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    through Esther‚ the main character in The Bell Jar. She could make this story come to life because it was her own story and she lived it‚ and so she told it; Of course with the help of some literally devices! Plath used her personal writing style‚ theme and tone to make her story the fullest. Plath had drowned us into her world with her writing style. Through out the novel‚ Esther had constant flashbacks of important events

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    read it. In fact‚ it wasn’t really relevant until midway through the novel. Only once the plot had progressed did the epigraph unlock an underlying theme. The epigraph in For Whom the Bell Tolls is applicable at the very beginning of the novel. For starters‚ the mention of the bell‚ which I assumed to mean a funeral bell‚ brings the theme of death to the forefront of the reader’s mind before the first chapter even starts. Once the story begins‚ the theme of death is clearly relevant as we enter in the

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    Bauby was a master of the elements of mind. This is how he was able to write a book with only his left eyelid. If he was not a master of the elements of mind‚ being able to write The Diving Bell and the Butterfly wouldn’t have been possible‚ and I believe this book is why he stayed alive. Bauby’s story is an inspiration to all: he could have given up on life‚ but he believed that his work would benefit the world or positively impact people; he found a way to communicate with the nurse to write

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    Response to “Criticism of The Bell Curve” This article is based on the comparing of cognitive abilities in different groups of people of all different categories such as IQ and social problems‚ IQ and race‚ and IQ and social policy. The Bell Curve‚ published in 1994‚ was written by Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray as a work designed to explain‚ using empirical statistical analysis‚ the variations in intelligence in American Society‚ raise some warnings regarding the consequences of this intelligence

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    Every now and then life gives us a challenge‚ and often that challenge can define our life and who are. The memoir wrote by Jean-Dominique Bauby describes such a challenge. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly challenges the minds of readers to imagine a world of pure terror where ones whole existence changes due to being trapped in their own body‚ left to live life through one’s own memories and imagination. Bauby begins by describing how he is awakening from a stroke and is trapped in his own body

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    In the movie‚ The Diving Bell and The Butterfly‚ the seven different genres of humanities each have their own role and are displayed throughout the film. Starting out with literature‚ it is displayed in a number of ways. The title of the film refers to the ways that Bauby describes himself and the situation he is in. With him being paralyzed‚ he feels as if he is trapped inside a diving bell with all the pressure from the ocean making it impossible for him to move or act for himself. The butterfly

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    leaves huge gaps in scientific findings when women are required to choose between profession and family affairs‚ leaving women on unfair footing when compared to their male counterparts. Bell Burnell‚ a leading astrophysicists‚ shares her laments on maternity. "[And] it was extremely hard combining family and career‚" "Bell Burnell said‚ partly because the university where she worked while pregnant had no provisions for maternity leave." With the improvement and lack of repercussion‚ women should be allowed

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    In the book‚ The Bell Jar‚ written by Sylvia Plath‚ the main character‚ Esther‚ experiences feelings of alienation. Esther shows her isolation by detaching herself from everyone else. With the build up of mental disorders and life tragedies‚ Esther attempted to take her life four different times. Esther rather not be alive than deal with the cruel world she believes she lives in. Alienation generates from a series of events unique to the person experiencing the feelings of isolation. Mental disorders

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    life time‚ but in literature it is described in a different manner. Every author has their own way of representing love though their writing. In these stories one can see how authors elaborate the different forms of love. In "The Grasshopper and the Bell Cricket" by Yasuari Kawabata he demonstrates an innocent love between children‚ In "On Her Loving Two Equally" by Aphra Behn she shows a confusion in love between an adolescent female character and two male characters‚ In "’How Do I Love Thee’" by

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    A response to The Bell Jar You would expect anybody to want the story of depression and suicidal thoughts to leave your memory as soon as the last page was over. However‚ The Bell Jar is more about the spirit of survival when you are trapped inside yourself and frightened because the rest of the world expects something completely different from you - something you cannot give them. Something you don’t want to give them‚ if it were your choice. This is a highly auto-biographical account by Plath

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