In the "Birthday Party," Katherine Brush shows what- at a glance- seems to be a non-suspicious dinner between a happily, "unmistakably," married couple; yet, when examined closer is obviously a dinner gone wrong. Her use of syntax, along with other literary devices, help show how a book shouldn't be judged by its cover.…
The book “The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle”, written by Avi Wortis has one main purpose. That purpose is for the readers to understand what truly happened on the “Seahawk”, the ship which Charlotte rode on. The story starts off in 1832, when Charlotte Doyle was just a 13 year old girl who always acted like a young lady. She wear bonnet, full skirts, high button shoes, and white gloves. Charlotte lived in Providence, Rhode Island, but she lived in England for many years because of her father’s job. While in England, her father was called back to Rhode Island, but he wanted Charlotte to finish her school year. As a result he…
In the short story “The Girl with Bangs” by Zadie Smith, Charlotte Greaves is portrayed as a round character. Charlotte has multiple things going on in her life that she reacts to positively and negatively. She knows what she wants but gets it not caring who she hurts in the process. An example of this given by the author is “This promise she gave him, but he was still gone, and gone is gone, and that 's where I came in” (272). Charlotte is promiscuous and usually gets what she wants. She has several affairs throughout the story. Charlotte acts unpredictably. “He married her after she 'd shaved her head that afternoon just to spite us” (274). Few people, especially women, would act impetuous and impulsive when it comes to features. She did this rebellious act to prove she was independent and strong minded still.…
Shirley Jackson’s story “Charles is a story set in a humorous setting about a child that doesn’t always stay out of trouble at school. Laurie’s mom is telling the story about the experiences of him. Kindergarteners come home all the time with stories about the “bad kid” at school who always gets into trouble, and Laurie is not an exception. Every day, he tells his parents about the trouble a kid named Charles gets into. He tells them that this student punches the teacher, he also told them about how this kid was bouncing a seesaw off a girl’s head, and also he tells them that Charles often uses naughty Language. Laurie’s parents are worried about their son learning in such an environment with such inappropriate influences, but they don’t do…
Dahl, builds a sense of foreboding in this story about a man named Billy on an innocent business trip and an old Landlady running a "Bed & Breakfast". The story in the beginning makes the Landlady seem creepy, but the story also makes the Landlady seem so nice. Through out the story she drops hints about how scary she really is. At the end of the story it all comes together, and we realized that this lady truly isn't harmless.…
Utilitarianism assumes that it would be morally correct for me to employ the water boarding technique on this possibly innocent man if it meant obtaining possible anti-terrorist information that could possibly save thousands of innocent Americans. The ‘greatest good for the greatest number’, so they say, but is torture really the best way to obtain the best consequence? I will use my take on the Just War model and J.J.C Smarts’ suggestion to focus on all consequences of a situation to argue against the notion that water torture would be morally ethical and the right thing that I ought to do.…
When eavesdropping on a person’s conversation who is nearby, sometimes a person won’t get all the information on what they are talking about or find out how their conversation ended. Sometimes a person could infer the wrong things or not get the whole story. Also, since the people talking in the conversation might not tell the full story, the person listening might not get to know how the end of their conversation went, but if they are lucky, they might. The narrator in the short story “Hills Like White Elephants”, by Ernest Hemingway, was not so lucky and didn’t find out the ending, or many details of what the couple was disgusting. The story just ended with the woman saying “There’s nothing wrong with me. I’m fine”…
There was a big deal with depression in the 1800’s because one who was taught to have a mental illness didn’t get the treatment they needed. Society didn’t believe mental illness was a problem so therefore family members secluded loved ones who might show signs of any mental illness from the outside world. They also had mental hospitals in which patients displaying mental illness where put in. Benjamin Rush and Dorothea Dix discovered that these institutions were mistreating many of the patients and acted more like jails. There were many writers with very controversial novels such as William Faulkner and Charlotte Gilman. These two were well known…
Bethany and Carla experienced success in Beauty. Carla was a famous, “beautiful catalogue model that was going to become a big time model soon after speaking with Ralph Lauren” (Martin 735). On the other hand, Bethany, the smart one, “received a $40,000 job offer straight out of college. She also published several short stories” (735). Carla was characterized as the perfect and beautiful success story, while Bethany was characterized as the ugly screw-up. However, neither person was happy in their respective positions. Carla was always annoyed, “and always hung by her fingernails in modeling. She felt like she had zero privacy, and guys would hassle her on the street and pressure her from the beginning of a relationship. She never was able to have a long relationship” (736). Likewise, Bethany did not see herself as a success story because, “she did not see herself as a beautiful individual” (736). They both envied each other’s success and looks. This alone shows the reader that the characters were very jealous of each other’s lives.…
Her stories are full of detail and small, albeit significant, incidents in her characters' lives. In an often-quoted letter published in The Letters of Katherine Mansfield, she says of “Miss Brill“: "I chose the rise and fall of every paragraph to fit her, and to fit her on that day at that moment.” Katherine Fullbrook notes in her biography titled simply Katherine Mansfield that “while the surface of her stories often flash with sparkling detail, the underlying tones are sombre, threatening, and register the danger in the most innocent seeming aspects of life.”…
story points out that beauty has its cost as well, the power of being beautiful holds a great…
The women we’ve read about in both “A Jury of Her Peers,” and “The Yellow Wallpaper,” share two aspects. They share the bondage of male oppression, and their resilient spirits. I both stories, the characters face a struggle regarding both their household and the men within them, and must go to great lengths to overcome them. Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale directly defy the men of the story, where the narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper,” defies her husband in a fashion unimaginable.…
Jeannette and her siblings were constantly getting bullied from other kids, in school and the neighborhood, for being too poor. The Walls’ children also underwent a lot of bullying from their parents. During Jeannette’s first days at her school in Welch, she got an abundance of bullying from a group of girls. Jeannette describes one of their encounters, “‘This girl ain’t got no buttons on her coat!’ she shouted. That seemed to give her the license she needed. She pushed me in the chest, and I fell backward. I tried to get up, but all three girls started kicking me” (139). Jeannette knew that she looked poor and recognized that the girls were badgering her for being poor, and that they got their power because they thought they were better than Jeannette. Jeannette’s tone of struggling and defeat displays how she’s tired of getting pushed around and bullied for the social class that she lived in, which drove her to become better and make big goals for herself. While recalling one of these many fights, Jeannette admits her acceptance of her living condition when she says, “As we fought, they called me poor and ugly and dirty, and it was hard to argue with” (140). Other kids were always teasing the Walls’ about their living conditions and seemed to find joy in hurting the children physically and verbally for living in the poverty that they were in. Jeannette’s use of the words “it’s hard to argue with” shows her…
Elie Wiesel has said, “What hurts the victim the most is not the cruelty of the oppressor, but the silence of the bystander, ‘’ I, unfortunately, know the emotion behind this quote too well. During my middle school years, my friends were everything to me. I had a compact group of two best friends. We were hardly seen without each other, but I had known one of the girls longer than the other; one since elementary school and the other I had barely met in middle school. The friend I had known the longest was named ‘E’, while the newest friend was named ‘J’. During 7th grade, rumors were being scattered about my group of friends. Supposedly, J had spoken disrespectfully about E and I. Everyone knows rumors should be disregarded, but there's just something about middle school that makes it a time during a growing kid’s life when one’s superiority needs to be proven. In other words, rumors…
1. Sometimes I contemplate on life thinking about what’s good and what’s bad in this world. Sometimes I wonder why we have good times if bad times are going to ruin it anyway. Then I try to find answers of my own. We have bad times to have better times. As humans we learn from experiences based from wrong doing.…