Alfred the butler are all in the quest movie The Dark Knight Rises. Batman is the quest hero, Robin is the helper/guide, and alfred is the wise old man who gives advice. This quest story has a lot in common as the book True Grit by Charles Portis. In the quest novel Mattie Ross fits the description of the quest hero. Reuben (Rooster) Cogburn fits the wise old man because he acts as a fatherly figure towards Mattie Ross, and knows the gang that Tom Chaney (the villain) is with

  • The Mentor In Haymitch Abernay's The Hunger Games

    733 Words  | 2 Pages

    molds their character. The evolution the protagonist undergoes is character building and significantly important to the storyline. Without a mentor present for this evolution, the protagonist may not gain the wisdom or assurance needed to seize the quest. For most romance narratives, the protagonist begins in their childhood stage. While in this stage of the story they are often immature, and innocent. Following the childhood stage is the initiation, which is where the character

  • truthhod Quest for Truth in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness

    2848 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Quest for Truth in Heart of Darkness Conrad’s Heart of Darkness is set in Africa's Congo region, and his descriptions of that place are stark yet full of the wonder of discovery as well as the shock that comes from uncovering ugly truths. Conrad was purposefully vague in his setting for Heart of Darkness; he never actually named the destination to which Marlow journeyed. This may be because Heart of Darkness was more an inner journey than a journey between places.  Conrad juxtaposed his