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On New Grub Street – Persona: The Existential Genesis Sid Ali Kercenna College

New Grub Street

The character’s aspects presented by an individual in order to be perceived by others are known to form his persona. Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung identified this as a psychological component of the individual himself, “a kind of mask, designated...

A Modern Epic?: Differences between Troy (2004 Film) and The Iliad Megan Hails 11th Grade

Iliad

The Iliad is an ancient Greek epic poem telling the story of the last 50 days of the ten year long war between the Greeks and the Trojans. Although the poem is attributed to Homer, it is a compilation of the long-standing tradition of oral...

The Postmodern Condition: Film Analysis and Levels of Meaning in 'Synecdoche, New York' Anonymous College

Synecdoche, New York

Synecdoche, New York (2008) is Charlie Kaufman’s directorial debut film. The film explores themes such as death, neurosis, existentialism, postmodernism, etc. from the perspective of the aging theater director Caden Cotard (Philip Hoffman)....

Life, Liberty, Brutality: World War II and The Once and Future King Anonymous 10th Grade

The Once and Future King

War, perhaps one of the most destructive concepts established by society, is something that will continue despite the atrocities war brings to society. Once and Future King, a novelwritten by T.H.White, follows the journey of a young boy (Wart)...

The Portrayal of Alcohol in Literature and History: 'A Tree Grows in Brooklyn' in Context Madison Stump 11th Grade

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

Life for Americans during the early twentieth century was difficult. During this time, President Theodore Roosevelt was shot, the Titanic sank, and the United States entered World War I. To distract their minds from the great horror of their daily...

Worship in the New World: Anne Bradstreet’s “Contemplations” on Her Environs Lauren Everhart-Deckard College

Anne Bradstreet: Poems

Anne Bradstreet, the first woman to be recognized as an accomplished writer from the New England colonies, is still broadly considered to be an important early American poet. Her work was first published in London in 1650 and achieved popular...

The Horror of Slavery: Gothic Motifs in 'Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl' Lauren Everhart-Deckard College

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl

Harriet Jacobs was the first African American woman to author a slave narrative in the United States. Her autobiographical novel, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, was originally published under the pseudonym Linda Brent. The story follows ‘...

Establishing Female Solidarity and Questioning Domesticity in “A Jury of Her Peers” Anonymous College

A Jury of Her Peers

Susan Glaspell’s “A Jury of Her Peers” is popularly heralded as early feminist literature because the short story features two female characters who are able to solve a murder the male investigators cannot. Mrs. Hale, the narrator of the story,...

Captivity: Societal vs. Physical for Cathy (Wuthering Heights) and for Mary Rowlandson Molly McAtee College

The Sovereignty and Goodness of God

How does one define captivity? Is it the physical restraint of a person through threats and violence? Could one be captive of their society due to the roles and expectations assigned to them? Both of these questions pose possibilities when it...

Idealism in Post Modernism: The Problem of Psychological Pressure in "Ellen West" Molly McAtee College

Frank Bidart: Selected Poems

How often should one focus on societal norms? According to the works of Frank Bidart, people should try to avoid these norms and the standards that the public creates at all costs. Through pieces, like “Ellen West”, Bidart shows his distain for...

Narrative Radicalism as Strategy of Representing the Unrepresented: Analyzing Mahashweta Devi’s Douloti the Bountiful as a Subaltern Text Swathy College

Mahasweta Devi: Short Stories

Douloti the Bountiful is one of the three short stories in Mahashweta Devi’s book, Imaginary Map which delves into the unglamorous lives and unattended issues of tribal life in India. The novella conjoins the evil practice of bonded labor and...

Examining How Marital Conflict is Used in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ Anonymous 12th Grade

A Streetcar Named Desire

‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ is set in New Orleans in the late 1940’s, just two years after World War Two ended; resulting in the setting and context of the play being rich in history and culture, as New Orleans often is. It was seen as a melting...

