"Changing attitudes in Britain Society towards women was the major reason why some women received the vote in 1918". How accurate is this view?…
This poem consists of many factors which give the poem its own unique idea such as the mood or feeling the reader gets while reading, the tone or the author’s attitude towards the poem, and the diction or the choice of words the author chose. Diction plays a major role in every poem or story especially this one. Many of these factors contribute to diction greatly, which affects this poem in general.…
1. How does the information contained in this statement aid us in our interpretation of poetry? What does it tell us into utterance? How has a previous equilibrium been unsettled? What is the speaker upset6 about?…
Lady Hao was a warrior during the 1200 BCE she was a woman who had a high status in China during the Shang Dynasty could also say she was the first legendary warrior queen of China. This information is not documented due to the fact that the statuses of women in china were often lowered, the evidence of lady’s Hao life come from the items that were in her tomb. Lady Hao led numerous military campaigns against the tribes Tu, Ba, Yi and Qiang. When they found her tomb they were unaware that it was a tomb of a woman they figured the tomb was of a prince or a man of royalty. She was the third wife of King Wu Ding. She was important in Chinese culture because during this time period it was every uncommon for a female to run an army and with her husband permission she was able to do so. Lady Hao asked for an increment to fund and be able to lead the army against the Tu Fang. She was said to have led several different battles. King Wu Ding gave Lady Hao her own lands on the borders of his kingdom.…
1. Identify and explain an emotion that Bradstreet expresses in her poem that any mother might have.…
This poem has no set pattern that is constant throughout. It has eleven sections in which are broken down into quatrains. Some verses are very different from others adding a trace of a story. Therefore, the verses do not follow the same rhyming scheme, making the poems emotion serious and mature. The lack of verse form also adds to these emotions.…
In his book, The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne tells of a story where a young woman has had an adulterous relationship with a respected priest in a Puritan community. Typical of Hawthorne's writings is the use of imagery and symbolism. In Chapter 12, The Minister's Vigil, there are several uses of imagery when Dimmesdale, the priest, is battling with confessing his sin, which has plagued him for seven years. Three evident techniques used to personify symbolism in this chapter are the use of darkness versus light, the use of inner guilt versus confession, and lastly the use of colors (black versus white).…
the novel Little Scarlet by Walter Mosley, the protagonist faces inner-conflict when he is chosen to lead an investigation for the LAPD. The author makes the conflict real for the reader through imagery and allusion. The racial tensions between the people in L.A. throughout the book are truly real and able to be experienced. Walter Mosley uses these tangible literary devices to show the reader the heartfelt pain that the main character, Easy Rawlins, feels, and in the same way smoothly resolves Easy's inner conflict. He feels that by proving the innocence of a white man, and taking time away from his family he is doing a wrong thing, but when he comes to think about it he feels that by helping the police he is working for a just cause.…
Women in 1901 were different to women today in the aspect of their clothing, their legal rights and homelife. In my repost i will comapre the two ages.…
Tomson Highway's "Kiss of the Fur Queen" is my favorite of what we have read so far. Vulgarity, creativity and abstract language are some of my favorite characteristics in writing. One of the things that surprised me about Highway's novel, which I do not want to say in class for fear that it is a false reaction to this piece, is his lack of abhorrence towards the priests in the Res School. It seems as though he almost appreciates what they have done for him. Granted, Jeremiah was given a chance to excel as a pianist and it seems he was not molested, but Gabriel treats the molestation as almost positive. He describes the priest as tasting like his "most favourite food, warm honey," which is not such a bad thing. This leads me to wonder if Gabriel was born a homosexual, which he probably was, or if he was made that way during Res School. On another note, this book connects with other readings, especially Ravensong, in the double consciousness of the boys and Stacy, and their different ways of handling it. Stacy is somewhat in between the extremity of how the boys handled it. She was able to bridge the gap while realizing that she was different from both groups. Jeremiah has a really hard time being both Native and part of the white culture while Gabriel embraces both cultures. Towards the end of Highway's novel, the boys do reconcile their double consciousness by publishing plays that embrace their native culture. If I could ask Highway one thing it would be, "What do you have to say about how Residential Schools shaped who you are?" All in all, this novel was fascinating and eye-opening, not only about homosexuality but about the complex struggles of Natives. It was something I would never have read had I not taken this class and something that leads me to want to read more of Tomson…
“I could tell she don't understand why a colored woman can't raise no white-skin baby in Mississippi. It be a hard lonely life, not belonging here nor there.” Skeeter is having trouble understanding why Constantine gave her daughter Lulabelle up for adoption. Lulabelle's father was black, but she inherits Constantine's father's light skin. As a result, she just won't fit into the closed-minded Jackson society. The Help shows us the inner workings of a segregated society against the backdrop of the growing US Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. Although there is some variety in economic and social class, race is the number one determinant of a person's place in Stockett's Jackson, Mississippi. Race also determines who has access to educational, occupational, and economic opportunity. Racial tensions are high as white community members employ violence and coercion to try to keep the Civil Rights Movement from sweeping into their Mississippi town. At the same time, it shows us how, against all odds, Skeeter, a white woman, daughter of a cotton family, joins together with Aibileen and Minny, two black women who work as maids, to challenge the unfair practices that make the lives of the town's black members so difficult.…
All in all, this is in a few words a possible approach of the poem, in which I tried to analyze it from Carl’s Jung point of view, namely the following archetypes: the Shadow, the Anima/Animus and the Self. As we could see they are not far from each other (in explanation), but they are aspects that guide us in understanding the Tennynson’s piece of…
“What was life like for Renaissance women?” “If you were a woman in that time, would you have liked it?” and “How was the treatment towards women?” Questions like these keep pestering my mind as I research about the Renaissance. It is preposterous at how little freedom women were given compared to this day and age. Not only that, it is clear and obvious that men in the 14th to 16th century in England were given special privileges, while females were not. This is absurd. Women should have been treated as equals with men and without inferiority. The English Renaissance was a period of time filled with great injustice, harsh treatment, and unfair consequences.…
The Lady of Shalott illustrates a strong allusion to the depths and cursed nature many poets or artists feel, the way they view themselves within society. Many artists feel restricted or isolated from the society they write about. Within the Lady of Shalott the woman in the tower is forced to view small glimpses of the world, small samples of human life and emotion and turn what she sees into art. Viewing life skewed from absolute reality is a curse of many artists, just as the curse of the Lady of Shalott deals with within her walls of solitude.…
Critics such as Hatfield[citation needed] have suggested that The Lady of Shalott is a representation of how Tennyson viewed society; the distance at which other people are in the lady's eyes is symbolic of the distance he feels from society. The fact that she only sees them through a window pane is significant of the way in which Shalott and Tennyson see the world—in a filtered sense. This distance is therefore linked to the artistic licence Tennyson often wrote about. Part I: The poem…