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    A rose for emily

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    Literary Analysis 14 November 2013 Plot Review for “A Rose for Emily” “A Rose for Emily”‚ written by William Faulkner. It is the type of story that when someone reads it‚ they know that something is strange but they do not know what exactly it is. This story will make the reader change the way that they feel about Miss. Emily at the very end. A good story needs a good plot scheme. “A Rose for Emily” has a very well thought out plot and the way that the narrator organizes things allows the

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    A Rose for Emily

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    The Plot’s Surprise in A Rose for Emily William Faulkner strategically uses plot to manipulate time in A Rose for Emily (Faulkner 566-74). The plot is sectioned into five parts. The sections are structured to go from present to past‚ instead of the more common chronological order. It is this manipulation of time that builds the suspense of the surprise ending. Part one takes place in what I understand to be present time. The narrator describes that the town’s people attended Emily’s funeral because

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    A Rose for Emily

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    A Rose For Emily 1. Why was it difficult‚ if not impossible‚ for Emily to meet possible husbands in her youth? So the reason she couldn’t meet possible husbands in her youth was because of her father and if her father had been a little better with the different men that wanted her than that would have the life of his daughter in the future. But he left her at a tough position by thinking that no man is good enough for his daughter. An evident for this would be‚ “… [No] young… [Man was]… good

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    Emily Bronte

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    Many times writing is based off of feeling or what’s going on around the author. It is often influenced by society and norms. Emily Bronte‚ author of Wuthering Heights‚ writes with great contrast to what is going on in her time period. She lays out how society is supposed to be‚ yet creates the character‚ Catherine‚ who defies all the norms. During the Victorian age women were very oppressed‚ it was also the rein of Queen Victoria and the patriarchal society‚ which is why Catherine is seen as such

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    A Rose for Emily

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    1. The introduction to the lesson says that Faulkner’s "great theme was the American South." "A Rose for Emily" is a good example of regionalism. Identify two examples of local color from the story. Two examples of a local color from the story are when Emily Grierson didn’t want to go along with the ones who moved into the new area. Emily didn’t pay her taxes for nothing and she had an African American as a slave. In addition to that‚ she never fixed up or repaired her old eccentric house. Also

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    Emily Dickinson

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    Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson is one of the most famous American poets. She wrote many poems throughout her lifetime‚ but it was not until after her death that she became famous. She wrote about death and life‚ love and separation‚ and God. She wrote about topics like these because she was inspired by the experiences in her life. Throughout her life‚ she dealt with problems that caused her to seclude herself‚ wear only a while dress‚ and write poems. Many have questioned what caused her seclusion

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    A Rose for Emily

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    Brandl AP English Professor Hertzog 2/26/13 A key trait to southern gothic fiction is that it often contains a character that is in a state of helpless isolation from the people around them. In the short story “A Rose for Emily”‚ William Faulkner characterizes Miss Emily Grierson with sexual repression and a psychological state that keeps her mind in the time before the Civil War. This characterization stems from her father‚ her boyfriend Homer Baron and the town of Jefferson itself‚ and causes

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    A Rose for Emily

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    reading‚ make note of your new understandings. Why did the colonel do that for Emily’s father? Did he do something prior for him and his family or something? Is the smell from a dead body? The drug is labeled “for rats”‚ did Homer do something to Emily like cheating on her? No‚ she kills him so she won’t have to lose him.What’s the deal with the yellow? If she was laying on the bed with him‚ that

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    Emily Dickinson

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    Janet Lester Professor Stewart Eng 1020 “Uncertain of the Uncertain” Interpreted By Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson wrote very distinctive poetry on the delight and twinge of existence. Her poetry is dense‚ sharp but sometimes vague. In selecting two of Emily Dickinson’s poems‚ “Because I could not stop for Death‚" and "I felt a Funeral in my Brain"‚ I noticed that in one poem “ I felt a Funeral in my Brain”‚ Dickinson presents unsettling images about death such as being aware‚ cognizant

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    Emily Dickinson

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    In Emily Dickinson’s‚ “Because I could not stop for Death”‚ the use of imagery with sensory language as well as personification to reveal the persuasion of the readers awareness about death. As soon as the poem begins‚ Dickinson begins giving attributes to death as if it is a spectacular moment in our lives. Emily Dickinson expresses her revolt against the predictable awareness of the hereafter‚ and the standards maintained by civilization in that period. Right in the first stanza‚ Dickinson lets

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