REACTION PAPER “A ROSE FOR EMILY” BY FAULKNER This story is a kind of sad and sorrow‚ Emily was a unhappy girl who lost her father and later she discovered that her fiancé was homosexual‚ this was too much for her and she decide to kill her boyfriend and live with the dead body for 40 years until she died. Here we can see that she doesn’t’ live in real life‚ she was in a fantasy‚ her pain turn her in a fantasy and she create a barrier; she was totally outside of reality‚ analyzing
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We want Bread but Roses too The story of Rosa and Maya are being played out in real life within the Mexican immigrant workers. The authenticity with which the story is told is astounding‚ showing a deep respect for those who in search of a way to make an honest living‚ subject themselves to countless humiliations and are relegated to live outside the margins of mainstream America. Every worker has an equal right to unionize and fight against the unfair conditions at work (Thesis Statement). Bread
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No Rainbow‚ No Roses In the reading "No Rainbow‚ No Roses" of Beverly P. Dipo reports about the last minute of the patient who is called Mrs. Trane. The writer does everything for the Mrs. Trane without asking‚ because he knows Mrs. Trane is dying and he has no time to do anything for her. Even though‚ this is a very first time the writer know Mrs. Trane but he doesn’t know why he has a lot of passion when he sees her. He has used many senses of human in this reading to express his emotion; such
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Roxanne T. Bilbao English II Professor “Effects of Text Messaging on Student Literacy” Submitted By: Kristine M. Braganza Arianne Loise Evangelista Blazel Colleen Jalique Tagum Doctors College Inc. Mahogany St.‚ Rabe Subd.‚ Tagum City‚ Davao Del Norte 8100 Table of Contents Chapter I: Introduction A. Background of the study B. Statement of the Problem C. Scope & Delimitation D. Significance of the Study E. Definition of Terms Chapter II: Review of Related
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William Faulkner is one of the most famous American writers in the American Prose since 1945. He writes a lot of novels with reality and experimentation which he has collected from society in his time and from village he has been living in years. “A rose for Emily” is one of his major works. Faulkner respectively uses ingenious ways to present his story of horror. He leaves the reader feel Emily Grierson is a pitiful heroine because she always refused to adapt to the changing times and therefore led
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1. “A Rose for Emily” is narrated in first-person plural. Why do you think Faulkner chose “we” rather than “I” as the voice for the story? How might this narrative strategy be related to the description of Emily as “a tradition‚ a duty‚ and a care; a sort of hereditary obligation upon the town” (part 1 paragraph 3)? I think Faulkner chose “we” rather than “I” to insinuate the town as a whole view of Emily. She was a duty to the whole town. Emily felt she had privilege over comon town folk and their
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woman can be regarded as strong‚ but ever and again‚ too much of a good thing can turn into something bad and can be regarded as a weakness. This impacts a woman’s life as it can put her at her best and also her worst. In William Faulkner’s classic‚ ‘A Rose for Emily’‚ he brings this premise to surface. This story illustrates the character of Emily who sustained herself throughout her entire grievance for a long period‚ and eventually ended up killing and sleeping with the corpse of her lover‚ Homer Baron
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Interpretation of “The Sick Rose” William Blake’s “The Sick Rose” is not easily interpreted at first glance. One must look at the deeper meaning behind the figurative symbols that Blake uses to uncover the essence of the poem. In the poem “The Sick Rose” the rose symbolizes a mentally unstable woman due to her abusive and controlling relationship with a man. This is demonstrated by the use of figurative language (symbolism and imagery in particular)‚ the speaker’s tone‚ and the two illustrations
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1.0: ESL LEARNER`S TEXT The following student essay is based on a reading from the December 1999 exam: an essay: “Getting Close to the Machine” by Ellen Ullman. Why do we have computers? Computers are invented in order to facilitate the satisfaction of our needs. We want to satisfy our needs daily and computers are composed of our thoughts and of how we would realize the action performed by the computer. In Ellen Ullman’s “Getting Close to the Machine”‚ the effects and compositions of a programmed
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Escaping Loneliness In "A Rose for Emily‚" William Faulkner’s use of setting and characterization foreshadows and builds up to the climax of the story. His use of metaphors prepares the reader for the bittersweet ending. A theme of respectability and the loss of‚ is threaded throughout the story. Appropriately‚ the story begins with death‚ flashes back to the past and hints towards the demise of a woman and the traditions of the past she personifies. Faulkner has carefully crafted a multi-layered
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