Tuesday 12th February 2013 Controlled Assessment 3 Of Mice And Men- How Does Steinbeck Show Loneliness In ‘Of Mice And Men’ John Steinbeck shows loneliness in ‘of Mice and Men’ because in 1929‚ there was an event called the Great Depression which was set in America‚ when the dollars lost its value. Many people lost their jobs and people were unemployed. In addition to this‚ Farm workers had to travel around the country combing the countryside for a job. People were not able
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Question: How does Frayn present Stephen and Keith’s relationship at the start of the novel? Through analysis of Michael Frayn’s 2002 novel‚ Spies‚ Stephen and Keith’s relationship plays a large factor within the plot of the novel‚ this is seen especially at the beginning. Frayn manages to represent this relationship in numerous ways that give different meanings depending upon what the context is. One such representation is adult Stephen’s perception of the relationship they had and
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family. Seeing as how Hamlet has no mention of other siblings it is easy to assume that he grew up alone around private scholastic teachers and other authority figures. As Allan Massie puts it‚ " Hamlet can be played as an indecisive and self-questioning Romantic intellectual (the Gielgud interpretation)‚ or as a mixed-up kid‚ immature‚ uncertain of himself‚ veering from self-love to self-loathing by way of self-pity." This description of Hamlet is a general description of how he is portrayed in
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How does Steinbeck create atmosphere in the lead up to the fight between Lennie and Curley? The fight is a pivotal moment in the novella’s plot and it brings out the emotions of many of the ranch hands and lets us examine closely the relationships between certain characters. Steinbeck uses carefully planned linguistic techniques to create an atmosphere of tension and drama before the event‚ adding to the foreboding throughout the first two chapters that something bad will happen between Curley
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How does Fitzgerald present identity in ‘The Great Gatsby’ Use ‘The Bluest Eye’ to illuminate your answer. ‘The Great Gatsby’ by F.Scott Fitzgerald is set in America before the Great Depression‚ and focuses on the aristocrats of “West and East Egg”; Fitzgerald explores identity through the characters and their greed for money‚ the search of love and the unachievable American dream. The novel is named after a young man who in by pursuing the love of his life loses his identity. ‘The Bluest Eye’
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“The most iconic characters in literature are alienated by the changing world around them.” Discuss these ideas in relation to The Great Gatsby and Nineteen Eighty-Four. In ‘The Great Gatsby‚’ Fitzgerald frequently demonstrates how isolated his strongest characters are by the world around them through a variety of techniques. Both Nick and Gatsby are presented as being alienated from the world in some way and‚ as suggested by William Troy‚ both characters represent two forces in Fitzgerald’s own
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How does Shakespeare present Iago’s manipulation of Othello? Shakespeare uses a number of techniques to express the manipulaton of Iago in this scene. He lies to Othello in a barefaced manner‚ as we know from earlier context‚ in which we see Iago slandering Othello to his friend Roderigo‚ in the first scene of the book‚ showing that from the outset Iago has been against Othello‚ and this facade of trying to “help him out” immediately tells us he is not to be trusted. From what we have already
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of a certain generation. A great example of this is shown through Harry‚ the protagonist of Ernest Hemingway’s The Snows of Kilimanjaro where we are presented with a character who yearns to be remembered by writing about some of things he has had to live though. However‚ while on his death bed‚ Harry realizes he never got a chance to write all the stories that
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suggests‚ through the characters and events of this novel that acting civilised is a custom that is adopted by society‚ however he also suggests that civilisation itself may not be as strong as some would like to think. At first‚ we see Golding present civilisation as something that binds all the boys to a sense of right and wrong. In chapter one the first thing Ralph and Piggy suggest is "we should have a meeting". That this comes to Ralph so instinctively suggests that they are used to a world
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In The Collector by John Fowles‚ Obsession plays the key role in both characters‚ Clegg and Miranda. One can see that obsession is present in Clegg’s point of view as he stalks Miranda around London. Miranda’s obsession is found in her diary about a man she loves. Both obsessions between Clegg and Miranda differ significantly. At the beginning of The Collector‚ the reader is introduced to Clegg as he is watching over Miranda in the Town Hall Annexe‚ where he works. Days that Clegg worked he would
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