Q 1: Diabetes is the worldwide fastest increasing chronic disease. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians have very high levels of diabetes. According to Australian Indigenous health info net (2016)‚ ATSI Australians have three times more likely to have diabetes compared to non-Indigenous Australians. Specifically‚ the number affect from diabetes in ATSI females are twice than non-Indigenous females. Diabetes can cause several serious health issues such as cardiovascular disease and
Premium Diabetes mellitus Obesity Insulin
and constantly fear of being replaced from their rightful and willful position in the society‚ though they imposture friendly attitude to each other which is the quintessential psychological conflict of the characters. The female character Adela Quested claims xenophobia to be friendly to the Indians of Chandrapore‚ she in the end she did the opposite. The male protagonist represents a new generation of India‚ who is trying to overcome the old enmity with the British and have new friends‚
Premium E. M. Forster Racism Xenophobia
all. That no matter what is done and said it is all in the end meaningless. For her‚ the caves symbolize the antiquity of existence and she has been reduced to being another nonsensical blurb in the annals of time. When she emerges from the cave‚ Adela asks Mrs. Moore if she saw
Premium E. M. Forster
sixtyMaría Josefa‚ (Bernarda’s mother)‚ aged eighty Angustias‚ (Bernarda’s daughter)‚ aged thirty-nine Magdalena‚ (Bernarda’s daughter)‚ aged thirty Amelia‚ (Bernarda’s daughter)‚ aged twenty-seven Martirio‚ (Bernarda’s daughter)‚ aged twenty-four Adela‚ (Bernarda’s daughter)‚ aged twenty Servant‚ aged fifty La Poncia (a servant)‚ aged sixtyPrudencia‚ aged fifty Beggar woman with little girl Women mourners Woman 1 Woman 2 Woman 3 Woman 4 Young girl The poet declares that these three acts
Premium Woman Family 2008 singles
tonga. He thinks that she has not taken off her shoes. He automatically dislikes all English women. 2. All of these are names of Mrs. Moore’s children except Stella Adela Ralph Ronny 3. Which of these characters best represents the Anglo-Indian mindset? Dr. Aziz Adela Quested Ronny Heaslop Narayan Godbole 4. What is the one thing that Adela wants most to accomplish from her journey? She wants to visit the Marabar Caves. She wants to learn about Hindu philosophy. She wants to marry Ronny Heaslop. She
Premium India Hinduism
all the girls are riddled with jealous tensions and some with betrayal which therefore leads to tragic death. This is exactly what happens‚ as due to Adela’s desire for passion the whole family is affected and the future of her sisters is damaged. Adela is not the only daughter who feels the heat‚ as a matter of fact they all do. Yet Martirio will not admit it: until the last Act‚ she denies her true feelings as she says “I don’t feel the heat”. This turns out to not be true as Martirio could be
Premium The House of Bernarda Alba
closely on the way Forster presents the trial in the following passage. “She paused… [pg 204] … the persecution” [pg 205].” A Passage to India is a novel written by English author E. M. Forster. In the twenty-fourth chapter‚ there is a passage where Adela first enters the court room. The passage mainly describes and shows Adela’s opinions of the man who pulled the punkah. The importance of the way the Anglo-Indians entered the courtroom and the man who pulled the punkah will be discussed. The British
Premium E. M. Forster Irony Court
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is a semi-autobiographical novel by James Joyce‚ first serialised in the magazine The Egoist from 1914 to 1915‚ and published first in book format in 1916 by B. W. Huebsch‚ New York. The first British edition was published by the Egoist Press in February 1917. The story describes the formative years of the life of Stephen Dedalus‚ a fictional alter ego of Joyce and an allusion to the consummate craftsman of Greek mythology‚ Daedalus. A novel written in Joyce’s
Premium
India” AUTHOR: Edward Morgan Forster TYPE OF WORK: Novel TIME AND PLACE WRITTEN: 1912-1924 England DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: 1924 TENSE: Past THEMES: Culture Clash; Friendship; Ambiguity; Religion CHARACTERS: Dr Aziz‚ Mr Fielding‚ Adela Quested‚ Mrs. Moore‚ Ronny Healsop SETTING ( TIME ): 1910s or 1920s SETTING ( PLACE ): India‚ specifically the cities of Chandrapore and Mau. Carico... CHARACTERS Dr Aziz Is the central Indian character in the novel. He works at the government
Premium Hinduism India Hindu
Forster’s novel A Passage to India portrays a colonial India under British rule‚ before its liberation. For convenience’s sake‚ Western civilization has created an Other as counterpart to itself‚ and a set of characteristics to go with it. An "us versus them" attitude is exemplified in Forster’s representation of The Other. Separation of the British and the Indian exists along cultural lines‚ specifically religious/spiritual differences. Savage or ungodly cultures were to be assimilated into or at
Premium India Christianity England