"Hairball by atwood" Essays and Research Papers

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    grief in the word “weeping”. These images are focused around a seemingly fertile garden; Atwood suggests here that Serena is mourning her lack of fertility. We also see that the tulips of the garden are described as being “red” and “a darker crimson” bearing similarities to being “cut” and starting to “heal”. The reader experiences imagery of bleeding and pain linked to the image of the fertile flower. Atwood suggests here that the sight of fertility in Serena’s garden is painful and that she is

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    Rhetorical Analysis

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    entertaining and casual manner whilst integrating the topical themes of feminism and the role of literature reflecting reality. The image of the famous American wartime propaganda poster with me today provides a visual representation and support of Atwoods speech as it was later used to promote feminism in the 1980s. The woman in the poster ‘Rosie the Riveter’ breaks gender stereotypes by wearing manual work wear which is then supported by the caption ‘we can do it’ inspiring freedom from oppression

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    Canadian literature is but a small part of the literature that is in bookstores across the globe. Students in Ontario‚ Canada should study Canadian literature because students need to focus on their own Canadian culture despite being surrounded by other cultures‚ it is also important to promote and establish a foundation for writers across Canada in order to encourage young writers. Students across Ontario take English as a compulsory course during their high school career. It is important that

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    Figurative Language

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    In the poem “Death of a Young Son by Drowning‚” Margaret Atwood uses different uses of figurative language to explain the pain of losing a child. The speaker of the poem has recently lost a child to drowning. The pain of losing a child is uncomparable to anything in the world‚ and Margaret Atwood uses the title‚ tone‚ language and structure to describe the pain. The author uses different similes and metaphors to describe her son’s recent death. The title of the poem is essential as it sets the tone

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    Cited: Atwood‚ Margaret. “The Handmaid’s Tale”. USA: Seal Books‚ 1985. Hopkinson‚ nalo. “A Habit of Waste.” In Making a Difference. 2nd edition. Ed. Smaro Kamboureli. Toronto: Oxford‚ 2007. 362-372. Poladian‚ Charles. “Steubenville’s Former NAACP President Says

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    The City Planners

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    THE CITY PLANNERS By Margaret Atwood Background Born in Canada in 1939‚ Margaret Atwood is an author‚ poet‚ critic‚ and essayist‚ feminist and social campaigner. Best known as a novelist‚ she is also an award-winning poetess. "The City-Planners” is critical of the monotony and false beauty of modern cities‚ suburbs and its architecture. The poem views modern life as empty‚ artificial‚ and its inhabitants as robotic and lacking in spirit. Analysis i. Main Subject The main theme is the poet’s

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    Early stages include nyctalopia and tunnel vision (Bessant et al‚ n.d.). Advance stages comprise of complete loss of the central vision. As per Atwood and Finlay (1994) Retinitis Pigmentosa‚ RP‚ can be detected at different ages‚ ranging from birth to early adulthood. The latter incidence usually has more severe affects and reaches the advance stage where the patient experiences complete loss of

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    good vs. evil. Whether it’s the innocent Hansel and Gretel vs. the evil cannibalistic witch; authors tended to paint the line separating the two through their uses of certain writing tools. The point Atwood attempts to drive into the reader is women’s naivety and overall downplay of rape. Margaret Atwood‚ author of Rape Fantasies‚ relies heavily on Irony and Characterization to get her point across. In the story Estelle‚ the narrator and main character‚ shares her rape fantasies along . In all of them

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    sentence‚ where as the last line finishing off the sentence of the 8th stanza. The first line compares the landlady to an animal‚ a mean dangerous one‚ as the landlady is said to have a "lair"‚ and the last line makes reference to animal‚ as well‚ as Atwood uses the word "bacon". After the first stanza‚ or line‚ there is one three-line stanza‚ followed by a four-line stanza‚ then a five-line stanza‚ but then cuts back down to a four-line stanza‚ jumping to a six-line stanza‚ repeating a six-line stanza

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    warning designed by an author‚ built from issues of the present. Some of the most famous novels of all time are from a dystopian viewpoint; take War of the Worlds by H.G Wells for example. The texts I have examined are The Handmaids Tale‚ by Margaret Atwood and Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes. The power and impact on the reader on these text lies within its dystopian setting and therefore its ability to warn for the future‚ but are these predictions believable‚ and if so‚ do people really take these

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