"Chapter 11 how to read literature like a professor" Essays and Research Papers

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    Conrad uses the accountant as a symbol of greed and conceitedness in Heart of Darkness similarly to how Foster describes the use of a symbol in his novel How to Read Literature Like a Professor. Symbols‚ according to Foster‚ have many meanings. Readers presume “them to mean something[‚...] one something in particular[‚ but] it doesn’t work like that” (Foster); they have multiple meanings. In this way‚ Conrad uses his character‚ the accountant‚ as a symbol of both greed and egotism. When the accountant

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    Chapter 1: “Every Trip is a Quest (Except when it’s not)” Summary: * The real reason for a quest is self knowledge‚ usually by younger kids trying to gain self knowledge. * Where there is a quester there is going to be challenges to overcome‚ but the real reason for a quest never involves the stated reason. * Quests are purely educational. Connection: In the Raven by Edgar Allen Poe he pays very close attention to details and talks with great imagery

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    In the twelfth chapter of Thomas C. Foster’s How to Read Literature Like a Professor‚ Foster analyzes symbols‚ and the great influences they have in literature. To begin the chapter‚ Foster compares and explains the differences between symbols and allegories. Symbolism is a broad category‚ and allegories fit under it’s immense hierarchy. Furthermore‚ symbols “involve a range of possible means and interpretations”‚ while allegories have single and specific answers (105). Foster continues by stating

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    Tim O’Brian and Thomas C. Foster are both fantastic authors. They both have written fantastic titles‚ The Thing They Carried ( By Tim) and How To Read Literature Like A Professor (by Thomas). Even though they were published in different years and different parts of the world‚ they still are very similar. One is about war and the other one on literature‚ but when examined you can clearly see religious influences in their writing. Oddly enough‚ they are influenced by many of the same ideas. In the

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    n chapter 9 of How to read literature like a professor‚ Foster goes into the topic of myths. There are three kinds of myths that Foster mentioned beforehand :shakespearean biblical‚and fairy tale myths. In this chapter however‚ he goes more deeply in myths from the Greeks and Romans. According to Foster‚ myths shape and sustain power of a story the and its symbols; show our ability to to explain ourselves; myths are so deeply ingrained our cultural memory that they both shape our culture and are

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    innocence b. Sexual implications—a trait of 19th century literature to address sex indirectly c. Symbolic Vampirism: selfishness‚ exploitation‚ refusal to respect the autonomy of other people‚ using people to get what we want‚ placing our desires‚ particularly ugly ones‚ above the needs of another. 4. If It’s Square‚ It’s a Sonnet 5. Now‚ Where Have I Seen Her Before? a. There is no such thing as a wholly original work of literature—stories grow out of other stories‚ poems out of other poems

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    writes about this in his book How to Read Like a Professor: For about as long as anyone’s been writing anything‚ the seasons have stood for the same set of meanings. Maybe it’s hard-wired into us that spring has to do with childhood and youth‚ summer with adulthood and romance and fulfillment and passion‚ autumn with decline and middle age and tiredness but also harvest‚ winter with old age and resentment and death. (178) As a result of this‚ when someone reads the line‚ "I had that familiar

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    Summer Reading Questions Chapter One: A casual definition of a quester would be an individual that goes on a quest‚ or mission‚ in hopes of looking for something. However‚ in How to Think like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster‚ we are challenged to look at this term in a very different and mind stimulating way. Foster challenges our minds to look at quests as everyday things. Foster points out 5 aspects to every quest and how we can find these within everyday situations. These include; the quester

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    Journal Entries; AP Eng Ch: 1 In the first chapter of his book‚ Foster lays out the conventions for a quest‚ stating that in most literature‚ modern and classic‚ "every trip is a quest." the novel "the Help" by Kathryn Stockett is not perhaps seen by the unaware reader to be a quest‚ however as it details a journey‚ it can in actuality be broken down into the conventions Foster cleverly recognized: every journey or trip a story embarks upon follows a pattern‚ and that pattern is a quest.

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    Jania Grant Ms. Lisa Myers 10th Grade Honors Literature 14 August 2013 Almost everyone in their lifetime has either observed or read stories similar to those comparable to Star Wars‚ Huckleberry Finn‚ or even North by Northwest. These are stories of a quest‚ or voyage of discovery. The reason for a quest is always self-knowledge. Because of its self-knowledge a majority of the time questers are often young‚ inexperienced‚ and sheltered. There are five aspects or attributes to a quest.

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