"Catcehr in the rye feminist views" Essays and Research Papers

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    Feminist Lens In Macbeth

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    A Feminist Lens in MacBeth MacBeth written by Shakespeare can be viewed through a feminist lens. Lady MacBeth and the witches are very strong important characters in MacBeth. When Shakespeare wrote this‚ feminism wasn’t a huge important aspect at the time‚ but he wrote it based on what he thought of women. Witches are often thought to be evil or mean‚ and Lady MacBeth was portrayed as a character who was very strong and could easily manipulate other people. Lady MacBeth is a strong person when

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    Holden Caulfield. The name alone insinuates thoughts of tormented teen angst and a lonesome rebel in a world filled with phonies. To say that the protagonist of J. D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye produced theories and speculation would be a gross understatement. Vast amounts of hypotheses sprang up on the deeper implications of Salinger’s famous character. According to various readers and critics‚ Holden Caulfield represents the metamorphosis from adolescence to adulthood‚ demonstrating

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    TThe Catcher In The Rye By J.D Salinger The Catcher in the Rye was written by J.D salinger and published by Little‚ Brown and Company in 1951. Originally intended for adults‚ the novel has in time become very popular with younger readers as well. His portrayl of alienation and difficulties with growing up has both been very influentional and sparked debate. The novel remains well-recognized selling more than 250 000 copies a year. Jerome David or “J.D.” Salinger was born on January 1th 1919

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    and perceptions of it. This quote simply states‚ women do not need to have power of men but they need to have power over themselves. This quote is true and speaks to the purist nature of equality that true feminists strive for‚ equality for gender and not one gender over another. To be a feminist like me means to be for nothing but equality. Women and men need to be equal. This does

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    deeper lack of understanding toward the thing being cursed in the first place. With Holden‚ it is plain to see that his view of the world

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    Radical Feminist Analysis

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    According to radical feminist scholar Catharine MacKinnon (1989)‚ consent is simply lacking around the existence of rape. In numerous instances‚ women’s sexual consent has been understood intently and expansively; and the simplicity of the absence revolving around resistance or refusal. Thus‚ feminists have critiqued this approach which regards unconscious women as consenting (MacKinnon‚ 1989: p. 340; Archard‚ 1998: p. 85). It is often assumed that the appearance of a woman‚ location‚ status‚ attire

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    The innocence of childhood is eventually ripped away from us all. In J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye Holden Caulfield wishes to dedicate his life to preserving the innocence of everyone. Holden wants to save what was so cruelly ripped away from him with the death of his brother. Holden at first believes that he can be "The Catcher in the Rye‚" but he eventually comes to understand that it is both impossible and wrong to attempt such a thing. At first‚ Holden wants to dedicate his life to

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    “When you have strict censorship‚ young students cannot receive a full education. Their view of the world is imbalanced. There can be no true discussion of the issues” (Ai Weiwei). Censorship regulates and sets standards for children’s literature. Restriction on literature such as “The Catcher in the Rye” by J.D. Salinger‚ prevents exposure to all types of literature which neutralizes society’s plan for increasing the all around rates of reading in students. Increasing these rates will benefit students

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    Vertigo Feminist Theory

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    First film theorist Laura Mulvey she wrote Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema in 1975. She came up with the idea of the Male Gaze. The idea that the woman is passive and the male is active. So the woman is the image and the man is the bare of the look which very much indicates the man has the power of the woman. In vertigo this is evident within the first scene the Ernie’s Restaurant when Scottie goes to meet Madeline for the first time. Where they don’t actually meet‚ they don’t even make eye

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    How Is Othello A Feminist

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    Reading it as a feminist‚ the reader is allowed to judge the different status of women in the Elizabethan society. Elizabethan or shakespeare’s society which was built upon Renaissance beliefs‚ say that women were meant to marry. In Othello women were seen as an act of possession

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