Teagan de Marigny DSVTEA001 Due Date: 16 September 2011 English Literary Studies: ELL1016S Tutor: Nicola Lazenby Tut group 13 Assignment 2: Poetry ‘Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing’ – Margaret Atwood ‘Helen of Troy does Countertop Dancing’‚ by Margaret Atwood‚ deals with the refusal to agree to or obey with the idea that woman need to live a self-respected life and have a humble day job‚ which is pressured by society in order for woman to be ‘Ideal’. As well as Atwood’s writing on
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/ Hour 2 AP Literature and Compisition January 10‚ 2012 Luke and Nick Ideal Men? It is no secret that Margaret Atwood has a feminist point of view in her novel The Handmaid’s Tale. She makes it very clear that she is trying to bring attention to the discrimination against women in the culture of Gilead in this novel. With the exception of two male characters‚ Margaret Atwood portrays all of the men in the novel as selfish and heartless towards women. Even though they may not be perfect men
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“respectable” jobs‚ and also to the men who watch her‚ when you would think it would be the other way around. In using lines such as “I don’t let on to everyone‚ / but lean close and I’ll whisper: / My mother was raped by a holy swan” (Countertop‚ 59-61) Atwood references Helen of Troy’s links to the Gods of Greek mythology (her father was Zeus; he had appeared to Helen’s mother in the form of a golden swan and raped [or had consensual sex with‚ depending on the version of the story that you read] her)‚
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Margaret Atwood’s short story‚ “Happy Endings‚” she explains that no matter what kind of story someone has‚ death is something that everyone has in common. Atwood states “So much for endings. Beginnings are always more fun.” She means that the end does not matter because eventually everyone will die‚ the beginning is the important part of a story. Atwood says that the beginnings of a story are more fun because that is where all the details are. The beginning can happen however it wants to‚ but the end
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the use of short sentences which Atwood purposely uses when she writes “Then he stubs out his cigarette‚ downs the heel of his Scotch and hauls himself out of the deck chair”. The heavily punctuated paragraph slows down the readers reading of the passage thus suggesting George’s character is as simple as the sentence structure used. It is at this point in the passage where Atwood draws on George’s simplicity to portray a wider message from the piece. Here‚ Atwood criticises the urban world outside
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summer and links it to the color green and from there all the way to all the trees in the background. Making connections isn’t the only thing Atwood seems to be trying to accomplish by writing this poem. She also appears to be describing to us how we all know basic words yet the world is far more complex‚ yet at the same time it relies on those basics. Atwood achieves this with a lot of the use of color. She describes in the second verse how the world contains nine colors‚ but then later implies that
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It becomes evident that citing Atwood’s novel provides a distinct explanation of how the dystopian society uses women – not men – as the commodity. It seems as though Atwood tries to challenge the reader’s acceptance of the social constructivism implied in the novel. Offred‚ together with other handmaids‚ where used by the elite society as conceiving vessels but they are not given the equal treatment of getting married
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Margaret Atwood provides this solution within a form of a metaphor‚ which is used to appeal to the audience and clarify how America should go back to its old ways. Regardless of this solution‚ one current fact remains: that America is much worse now‚ as it was before
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Critical Analysis Essay by Wiegand Maechtlen EN 4903 “Death by Landscape” (1990) By Margaret Atwood Death by Landscape is a short story‚ written by Margaret Atwood in 1990. The Author is a Canadian novelist‚ poet and essayist as well as an environmental activist and feminist with many national and international awards for her writings and activities. She was born in Ottawa‚ Canada and started to write when she was six years old. At the age of 16 she already knew that she wants to become a professional
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We also see this in stories‚ specifically‚ ones told in the first person where the narrator tells a story from their point of view and inject their own personal biases in the process often leaving the audience pondering what the truth is. Margaret Atwood addresses the issues of different perspectives telling different stories that are brought up by Homer’s Odyssey in The Penelopiad. The book illustrates just how different the same story can be told from different perspectives and the issues it may
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