In Hawthorne's book, The Scarlet Letter, he uses tone and diction that reveals his attitude toward Hester. Hawthorne's tone towards Hester is admiring. While he does not glorify her sin, his tone is respectful. In the passage he says "In such emergencies, Hester's nature showed itself ward and rich". Here he uses positive adjectives to describe Hester's character, and proving that he finds her an admirable…
Just when Mladen believes that he is a failure of a father, a man proposes to compensate Mladen with the money if he were to kill a man. “I’ll give you the money if you kill a bad man” he says, “It is two good deeds.” Mladen ponders the decision, struggling to determine the right thing to do, as he has always lived his life as a good, moral man. If Mladen denies the proposal, he is denying Nemanja his life. If he accepts the proposal, Mladen would have to cross certain moral boundaries he was unfamiliar with. His moral code would be altered. Both selfish and unselfish acts yield negative and detrimental…
I agree that you should think about the consequences before your action before you act, for example if Ian thought of the consequences of his consequences of his actions of bullying the Beal family he would live a better life and wouldn’t be dead now. The evidence for the example is on chapter 24 on page 249 it writes, “Adult male: “move away or you’ll pay as well. I don’t care what they do to me. I’ve had enough of you and the whole family, the way you persecute me, make me come here so you can spit in my face. I’m fed up with all the games. Get from him. ‘Adolescent female screams. Sound of fire-arm discharging. Can you see how the actions of Ian Cartwright bullying the Beals had a big consequence of him…
GCU NRS-437V Lecture 3 (2011). Ethical decision making. Retrieved from: https://lc-ugrad1.gcu.edu/learningPlatform/user/users.html?operation=loggedIn - /learningPlatform/loudBooks/loudbooks.html?viewPage=current&operation=innerPage¤tTopicname=Ethical Decision Making&topicMaterialId=875a116e-998a-48aa-8d33-31ca3336f88c.…
1. The parrot says “Allez vous-en! Allez vous-en! Sapristi! That’s all right!” (Chopin 5). It means “Get out! Get out! Damn it!” The words foreshadow something tragic to occur in the end of the novel. The parrot is also caged and also speaks a language in which only the mockingbird can understand. The parrot symbolizes Edna Pontillier who seems to only be understood by some but not all and seems to be beside herself because her husband doesn’t seem to notice her.…
The novel No Signature ratifies the importance of human relationships through exhibiting how drastically Steve’s decisions can negatively affect his relationships with his family and friends. After Steve Chandler's father leaves the family, Steve receives a postcard from him every month. There's no return address, and no signature; just "DAD" stamped on the back. When Steve’s mom finds him angrily ripping up the cards, she starts throwing them out before he can see them. But one day, when he's eighteen, he gets the mail first. He finds another "DAD" postcard, and goes in search of his father. During a short trip to Thunder Bay, the two slowly form a relationship. The painful secret that forces Steve’s father to leave his family is revealed; as a result, Steve’s resentment and bitterness leads to forgiveness and respect. Through the series of flashbacks, the reader sees Steve at various moments in his life and grows to understand his anger at his father and his own decision to distance himself emotionally from a potentially painful situation. An important theme in William Bell’s No Signature is human relationship issues which occur between Steve and Hawk, Steve and his mother, and most significantly, Steve and his father.…
A moral dilemma entails a choice between two highly conflicting values, where the decision made may result in guilt and remorse. As responders we are able to assess our own values in regards to the character’s actions. These characteristics are present in the texts Montana 1948 by Larry Watson 1993, The Returning by Daniel De Paola 1964 and Clint Eastwood’s Million Dollar Baby 2004. I personally have been influenced to assess my own values towards family ties, justice and the balance between right and wrong.…
Of all the books I’ve read throughout high school, I feel that Pride and Prejudice epitomizes politics the most. Throughout the story, there’s this class struggle that manifests itself between the lower, middle, and upper class. Members of the upper class, the Bingleys and the Darcys, are portrayed as being “snobbish” and “prideful” people, and they aren’t afraid to flaunt their wealthy status to others. The Bennets, on the other hand, are part of the middle class and are constantly reminded of their inferiority to the upper class by specific members of the upper class. For example, Catherine De Bough, who attempted to prevent Elizabeth from marrying her nephew, Mr. Darcy, so their family’s reputation wouldn’t be tarnished, or Miss Bingley, who constantly degraded Elizabeth and Jane for attracting more successful men despite their lower social status.Then there’s the people of the lower class like Wickham, whose one goal is to assimilate with the upper class by marrying a woman who exudes wealthiness. Despite this inter-class struggle, Jane and Elizabeth both end up marrying higher class men, challenging the notion that in-class marriage is the only acceptable way to find one’s significant other.…
