"Great expectations portrayal of childhood innocence" Essays and Research Papers

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    Romantic Innocence

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    Romantic Innocence Though Romanticism at large is not concerned with lost innocence only‚ but a whole array of human emotions‚ it is certainly an important theme for writers of this literary epoch. Several Romantic poems testify to this‚ as well as other Romantic or pre-Romantic literary texts. In the England of the 18th century‚ scientific progress along with industrialism had effected great changes in society. Europe on the whole was shifting rapidly: economically‚ socially and politically. In

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    analyzing and comparing The Catcher in the Rye and Great Expectations‚ by J.D. Salinger and Charles Dickens respectively‚ one usually stops and ponders‚ what can these two novels possibly have in common? Well I can tell you‚ quite a lot. To begin with‚ both are fictional autobiographies‚ narrated personally by the protagonists‚ that is Holden and Pip. However‚ regardless of the fact that they are both narrated in the first person‚ one‚ Great Expectations is a full life story‚ and you can tell by the very

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    In the novel Great Expectations‚ the author Charles Dickens uses the first person narrative throughout the novel. The first person narrative is the main character‚ Pip. However‚ in this book the first person narrative comes in a retrospective form‚ with Pip looking back on his life. The retrospective point of view is key in this story for the reaction of the readers to the plot. In Great Expectations‚ the retrospective first person point of view makes the main character Pip unreliable‚ makes the

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    The Age of Innocence

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    The truth that lies behind fantasies The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton is a book that gave the word "love" many other meanings‚ such as impossible‚ meaningless and incomplete. There were many unbearable obstacles that Countess Ellen Olenska‚ one of the main characters‚ had to face because of love. She was treated badly by many people and always longed for love but never obtained it. With everyone cursing her‚ betraying her and hurting her‚ there was one person who was always there for her. Newland

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    Loss of Innocence

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    Many people experience the loss of innocence every day because it’s just a natural thing. One way that people loss their innocence is through the violence of war. Most people in a war will come unto the fact that it’s a kill or be killed kind of thing. Everyone would naturally choose to kill another man and that’s how many people in a war end up losing their innocence. Another way that people lose their innocence is when they witness the death of someone else. In the book “Fallen Angels‚” Lieutenant

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    The Age of Innocence

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    5th 2011 The Death Of Innocence Characterization is a description of qualities or peculiarities. In “The Age of Innocence” Edith Wharton uses characterization over plot to emphasize the ways in which a death of innocence is taking place in society. Throughout the novel‚ various characters emerge who challenge the strict order of society and while they face a great deal of opposition‚ they often are far more complex and‚ more interesting than

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    Loss of Innocence

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    It has been said that innocence can be defined as the state or quality of being morally free from guilt or sin‚ through lack of knowledge of evil. I will examine pieces of literature that convey the loss of innocence to either a particular person‚ or a group of people. The first piece of writing I have chosen is‚ The Lord of the Flies by William Golding. In the middle of a war‚ a plane carrying a group of schoolboys crashed onto an island. The pilot had been killed‚ so that left the boys to fend

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    The Vulnerability of Innocence “Billy Budd‚ Sailor (An inside narrative)” by Herman Melville uses John Claggart as a foil to Billy Budd in order to draw attention to the vulnerability of innocence. This can be seen clearly throughout the relationship of Billy and Claggart‚ as their relationship is an obvious struggle between good and evil‚ as well as the similarities and differences that Herman Melville stresses continuously throughout the short story. By analyzing the relationship‚ similarities

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    Loss of Innocence

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    Andrew Yamin Scarlet Letter Analysis Loss of Innocence in the Puritan Society In the Scarlet Letter‚ Nathaniel Hawthorne hones in on the contrast between good versus bad and the loss of innocence that defies that line. Hester Prynne is a symbol of shame and sin to the puritan society‚ however she once was an innocent and honorable woman. On page 76‚ Hawthorne repeats the phrase “At her‚ child of honorable parents...At her‚ mother of a babe...At her.” This repetition emphasizes the way Hester

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    The Significance of Innocence “‘Stay gold‚ Ponyboy. Stay gold…’” (Hinton 148). The last words of Johnny Cade indicates that he is telling Ponyboy Curtis to retain his innocence. In The Outsiders‚ the author‚ S.E. Hinton‚ suggests that Ponyboy and Johnny are trying to keep hold of their innocence. They go through many challenges and obstacles and in the end they realize that innocence can be cherished but there is a time when you have to grow up. Oddly‚ Hinton proves just the opposite; she proves

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