In the beginning there are two kids, Corey and Travis who go to see their grandmother at an inn that used to be haunted. Their grandmother owns it now because the past owners died tragically. When they first get there aren’t many guests. But there is a couple staying there “looking for ghosts”. They are a traveling ghost seeker couple. They saw the Inn on the “Most Haunted Hotels and Inns” So they decided to go there. Corey and Travis over hear them talking about how they want to see a ghost and if they do they’re going to get their entire ghost seeking friends to come to the Inn and stay. Corey thought it’d get their grandma more business so they decided that the couple would see a ghost.…
Helpless, by Barbara Gowdy, was a well written novel which kept the reader interested right until the final page. Gowdy used descriptive language, suspense, and flashbacks to develop the theme that unrequited love lasts longer than love that is fulfilled. Gowdy used descriptive language well.…
1. In the reading Beyond Backlash Ruth Rosen discusses that when succeeding in women activism…
At one point in life, we all wanted superpowers. The thought of having the ability to fly or read minds always seemed amazing. However, everything has its cons, no matter what. In Alexandra Bracken's book "The Darkest Minds," the main character, Ruby, went through was not being able to control her gifts, people constantly hunting her down, and was wanted as a weapon.…
The beginning of the novel is the rivalry between Heed and Christine, middle part is showing a friendship that existed once to these two women as children and their deep feelings towards the end of the novel. The women try to come together and find out about this communication situation on why they are not friends. Christine asks “Was he good to you, Heed?...Mind you at eleven I thought a box of candied popcorn was good treatment. He scrubbed my feet til the soles was like butter.”( Morrison 186) The misunderstandings of being young and ignorant, having no one to explain important things in life to them leads to the characters living the life they have. She started blaming everyone for a lot of things that were happening around her. Having…
Sula came back accompanied by “plague of robin” in Medallion. She dressed in the manner of a movie star. When Eva saw Sula it was like when she saw worthless BoyBoy return, and being judgmental, why she didn't get married. She was furious the way Eva was criticizing her, she had to tell her to shut her her mouth. As a result, of that she told her, bad enough you cut off your own leg to collect insurance money. That doesn't give you the right to control other people life. Eva told Sula God is going to strike you, which one, the one who watched you burn Plum. Consequently, She was so scared that she locked her door at night. Surprisingly, later Sula have Eva committed to a nursing home, because she was her guardian, the whole community…
Christopher Browning describes how the Reserve Police Battalion 101, like the rest of German society, was immersed in a flood of racist and anti-Semitic propaganda. Browning describes how the Order Police provided indoctrination both in basic training and as an ongoing practice within each unit. Many of the members were not prepared for the killing of Jews. The author examines the reasons some of the police members did not shoot. The physiological effect of isolation, rejection, and ostracism is examined in the context of being assigned to a foreign land with a hostile population. The contradictions imposed by the demands of conscience on the one hand and the norms of the battalion on the other are discussed. Ordinary Men provides…
A three-hundred-year history of slavery in America led to a psychological oppression of black people in America, which still exists today. Toni Morrison decides not to delineate how white dominance has affected African-Americans culturally yet she challenges American standards of white beauty and how that beauty is socially constructed within our culture. In The Bluest Eye, Morrison uses society’s image of beauty to demonstrate how the value of black beauty is diminished by racial prejudices and dilemmas through the lives of Pecola Breedlove, Claudia and Freida MacTeer, whose young minds were affected by this internalized idea that the color of your skin determined how perfect or worthy you were seen, not to yourself and on the inside, but…
Toni Morrison (Chloe Anthony Wofford) is an American novelist, editor, play writer, and professor. Her nickname, Toni, came from her baptismal name, Anthony. She became Catholic and received this name at the age of 12. She is the first African American who won the Nobel Prize in literature. Morrison also won many other honorable awards. Her novels are famous for epic themes, vivid dialogue, and richly detailed characters.…
In Soren Kierkegaard’s Fear and Trembling, the biblical story of Abraham is retold with four different viewpoints, to narrow on the religious and the ethical. The Religious is that stage of life when the individual is found to be in “an absolute relation with the absolute”, and the ethical being the “expression of the universal, where all actions are done publicly and for the common good.“ Kierkegaard writes that Abraham killing Isaac is ethically wrong, but religiously right. But the point that Kierkegaard is driving home is the distinction between faith and resignation. Faith is what it takes to “leap into the absurd, something that cannot be rationally explained, transcending the intelligible.” Resignation is the sacrifice of something dear and the following reconciliation with that loss. Kierkegaard cites the example of Agamemnon who must reconcile himself to the loss of his beloved daughter, Iphigenia. Back to the Abraham story, it would have been resignation if Abraham merely had tried to kill Isaac on the basis of the infallibility of God’s wish. But Abraham made the leap of faith to believe that God would not commit something unethical, and hence, spare Isaac.…
In “The Street” by Octavio Paz, we believe that the speaker is displaying signs of paranoia and fear. As the speaker walks down the street, he is in complete darkness, allowing for him to imagine presences that are not there or predators lurking in the shadows. He also continues to turn around and check his surroundings, which implies that he has a fear of being followed. In the 1st stanza, he steps on “stones and dry leaves” which could be adding to the fear of someone following him. Another factor that could add to this fear is if the person is going through a dangerous time in his life where his safety is at risk, he is more likely to be shifty and cautious. The person who he assumes is following him possesses qualities like a shadow. Figuratively,…
In Margaret Atwood’s short story, “Happy Endings,” she explains that no matter what kind of story someone has, death is something that everyone has in common. Atwood states “So much for endings. Beginnings are always more fun.” She means that the end does not matter because eventually everyone will die, the beginning is the important part of a story. Atwood says that the beginnings of a story are more fun because that is where all the details are. The beginning can happen however it wants to, but the end will result in death. Death is always the same in every story and that is not mysterious at all. At the end of a story, many people can guess what will occur, but the beginning will be different in any circumstance. Atwood enjoys the beginning…
and even the white world are also victims who in what Foucault calls the stream…
In the novel, Misery, Stephen King embodies the state of possession by an evil being who happens to be the elaborated and horrifically psychotic woman, Annie Wilkes. In this story, Annie represents a mother figure, a goddess and a loyal reader of the romance novelist, Paul Sheldon. In reality, however, Annie merely represents someone who has troubles deciphering between reality and fiction. This odd obsession with not only Paul, but with the fictional character Misery, shows the mental unstableness of her.…
The novels The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood and Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen are novels written by female authors in different time periods each containing the universal theme of feminism. Feminism is the belief that men and women should be treated equally and allowed the same rights and opportunities. Atwood uses the theme of feminism to a lesser extent whereas Austen does the opposite in conveying the female characters as independent human beings. In her novel The Blind Assassin, Margaret Atwood purposefully portrays her female characters as ones who need to rely on a male figure, a father or a husband, to keep things going whereas in Sense and Sensibility, Jane Austen shows her female characters to be much more independent and…