The Form of Formulating Forms: "Bob" by Jonah Winter Molly McAtee College

Jonah Winter: Selected Poems

What really matters in a poem, the form or the content? While many may assume that the content reigns supreme, it actually takes both form and content to create a poem that performs properly. This is because the form is not simply a device that...

Love's Language: A Force of Nature in "I Was Reading a Scientific Article" Anonymous 12th Grade

The Poems of Margaret Atwood

Loving someone involves unearthing them: getting to know someone intimately, from their strengths to their weaknesses. Margaret Atwood explores this perspective on romance in her poem, “I Was Reading a Scientific Article” which portrays a speaker...

Both Friend and Foil: How the Characterization of Obierika Conveys Human Truths and Social Concerns Anonymous 10th Grade

Things Fall Apart

In his novel, Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe masterfully uses his characters to convey larger human truths as well as to drive his plot. Things Fall Apart is about the colonialization of a Nigerian tribe called the Igbo, following the characters...

Blair as the Queen's Savior: Characterization in Frears's Film Azrin Abd Nur 12th Grade

The Queen (2006 film)

The film, The Queen, directed by Stephen Frears in 2006, talks about the whirlwind events that happened after the Princess Diana’s death. The Queen’s adherence to protocols and the royal family’s insistence on not appearing to make a statement...

Compromised Prosperity in Linden Hills: The Flawed Pursuit of the American Dream Anonymous 11th Grade

Linden Hills

American poet Ralph Waldo Emerson once stated, “Without a rich heart, wealth is an ugly beggar.” While many would agree with Emerson’s claim that materialistic gain is insignificant without core values and a strong moral compass, the community of...

“You will be better off than me:” Reshaping Tradition in “Daphne with her thighs in bark” written by Eavan Boland CLAUDIA EXCARET SANTOS CAMPUSANO College

Eavan Boland: Poems

The poem “Daphne with her thighs in bark,” written by Eavan Boland in Night Feed, takes its title from the first line of the poem “XII” from Hugh Selwyn Mauberley, by Ezra Pound. In Pound’s poem, this first line is a translation from Le Château du...

Balance, Responsibility, Fantasy: Growing Up in Haroun and the Sea of Stories and Alice in Wonderland Anonymous 10th Grade

Haroun and the Sea of Stories

“Imagination is the only weapon

In the war against reality.”

- Jules de Gaultier, French Philosopher

Salman Rushdie’s Haroun and the Sea of Stories and Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland are literary works related by the common...

Analysis of Social Inequality in “West London” by Matthew Arnold and “The Architect and the Vagrant” by K. Sello Duiker Leah Naidoo College

Matthew Arnold: Poems

The poems “West London” by Matthew Arnold and “The Architect and the Vagrant” by K. Sello Duiker offer readers a criticism of a society that separates the social classes. Both poets emphasise the segregation of the wealthy (the group that society...

Nuances of Gender, Femininity, and Masculinity in 'Down 2nd Avenue' Humairaa Mayet College

Down Second Avenue

Set across post-union, pre-apartheid South Africa, Down 2nd Avenue follows Eseki – Es’kia Mphahlele – as he recalls the days of his youth. Throughout the narrative, focus is placed on gender, femininity, and masculinity. This focus, however, is...

Marnus’s Silence in Relation to Afrikaner Politics, Ideologies, and Hegemonic Masculine Identity Anonymous College

The Smell of Apples

Within Mark Behr’s The Smell of Apples, the notions and ideologies of Afrikaner identity is perpetuated through hegemonic masculinity. This asserts that “between [Frikkie, Johan and Marnus] the secret [of Frikkie’s rape] will always be safe”....

Undermining Functionality and Integrity of Law— “The Unspeakable” in "The Ecstasy of Influence" (Lethem) and "The Lockdown" (Alexander) Anonymous College

The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions, Etc.

Although the law is meant to be clearly defined, most of the time, it can be interpreted differently. In his essay, “The Ecstasy of Influence: A Plagiarism,” Jonathan Lethem emphasizes the law’s unclear definitions and the way people use them for...

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