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This paper compares Gilgamesh and Odyssey, and then Buddah-Karita and Mohammed. Both stories reflect how their gods could be manipulated for their own purposes. Their story is similar to our lives today in that we rely upon others for help. Odyssey and Gilgamesh used people to get their needs met in the story. In Mohammed the young men respect and listen to Mohammed, while in Odyssey the young men wanted to marry Penelope. Odyssey seems to be a story of victory and peace at the end. Mohammed died and continues to live on with the Moslem belief. Odyssey is a story of love and conquering. Mohammed is a story about a religion that many continue to belief.
Pages: 2
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 667 667 Comparison Different Literature.doc
Price: US$17.90
1780.759 Clarissa And Lulu
Analyze Virginia Wolfe's Mrs. Dalloway and Louise Erdrick's Love Medicine. The characteristics are similar in how they want to be independent, yet they are tied to men that they are not married to. They want to be recognized for who they are. Clarissa and Lulu are strong characters; yet, they are weak at times. Both stories are about women who love and survive in a difficult world. The characters found in both stories could be described as similar. Both women are women that can be found in unsteady relationships in today's world. The women in Love Medicine and Mrs. Dalloway have very similar characters. They both lose someone they love, but find themselves in their acceptance of grief. Although the settings are different, either woman could fit into either of the stories because they are so much alike. These women can also be found in many relationships in today's world.
Pages: 6
Bibliography: 4 source(s) listed
Filename: 759 759 Clarissa And Lulu.doc
Price: US$53.70
1781.819 Real Life Experiences On Work.
This paper discusses the poet, Gary Soto. In spite of Soto's individualism, he is very much a contemporary American poet. Like many of his peers, he writes liberally in an autobiographical or confessional manner. As an intensively thoughtful poet, he seeks to maintain his connection to his Mexican customs and traditions as it exists on both sides of the border. His work often focuses on the demise of his father at a tender age, on his difficulties in romantic affairs and the urgency of emotional closeness with his family. On a broader level, Soto speaks vehemently on behalf of endurance and mutual respect, while he denounces middle- and upper class comfort and indifference to the poor. As a Chicano working-class poet, Soto sometimes uses representative language that might be unusual to and difficult for some of us. As a poet with a strong sense of association with people who are poor, abandoned, and oppressed, Soto tries to create poetry out of customary working-class experience and images. All this is very different from typically bourgeois American poetry.
Pages: 9
Bibliography: 7 source(s) listed
Filename: 819 Real Life Experiences.doc
Price: US$80.55
1782.825 Robert Frost
This paper is written on the American poet, Robert Frost. His poetry, like his life, is filled with the contrasts of happiness and somberness. He became America's most beloved poet for his work. Frost won four Pulitzer Prizes and the poem The Road Not Taken is one of his finest piece of work. The more we read of Frost, the more we are impressed with his intellect, his thinking, his feelings, his understanding and his way of expression. Each poem is like a discovery of life, experienced by all of us. The interest he creates in his poem is absolutely superb. He portrays the incidents and other such influences that may have had a bearing on an individual life. Each poem brings us closer to life, makes us appreciate life's simple pleasures, as in birds, flowers, and fruits and the wonders of nature. And those jewels of thought can catch any one of us off guard. The depth of words creates a profound feeling at once and lingers long afterwards too and also gathers wider meanings and interpretations.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 0 source(s) listed
Filename: 825 Robert Frost Poet.doc
Price: US$26.85
1783.882 The Downfall Of Oedipus
The story of Oedipus begins with one tragedy as it leads to others. The story of Oedipus begins with Laius, King of Thebes. Laius took his child and pierced his ankles and tied them together. How loving of a person could this Laius be? Laius then tells a servant to take him to Mount Cithaeron to die by exposure. This man is the father of this baby. He orders the baby to be left to exposure. How humane was that? Why did he not simply kill the child without the baby suffering? This was not the reason for Oedipus's downfall because his life was saved and he was raised by a couple of loving people. They raised him with love and the ability to make wise decisions.
Pages: 8
Bibliography: 6 source(s) listed
Filename: 882 Downfall Of Oedipus.doc
Price: US$71.60
1784.16242 Social Protest Novels: An Analysis of Stowe and Remarque
This eight-page undergraduate paper analyzes the social protest themes in Erich Maria Remarque?s twentieth-century novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, and Harriet Beecher Stowe?s pre-Civil War novel, Uncle Tom?s Cabin. The author notes that these two novels have become classics of modern literature because their authors combined plot, characterization, and theme to make powerful social statements about the human condition. As social protest novels, these works changed the attitudes of millions of people for the better by exposing the evils of war and human slavery.
Pages: 8
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 16242 Social protest novels.doc
Price: US$71.60
1785.16244 A Statement and Pastiche of Oedipus Rex by Sophocles
This paper will write a statement of intention in writing a pastiche for Oedipus Rex by Sophocles. By giving greater charcterization to oedipus by rewriting the play, we can see an attempt in an ancient style to create a differnet, yet more clear representation of how Oedipus chose pride and vainglory over the Fates that command all men, kingly or not.