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    Jungle Juice Monologue

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    Jungle Juice “You heard Morgan might get suspended? She’s been in the principal’s office all day” says Marcus. “Marcus could you slide me one of the chocolate milks?” says Sam as he sits down with a tray of cheese pizza‚ fries‚ and an apple. “Yeah I gotta tell you this crazy story of what happened at her party last night.” Marcus sits down on the opposite end of the lunch table and gives Sam chocolate milk. “Those fries are so stale I don’t know why you eat them.” “I just use them to pick my teeth”

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    still. Sensing our fear‚ the cobra raised its head as a sign of attack. It was Tom who was attacked. He was groaning in pain while the cobra quickly glided away. Time is the essence. We had to carry Tom to a doctor and as we were in the deep of the jungle we knew that we had to move fast. Finally‚ we reached our motorcycles and without a word/ without any

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    Into the Jungle Ch.8

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    Into the Jungle Chapter 8: A Sickle-Cell Safari 1) How did Tony Allison’s early life experiences in Kenya prepare him to make the discovery of the sickle cell-malaria link? Tony Allison’s early life experiences in Kenya prepared him to make the discovery of the sickle cell-malaria link because at a young age‚ Tony himself caught malaria. Tony’s experience with the disease led him to change his motivation and goals towards medical school instead of becoming a naturalist or anthropologist. When

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    authors by the name Annie Dillard‚ Mark Twain‚ and Eudora Welty write about how their interaction with nature and how it influences their character and outlook on life. “The visible world turned me curious to books; the books propelled me reeling back to the world. At school I saw searing sight. It turned me to books; it turned me to jelly; it turned me much later‚ I supposed into an early version of a runaway‚ scapegrace.” In source A “An American Childhood” Annie Dillard uses anaphora in the

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    Annie Dillard has been considered a major voice in American literature since she published Pilgrim at Tinker Creek in 1974 and won a Pulitzer Prize. Her reputation has increased steadily if bumpily since then. Scholars and critics have recognized her scope’s widening from the natural world to history‚ metaphysics‚ ever --more narratives‚ and theology until Paul Roberts could say in the Toronto Globe and Mail that the 1999 publication of For the Time Being‚ “places Dillard more firmly than ever among

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    A comparison of life and death as seen by Dillard and Woolf Life and death both have different meaning to each person and that meaning can be greatly influenced by their life experiences. The two authors Annie Dillard and Virginia Woolf both expressed their views of life and death using the same symbol‚ a moth. It is apparent in both essays that the authors hold very different views though‚ in the end the fate of the moth turns out to be the same – death. This essay goes in detail into the meaning

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    Bona 1  Dylan Bona  Period 1 Smith  February 21‚ 2014  AP Lang  Rhetorical Analysis “Death of a Moth”  Annie Dilliard‚ a well­known nature writer‚ in her piece “Death of a Moth” recounts an  experience where she witnesses a moth get caught in the flame of a candle. Dilliard’s purpose  in the passage is to convey the brutality yet beauty of nature through the death of a moth. She  uses similes‚ choice diction regarding colors‚ and adopts a fascinated tone in order to portray  her feelings about nature

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    The Jungle: Book Review

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    The main theme of The Jungle is the evil of capitalism. Every event‚ especially in the first twenty-seven chapters of the book‚ is chosen deliberately to portray a particular failure of capitalism in Sinclair’s view‚ inhuman and violent. The slow total destruction of Jurgis’s immigrant family at the hands of a cruel and unfair economic and social system shows the effect of capitalism on the working class as a whole. As the immigrants‚ who initially possess an idealistic faith in the American Dream

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    Book Review of the Jungle

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    Book Review on The Jungle As in any classic novel‚ there are several themes that contribute to the betterment of the story. However‚ the most prominent seems to be that capitalism is the root of the evils in the world‚ and socialism is the only cure. In my opinion‚ this is an excellent theme‚ because Sinclair truly persuades the reader into the belief that socialism is far superior to capitalism. He creates a sort of propaganda for the cause of socialism. The theme is developed subtly. The author

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    The Jungle Questions 1. Upton Sinclair depicts the lives of Jurgis Rudkus and his family to closely resemble the true lives of the working-class of America during this time period. The word bitter best describes the challenges faced Jurgis’s family. For instance‚ mostly whenever anything happens to Jurgis’s family mostly everything has a negative outlook on their lives. First‚ a large portion of Jurgis’s family has to undergo the cumbersome working conditions Packingtown has to offer. Ona‚ Grandpa

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