"Great expectations comparing book to movie" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Great Gatsby is by far one of the best classical novels ever written. Fitzgerald sure knew what he was doing with this one. The book is still one of the top sellers and has been made into two movies so far. The difference both large and small between chapter eight of The Great Gatsby and its 1974 and 2013 film adaptions prove that once again‚ Hollywood can sure make a heart racing film from just a few hundred pages. The film adoptions of the Great Gatsby‚ talks about the love within Gatsby and

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    There were several themes associated with the novel "Great Expectations". One of the most fascinating themes dealt with "infatuation and how it compares to and relates to love" ("Infatuation"). Infatuation is basically an obsession‚ or extravagant affection towards a person (Webster‚ 667). There is really no definite reason behind their passion‚ therefore this feeling is often short in duration and indicative of faulty judgement (Webster‚ 667). The person doesn’t know what these feelings mean‚ this

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    Great Expectations Essay Are Great Expectations and ambitions always destined for everyone? In Great Expectations‚ the central recurring theme is that affection‚ loyalty‚ and inner worth is more important than a progressive increase in wealth and social status. Dickens makes this theme evident through the interactions of the characters‚ and by discovering the idea of wealth and self-improvement (specifically in social classes). The thesis can be discovered in situations such as Pip’s awareness

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    The era in which The Great Gatsby takes place was a unique time in American history. The 1920s were also known as the Jazz Age‚ a time when jazz was the most popular kind of music and was played live in clubs and speakeasies. Organized crime became an explosive problem in America during the 1920s‚ and the Italian mob played a large role in distributing alcohol to the people during Prohibition‚ a time when selling alcohol was banned but drinking it was not. Cars were made accessible to everyone‚ although

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    Book vs movie

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    There are different ways to get a story from different sources in modern times. Books have been good sources for stories‚ but movies are getting more popular and have the same story with the books. Why people still reading books; and others are prefer watching the movies? Reading books and watching movies have a lot in common‚ but there are some differences that makes the readers remain faithful to reading books. Reading books and watching movies are similar because they are telling the same story. They

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    In the novel Great Expectations‚ a cruel elderly woman‚ Miss Havisham‚ had been left at the altar by a man named Compeyson. Therefore‚ she uses an innocent and undeserving orphan girl‚ Estella‚ to take vengeance on all men as a whole. Estella is raised in a way that causes her to be incapable of expressing any form of love and is consequently cold towards the men who seek her. She treats the main character‚ a boy named Pip‚ in this way‚ through an unrequited love. Similarly‚ in the song “I Don’t

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    Response to Essay Question Two Throughout Great Expectations we are introduced to many interesting and compelling characters. Some of the characters are quite charming and lovable while others are very vile and repulsive. Perhaps the best example of a positive and lovable character is Joe Gargery. Joe is a blacksmith and a sort of father to Pip‚ considering the death of both of Pip’s parents. Joe is a simple man who is content with living the life of a “commoner”. This contentment and true happiness

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    Great Education Many describe Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations as a Bildungsroman – a novel tracing the education and spiritual growth of a young hero‚ in this case Philip Pirrip‚ better known as Pip. Pip’s thoughts on education change throughout the course of the story‚ beginning with idealistic views of becoming a gentleman and ending with a deeper‚ more intellectual perspective of being a gentleman. After meeting the wealthy and once elegant Miss Havisham‚ Pip becomes ashamed of his life

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    genteelly brought up”. Pip begins to feel ashamed of himself also and sees himself as a “common laboring-boy; that my hands were coarse; that my boots were thick; … and generally that I was in a low-lived bad way”. Secondly‚ after Pip receives his great expectations and goes to London to be educated‚ Pip encounters characters whom society would regard as gentleman‚ but who are revealed to not only be coarse and brutal but also extremely cruel and unjust. In particular‚ Pip first hears of Compeyson through

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    Imprisonment is a lack of any kind of freedom. In Charles Dickens’s novel Great Expectations there are many examples of imprisonment. Dickens created the characters Estella‚ Herbert‚ and Molly with a lack of freedom. These three characters were imprisoned because they could not make their own choices. Estella had very little freedom. Miss Havisham controlled every aspect of her life. She was forced to carry out Miss Havisham’s revenge on men‚ and she tortured Pip only because she had been

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