"Great expectations pip miss havisham" Essays and Research Papers

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    clinical context‚ but the initial PIP/TAZ selection as initial therapy was considered inappropriate for 55%. This is considered higher than the percentage of inappropriate PIP/TAZ use in benchmark studies presented at the introduction (10% to 17%). [7‚8] Based on the definition of appropriateness of therapy‚ 45 % of the patients included‚ PIP/TAZ was prescribed appropriately‚ whereas 55 % of the patients received PIP/TAZ inappropriately. Among inappropriate PIP/TAZ usage there was 50 % prescribed

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    kind of obsession is shown through the protagonist of Dickens’ novel‚ Great ExpectationsPip‚ as he visits Miss Havisham and Estella. Obsessions like this are also shown in today’s society‚ (with celebrities‚ status‚ and becoming famous) and such obsessions are created by the media. Regardless of the time period‚ anyone can be exposed to wealth and social status and become unhealthily obsessed. In Great ExpectationsPip becomes obsessed with social class‚ wealth‚ and becoming a gentleman

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    "Great Expectations" is set in Victorian England. It is apparent when we read the novel that Charles Dickens expressed many of his own views when writing the narrative‚ using a strong authorial voice. This is particularly clear when he addresses certain issues concerning the social and cultural concerns of the time‚ and through Pip’s desire for social change. The development of the relationship between Pip and Joe is crucial in realising the complexity and importance of their relationship because

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    Estella Havisham JM 02/06/06 Final Draft Estella is an obsequious yet proud individual whose harsh upbringing hinders her ability to lead a happy and productive life. She is a bossy‚ showy‚ flippant heart breaker who uses her power – her beauty – to wreck havoc in men’s lives. She gets a blatant reality check when she marries Bentley Drummle‚ who abuses her to the point of desperation and separation. She ultimately learns that the man she thought would provide for

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    REVIEW GREAT EXPECTATIONS BY CHARLES DICKENS On Christmas Eve‚ Pip‚ an orphan living with his sister (Mrs Joe) and Joe Gargery‚ meets a convict who demands him to bring him food and a file to cut his chains. Pip does so and the following morning and feels extremely guilty. He‚ Joe and some police officers later catch and arrest this convict. Uncle Pumblechook arranges for Pip to go and play at Miss Havisham’s home in hope that she’ll give him money. There he falls in love with Estelle‚ Miss Havisham’s

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    Gender roles. Behavioral expectations. Identifying oneself. These aspects all lead to the significance of following separate spheres which correlates on the role someone has in life. An example of this is in the novel‚ Great Expectations‚ written by Charles Dickens. Gender roles are vigorously expressed in this novel. Page by page‚ inside and out‚ there are examples of separate spheres throughout the book. Today the world is the same way‚ there is a split difference between the men and women. People

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    Consequences it has in Great Expectations by Charles Dickens Charles Dickens examines how money can corrupt people and sometimes to a point beyond repair. In Great Expectations money is suppose to make people happier and to live easier lives but money will eventually corrupt people and ruin their life. Pip is introduced to a lot of money and becomes corrupt. When Pip becomes corrupt he looses former relationships that he had. The relationships that pip looses are completely ruined because Pip was corrupted

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    at any given time. People observe others being influenced in movies‚ books‚ and stories everyday. Phillip Pirrip‚ or Pip as he is commonly known is influenced by three women in his life during Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations. First‚ Pip is influenced to become an educated man because of Biddy. When Pip is just a child‚ Biddy and he become great friends. Biddy is about the age Pip‚ and she teaches him. Biddy‚ being quite intelligent‚

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    all stories have a happy ending‚ especially in his novel Great Expectations. His two endings convey very different tones. The original ending gives Pip what he deserves. He ends up living alone and is unmarried. Dickens’ rewrite seems far fetched in that Estella‚ and Pip marry. The alternate ending gives good imagery and details‚ but misconstrue Dickens’ intended tone. The original ending is better and more congruent to the storyline because Pip is undeserving of a happy ending‚ while in the second

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    [him] in [his] grave‚ and [he] had contuma- ciously refused to go there." Pip is made to feel guilty not only for being so much "trouble" but also for his lack of gratitude. He is not grateful for his ill-treatment‚ of course‚ but is full of suppressed rage. During his sister’s recital of his "misdemeanors‚" Wopsle’s Roman nose so aggravates Pip that he "should have liked to pull it until he howled" (ch. 4). Another reason Pip is regarded as ungrateful is that he is not perceived as having any rights

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