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    Compare and Contrast Paper The Yellow wallpaper and A Doll’s house In class we discussed various stories that linked themselves in different perspectives. Some were related through plot and setting and others through characters and themes. Yet the same way that they were related‚ they also conflicted with each other. Just like the stories The Yellow Wallpaper and A Doll’s house. In both of these stories they show very similar characters that share the same idea and concept. The setting also

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    The Puritans had a heavily important part in the formation of early America‚ as well as a religion that influenced our early American society. This society has been the target which many authors have picked to set their novels in. The topic of Puritan life contains a broad list of aspects that can be easily compared to one another in several different books. Two selections that go into detail about some of the different aspects of the Puritan people are The Crucible‚ by Arthur Miller‚ and The Scarlet

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    Cindy Jecker Professor Kim ENG 200 12 April 13 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde/ Frankenstein From the comparison between the novel by Stevenson and the novel by Mary Shelley we noticed some important analogies. One of these regards the theme of the limits of Nature. Walton’s only aim in life is to travel towards the unknown; Frankenstein has the ambition of distinguishing himself in science and so he creates a living being by joining parts selected from corpses without respecting the rules of Nature

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    The American and French Revolution are the two most important revolutions to ever happen in history. Both revolutions began due to the common people need to obtain independence and liberty from an oppressive government. The American Revolution was first started the American colonists who wanted financial independence from Great Britain. The French Revolution was a struggle to gain social equality among the masses. Though both revolutions are glorious‚ they have different and similar characteristics

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    Many popular novels are often converted into television movies. The brilliant fiction novel‚ Flowers for Algernon written by Daniel Keyes‚ was developed into a dramatic television film. Flowers for Algernon is about a mentally retarded man who is given the opportunity to become intelligent through the advancements of medical science. This emotionally touching novel was adapted to television so it could appeal to a wider‚ more general audience. Although the novel and film are similar in terms of plot

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    The modernism and postmodernism era vary in writing styles and perspectives‚ but two pieces of work that stood out were the Diary of a Madman written by Lu Xun‚ and the Daydreams of a Drunk Woman. These two stories provide perspectives from troubled individuals as they participate in everyday life. The main characters in the Diary of a Madman and the Daydreams of a Drunk Woman are clearly mentally disturbed. In the story regarding the madman‚ it is evident that he suffers from a mental illness and

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    In To Build a Fire‚ written by Jack London‚ and The Story of an Hour‚ written by Kate Chopin‚ both contain many similarities while also being unique in their own way. Both To Build a Fire‚ and The Story of an Hour heavily discuss the idea of death and independence. However‚ there are differences in the stories that include themes of confidence‚ and the idea of free will. In The Story of an Hour‚ and To Build a Fire both go in depth discussing the theme of death using it as an ending to their story

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    Both authors Fredrick Douglas and Harriet Jacobs demonstrate the horror of slavery and how it dehumanizes slaves. They show this through their narratives Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl and the narrative of the life of Fredrick Douglass. Jacobs on her personal experience as a slave says "Slavery is bad for men‚ but far more terrible for women". This statement is definitely true considering the experiences she discusses throughout her narrative. Even though men suffered tremendously

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    The point of view used in a novel plays a vital role in a reader’s experience. When an author chooses to use a first-person point of view‚ the audience is limited to the experiences and thoughts of the narrator. This results in a one-sided view of the plot. Using a first-person narrator also controls how much knowledge the reader is granted. When the narrator is detached from the conflict in the story‚ the reader’s information is limited. In contrast‚ when the narrator is more involved‚ so is the

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    Love is something defined as happiness‚ but what does love mean when it begins to hurt that person and traps them completely? The definition of love changes and becomes a continuous struggle to escape or run away from the evils it possesses. No matter how sever the pain‚ love is never sub sided. Hester Pynne and Jane Eyre are both characters that involve themselves in a romance that overcomes them entirely. In each novel their love and feelings turn into a fallacy in which they learn of secrets‚

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