"Atwood's hairball" Essays and Research Papers

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    A Woman’s Civil Right by Betty Friedan Friedan presents her thoughts and feelings about feminism through many rhetoric devices used in her speech to persuade her audience that women’s liberation is an advantage for all and not just for women. Her speech is structured into four sections‚ she anticipates the opposition straight away‚ opening by explaining that she is not going to say what her listeners expect. She does this with a rhetorical question‚ and asks two questions one after the other

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    In Margaret Atwood’s novel Oryx and Crake‚ Atwood argues that genetic modifications are harmful to society instead of being helpful. Atwood shows this by describing all of the disasters that have taken place because of the genetically modified children. In the novel‚ genetic modifications start in animals‚ and then slowly progress to humans. When the modifications were taking place in animals there were a lot of people that knew about it‚ but once it switched over to the human population the people

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    Animal Law

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    ID #: 41703 Question 1. a)Animals are property under the law and therefore they are unable to bring a suit in court for themselves if they are harmed. Standing requires: 1. The plaintiff has suffered an injury in fact 2. The injury is casually related to a known act 3. Redressability. In the case‚ Citizens to End Animal Suffering and Exploitation v. the New England Aquarium‚ the court held that the Marine Mammal Protection Act does not allow the requirement of standing to be satisfied in a

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    usually (but not limited to) a political issue. Many children’s novels are used to teach younglings about equality or societal norms and manners. Margaret Atwood is an author that is no amateur to stimulating awareness about her concerns. In Margaret Atwood’s dystopian and speculative fiction novel Oryx and Crake‚ several instances can be intertwined

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    and liberal customs. The second‚ Gilead‚ a far cry from modern America‚ is a totalitarian Christian theocracy which absorbs America in the late 1980s in order to salvage it from widespread pollution and a dwindling birthrate. The principal flaw in Atwood’s Gileadian society is the justification of human rights violations. This justification only limits the liberties citizens experience‚ and taunts their once freeing rights‚ such as the prerogative to explore sexuality. Gilead’s only freedom‚ is freedom

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    Sound of a Siren

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    Sound of a Siren In the poem by Margaret Atwood titled “Siren Song” multiple techniques are used and left out in order to create a specific and clever meaning. The poem works in a way that speaks to the reader from a siren‚ the speaker of the poem being the siren. It begins with the speaker telling the reader about a song of a siren; half women and half nymph. These sirens in Greek mythology would sing to sailors and attract them to their island. Once on the island the men would be killed or stranded

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    She is simply a mirror telling her story‚ it seems. The introduction that Part I provides us with‚ identifies the problem the speaker is facing‚ she is at once unhappy but has willingly placed herself in her role as a mirror. In the second part of Atwood’s poem‚ the speaker describes the undeniable feelings that come from being a separate entity apart from her lover. Even as a mirror‚ there is more to her than there seems. As a woman hiding behind the metaphor of a mirror‚ the speaker seems to be telling

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    Science and Capitalism If I were to take I guess‚ I would says that we all have been taught that capitalism drives innovation‚ technology‚ and scientific advancement. The teaching that competition‚ combined with the profit motive‚ pushes science to its limits and gives big corporations incentive to invent new medicines‚ drugs‚ and treatments is very common. We are also told that the free market is the greatest motivator for human advance‚ but in some cases that is not true. Patents‚ profits‚ and

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    Alias Grace: Point of View‚ Characterization and Title Rhys Sutter English Language Arts 30 AP Miss Strueby March 26‚ 2012 Alias Grace‚ written by Margaret Atwood‚ is a well-written novel filled with many components that enhance the theme and the story as a whole. Atwood reveals the story of Grace

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    Metafiction and Happy Endings (Margaret Atwood) METAFICTION A. Definition: The narrator of a metafictional work will call attention to the writing process itself.   The reader is never to forget that what she is reading is constructed--not natural‚ not " real."  She is never to get "lost" in the story. B. Possible Contents: intruding to comment on writing   involving his or herself with fictional characters   directly addressing the reader   openly questioning how narrative assumptions

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