presumption of superiority and its destructive consequences. Eliot says of Fuller‚ “some of the best things she says are on the folly of absolute definitions of woman’s nature and absolute demarcations of woman’s mission”. She quotes Fuller: “I think women need‚ especially at this juncture‚ a much greater range of occupation than they have‚ to rouse their latent powers” if they are to avoid “the ennui that haunts grown women.” George Eliot sets her novel nearly 40 years before the period in which it
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Dibrugarh University B A. Syllabus in English under Semester System (Approved by the Board of Studies in English on 20/12/2010) This course has been designed as part of an integrated course in English Literature‚ inclusive of M.A. in English. Only students wishing to pursue M.A. in English should take up this course. Each paper is of 100 marks out of which 80 marks will be for the End semester examination and 20 marks for the Internal Assessment. Paper I: History of English Society and Culture I
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Bibliography: See bibliographies in R. P. Blackmur‚ Kenneth Burke‚ T. S. Eliot‚ William Empson‚ Northrop Frye‚ Murray Krieger‚ F. R. Leavis‚ I. A. Richards‚ René Wellek‚ and Yvor Winters; for R. S. Crane see bibliography in Chicago Critics. [pic] Cleanth Brooks‚ Modern Poetry and the Tradition (1939)‚ The Well Wrought Urn (1947);
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Poetry Analysis of T. S. Eliot’s The Hollow Men I picked this poem by Eliot for two primary reasons‚ one of them being that Eliot is one of my favorite modern poets‚ and the other being the view presented in it. That view is one of a barren and dead world‚ with humans as meandering and meaningless objects with no true value‚ and religion (primarily Christianity) as a futile hope for a salvation that will never be granted. Most of that can be observed in section I‚ but particularly in
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believed that justice was good‚ and the good could only be attained through self-knowledge. In the Republic‚ Socrates defines justice as ‘working at that which he is naturally best suited‚’ and ‘to do one’s own business and not to be a busybody’. George Eliot induces her personal opinions in and further elucidates her nineteenth century readers on the very real and prevalent issue of justice by intertwining several cases between characters in her novel Silas Marner‚ cleverly using terms that can be interpreted
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“Cat in the Rain.” The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. Vol. 2. Boston: Norton‚ 2007. Print. • Sample parenthetical reference: (Eliot 187)‚ where “187” is the PAGE number Journal Article: Keary‚ Anne. “Dancing with Strangers: Europeans and Australians at First Contact.” Canadian Journal of History. 41 (2006): 613-616. Print. • Sample parenthetical reference: (Keary 614)‚ where
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Concurrency Control in Distributed Database Systems PHILIP A. BERNSTEIN AND NATHAN GOODMAN Computer Corporation of America‚ Cambridge‚ Massachusetts 02139 In this paper we survey‚ consolidate‚ and present the state of the art in distributed database concurrency control. The heart of our analysts is a decomposition of the concurrency control problem into two major subproblems: read-write and write-write synchronization. We describe a series of synchromzation techniques for solving each subproblem
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modernism refers to the radical shift in aesthetic and cultural sensibilities evident in the art and literature of the post-World War One period. The ordered‚ stable and inherently meaningful worldview of the nineteenth century could not‚ wrote T.S. Eliot‚ accord with "the immense panorama of futility and anarchy which is contemporary history." Modernism thus marks a distinctive break with Victorian bourgeois morality; rejecting nineteenth-century optimism‚ they presented a profoundly pessimistic picture
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