Life is not always fair. Today it’s not been fair to you. Tomorrow it will be unfair to another person. People take life not being fair in a good way and some take it in an awful way. Everyone is different and treated different. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, there are people that face life not being fair at times, like Scout, Tom Robinson and Calpurnia. Other people on the news and people in the book have also been stuck in situations where life isn't always fair to them.…
As C.G Jung once said, “The pendulum of the mind oscillates between sense and nonsense, not between right and wrong.” In Willam Shakespeare's Hamlet, the protagonist Hamlet and antagonist Claudius struggle with basic of notions of right and wrong bringing their morality into question. The murder of an innocent, the abuse of the women closest to them and, the quest to murder one another are simply the indications of how both characters are morally weak.…
Benjamin Britten was an English composer, conductor and pianist. He was born on November 22, 1913 in Suffolk. Britten’s best works were the operas War Requiem which he wrote in 1962 and Peter Grimes which was written in 1945. His most famous orchestral piece was The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra which was also performed in 1945. Britten had a very unusual past but as any other famous composer, pianist or conductor, Britten started at a very young age. The main theme of Britten’s work was the struggle of someone trying to gain admittance into an intimidating group or society. Many people believe that this theme was very common for Britten because of how he lived and his experiences throughout his entire life. By the time he passed away Britten had developed a great legacy writing nearly 15 operas and composing and orchestrating music for many other people. Britten continued to write music and orchestrate and write operas until his death in December of 1976; he died shortly after his 63rd birthday.…
That is exactly the dilemma that Ambrose Bierce writes Carter Druse into in the short story A Horseman in the Sky. I feel there are several parts of the story that flip back and forth between being moral and not being moral or maybe the better words would be that it is ironic on many levels.…
Revenge is a harmful action against a person or a group. It is characterized as a form of justice, seeking or taking vengeance for oneself or another person by retaliating in response to a grievance. Within the short declaration "Of Revenge" by Francis Bacon he describes the self-destructive nature and the injustices that revenge brings about while detailing the benefits of forgiveness. While "He Becomes Deeply and Famously Drunk" by Brady Udall 's story explores the concept of revenge as Archie contemplates killing his father 's murderer until realizing the elderly man Calfred Pulsipher is not worth the effort and lets go of his anger. From the short story "Spanish Roulette" by Ed Vega the poet Sixto vows revenge against a local gang member who raped his sister and battles with himself to make the right choice. Although revenge may be the momentary satisfaction in times of despair, no man extracts revenge for the sake of evil, without the intent of profiting from it, and will be punished for it, regardless of reason, in this life or the next.…
Prison is a very grim and doleful place for humans in which everyone might experience once in their life physically or mentally. The theme of imprisonment is demonstrated frequently in many works of literature, as many characters must struggle with the reality of their prison whether it is a physical or mental prison. In Charles Dickens’s bildungsroman novel, Great Expectations, the characters Miss Havisham, Estella, and Pip must struggle and endure physical and/or mental prisons.…
It is inevitable that a literary masterpiece is going to be translated to different languages by different translators, however, what matters is the quality of the translations produced in a particular language. The translator has to be aware of the writer’s style, diction, point of view, tone,… in order to produce an adequate, effective, and natural translation. It is the duty of translation critics to assess the quality of the translations produced in order for the translators to be able to enhance the quality of their translations. In this paper the translation of for whom the bell tolls written by Ernest Hemingway and translated by Dr. Ali Salimi has been evaluated.…