Scott Fitzgerald and Sonnets from the Portuguese by Elizabeth Barrett Browning are influenced by their varying context in their portrayal of love in their respective texts. Both authors explore the concept of love using various language features such as metaphors the use of irony. The Great Gatsby explores how the desire for the American Dream has taken prevalence over romantic love during post world war 1. This is contrasted with Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Sonnets from the Portuguese where we are
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning is a Victorian poet that is renowned for her poetry that focuses on the social conscience of people in western culture. One of Browning’s most controversial poems is called “A Curse for a Nation‚” which is a didactic poem that aims to persuade its target audience to speak out against the slave trade. This didactic poem uses ethos‚ logos‚ and pathos as forms of persuasion. The target audience for this poem is the United States because at the time that Browning wrote this
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Sonnet 43‚ also known as "How Do I Love Thee" is a literary classic written by Elizabeth Barrett Browning in 1850. This poem follows a Petrarch sonnet structure‚ even though she lived closer to Shakespear’s time. This poem explores all the ways the author loves someone‚ it even goes through almost all stages of life. Her love is talked about on an everyday level‚ as well as on a spiritual level. Her love‚ she says‚ will even continue on after death. This sonnet uses a wide range of figurative devices
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When reading Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s "Sonnet 32" I noticed that this was her only sonnet of the four in Sonnets From the Portuguese that wasn’t written directly for another person. It seems as if she was writing this sonnet in a diary for herself. This makes me believe that during the time of writing this sonnet the speaker‚ or Elizabeth Barrett Browning‚ had some internal conflict over the relationship she was in at the time and was confiding in her own secrecy to try to work out her controversial
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As a new generation kid‚ I was lucky to be born into a era that didn’t have to start the fight for civil rights. Yes‚ protests and rallies are still being held but those protests and rallies are the same ones that have been held for years on end now. They aren’t the first. My generation isn’t the first. However‚ living in this "new generation" means that a good majority of past traditional social oddities are more normalized to us than ever. These oddities encompass everything from interracial relationships
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Browning used repetition in her poem The Cry of the Children to show the pain‚ and suffering that children had to go through as they were forced to work. She was in distraught about the sad faces of the children who were forced to work in mines and factories‚ and decided to make a political point by writing The Cry of the Children against the enslavement of children. She uses repetition to get the thoughts in the mind of the reader to point out the signs in order to stop the enslavement of children
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In what ways do the texts you have studies highlight the changing values of dreams and desires? The concept of dreams and desires are a constantly changing ideal experienced in human nature‚ and this concept is explored through Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s anthology of poems “Sonnets of the Portuguese” and Francis Scott Fitzgerald’s satirical novel “The Great Gatsby.” Correlative thematic concerns arise between the Victorian era and the Jazz Age in relation to dreams and desires and furthermore
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ENGLISH – TEXTS IN TIME COURTNEY MILLS HOW DOES THE CONTEXT IN WHICH THE TEXTS ARE SET SHAPE THE VALUES WHICH ARE EXPLORED WITHIN THEM The context of both the Great Gatsby (GG) and Elizabeth Barrett-Browning’s (EBB) sonnets has shaped many of the attitudes and values explored throughout the texts. Both texts take into account the social contexts of the time and the personal context of each author. An author’s personal context can shape many of the values displayed throughout
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Prominent Victorian poet Elizabeth Barrett Browing first published Sonnets from the Portuguese in 1850. These sonnets were written as a personal declaration of love to her husband‚ Robert Browning. She implied that these sonnets were originally written by someone else in Portuguese and that she had translated them when in reality these were her own authentic compositions. She initially planned to call the collection Sonnets from the Bosnian‚ but Robert insisted that she claim they are from Portuguese
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CRITICISM: Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s How Do I Love Thee? Introduction Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s How Do I love Thee‚ or Sonnet XLIII is one of her love poems from Sonnet from the Portuguese (1850). This is the manuscript she slipped into her husband’s (Robert Browning) pocket one morning after breakfast‚ and was originally intended as a private gift. When she finished Sonnets from the Portuguese in 1847‚ the book had no title. At that time‚ the couple was staying in Italy. Mostly the main
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