looking at someone‚ one can tell how they are feeling by staring into his or her eyes. Our eyes never lie. Our eyes will often mirror our souls and display our true inner emotions. In Elie Wiesel’s autobiographical narrative‚ Night‚ he uses the eye motif to portray characters’ true souls. In some parts of the narrative‚ Night‚ Wiesel used eyes to display the hope and positive emotion in characters. In the beginning of the story‚ eyes were used as an indication of Moche the Beadle’s calmness in the
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Novel Study Annotated Bibliography Gruen‚ Sara. Water for Elephants. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill: Chapel Hill‚ North Carolina‚ 2006. The story follows Jacob Jankowski who was an old man living in a nursing home‚ as he looks back about a time that defined his life. In the 1930’s‚ 23-year-old Jacob’s life changed drastically. One minute he was finishing his Veterinarian degree at Cornell and planning to follow his father in the family business. The next his parents passed away in a car
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Themes Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work. The Forcefulness of Love Romeo and Juliet is the most famous love story in the English literary tradition. Love is naturally the play’s dominant and most important theme. The play focuses on romantic love‚ specifically the intense passion that springs up at first sight between Romeo and Juliet. In Romeo and Juliet‚ love is a violent‚ ecstatic‚ overpowering force that supersedes all other values‚ loyalties
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Throughout the novel‚ readers are shown different symbols and motifs‚ through the characters actions and characteristics. Feathers and birds are a key motif that helps showcase the theme of freedom and links between birds and Skellig. In addition‚ evolution is significant in this novel. The way David Almond writes about evolution between Skellig and Mina shows the importance of evolution. Birds help symbolize the theme of freedom. At the start of the novel Skellig is weak‚ vulnerable and scared
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Houses as Motifs in Kate Chopin’s The Awakening Linda Catte Dr. Kathryn Warren ENGL 2329: American Literature March 22‚ 2012 (KateChopin.org.) (Krantz’s Grand Isle Hotel Picture of painting by Tracy Warhart Plaisance) (Reflechir: Vol.1. Les images des prairies tremblantes: 1840-1940 by Chénière Hurricane Centennial Committee) It is not new or unique that an individual is looking for one’s purpose and meaning in life. Nor is it unique that men and women imitate the norms of society. In Kate Chopin’s
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Themes The Search For Redemption Amir’s quest to redeem himself makes up the heart of the novel. Early on‚ Amir strives to redeem himself in Baba’s eyes‚ primarily because his mother died giving birth to him‚ and he feels responsible. To redeem himself to Baba‚ Amir thinks he must win the kite-tournament and bring Baba the losing kite‚ both of which are inciting incidents that set the rest of the novel in motion. The more substantial part of Amir’s search for redemption‚ however‚ stems from his
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When people lose their dignity‚ they also lose a part of the very thing that makes them human. Despair‚ hopelessness‚ fear and apathy are all ways a human can lose their humanity. The eyes provide a window onto the soul‚ and thus a view on the person’s mental state. The eyes also function in reverse‚ as a symbolic gesture of control over someone. All of this is present in Night‚ by Elie Wiesel‚ an account of human tragedy‚ human cruelty‚ human dignity‚ and the loss thereof. At the start of the
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Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man depicts a realistic society where white people act as if black people are less than human. Ellison uses papers and letters to show the narrator’s poor position in this society. Many papers seem to show good fortune for the narrator‚ but only provide false dreams. The narrator’s prize of a brief case containing his scholarship first illustrates this falsehood: "take this prize and keep it well. Consider it a badge of office. Prize it. Keep developing as you
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Themes Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work. Whiteness as the Standard of Beauty The Bluest Eye provides an extended depiction of the ways in which internalized white beauty standards deform the lives of black girls and women. Implicit messages that whiteness is superior are everywhere‚ including the white baby doll given to Claudia‚ the idealization of Shirley Temple‚ the consensus that light-skinned Maureen is cuter than the other black girls‚
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There is numerous amount of cosmological motifs in the play King Henry IV. Each pattern has its similarities expressed by their meaning. The following characters convey opinions that have an astronomic comparison. In the first several stanzas of act 1‚ the king starts to express a feeling of being anxious. He starts complaining tremendously about certain living beings. “Those opposed eyes which‚ like the meteors of a troubled heaven”‚ he utters the comparison of the horse’s eyes partaking in the
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