"An Unmarried Woman" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Devil in the Shape of a Woman by Carol Karlsen (1987) astutely focuses attention upon the female as witch in colonial New England‚ thus allowing a discussion of broader themes regarding the role and position of women in Puritan society. Karlsen’s work‚ which has been well-received‚ focuses on the position of accused witches as largely females placed in precarious social and economic positions‚ often because they stood to inherit‚ had inherited‚ or lost an inheritance in property. Karlsen departs

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    The French Lieutenant Woman John Robert Fowles was an English novelist‚ much influenced by both Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus‚ and critically positioned between modernism and postmodernism. Fowles was named by the Times newspaper as one of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945. The period of the 1960s was followed by The French Lieutenant’s Woman‚ a period romance set in Lyme Regis‚ Dorset‚ another location in which Fowles was deeply absorbed. As John Fowles builds his novel on the tradition

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    Woman in Black Notes

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    Woman in Black Example questions Choose a novel or a short story in which you feel there is an incident of great importance to the story as a whole. Describe the incident and go on to show its importance to the development of the characters and the central concerns of the text. Explain how the writer creates the setting‚ and then go on to show how this feature contributes to your understanding of the text as a whole. Things about Woman in Black • Written by Susan Hill • Gothic Ghost story

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    The main theme in the novel entitled The Edible Woman by Margaret Atwood is consumerism. To consume‚ as defined by The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language is "To take in as food; eat or drink up. To expend; use up. To purchase (goods or services) for direct use or ownership. To waste; squander. To destroy totally; ravage. To absorb; engross." Consumerism is demonstrated throughout the novel in a variety of ways‚ some more subtle than others. One of the more subtle‚ yet most common

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    Leading to the Modern Woman HIS 204 Instructor Wylie Tidwell By Charity Palmer August 18‚ 2014 Women through the years have gone through a lot of pain and suffering. Anything from suffrage to going through the civil rights movement. I chose to write about 6 important things in the history of women because well for one I am a woman and 2 I think women played a huge role in our nation’s history. I have read numerous things that say men are the superior gender but after all

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    ❝Well‚ the kid seems to be speaking some sort of...Ukranian? Czech? Russian? I don’t know. Why don’t you put that on your founding certificate.❞ The woman seemed to notice your eyes light up at the mention of the word ‘Russian’. A fleeting but noticeable look of acknowledgement etched her features and she began scribbling. ❝Certificate of finding‚❞ The woman was quick to correct her companion‚ who was even less eager to undergo the entire process your discovery has subjected them to. ❝ I’m just spitballing

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    The Most Beautiful Woman

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    The most beautiful woman anyone in the town of Buzios‚ Brazil had ever seen. Tan‚ dark‚ flawless skin like it was painted by an artist. Long‚ flowing‚ black hair similar to the beautiful Pocahontas. She had the most perfect figure‚ as if it was sculpted by the most talented of men. She only had one flaw that she refused to tell anyone about. She suffered with multiple personalities disorder. She had her loyal‚ peaceful‚ friendly personality‚ which she spent most of her time during the day as‚ and

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    Woman Poem Subject

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    Often‚ when a man objectifies a woman‚ he takes away her human qualities. He dehumanizes her. Once a woman does not have her natural human abilities‚ it becomes easier for predators to harm and attack women. Predators tend to have harmful intentions‚ whether it be to kill‚ rape‚ molest‚ etc. the intentions cause pain. As a man continues to belittle and strip a woman of her humanity‚ the attacks become easier. Castillo uses “Women Don’t Riot” to take

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    Pygmalion and Pretty Woman

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    text from the past and it’s appropriation. The intended audience of both Pygmalion‚ by George Bernard Shaw and Pretty Woman‚ directed by Garry Marshall was the mass of society at the time of composition. This is seen through the choice of the form of each text‚ Pygmalion is a play because in the early twentieth centaury this was the popular way of spreading ideas and Pretty Woman is a Hollywood film‚ a current form of mass media today. Because both texts were aimed at the majority of society they

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    The New American Woman

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    New American Woman The “Roaring Twenties” was a huge decade for the American woman. Women transformed from being completely covered up to wearing only a short skirt and tank top. The “Flapper” style came complete with a bobbed haircut‚ bound breasts‚ and short skirt. The flapper was a symbol of women gaining the right to vote‚ becoming more active in the workforce‚ and being equivalent to men in the political sense. All of these things led to what people called “The new American Woman.” Margaret

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