Year 12 Literature SAC Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll The play "Summer Of The Seventeenth Doll" is a mixture of people’s inability to grow up and let go of dreams‚ in a typical Australian atmosphere in the nineteen fifties. Ray Lawler focuses on showing the characters finally waking up to their lives and realizing they don’t live in "heaven‚ " within in a simple plot. These techniques allow readers to connect and understand the disillusionment suffered by these Australian’s in this time. Our
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What is the “spiritual reassessment or moral reconciliation” evident in the ending of The Doll’s House? British novelist Fay Weldon suggests‚ “The writers‚ I do believe‚ who get the best and most lasting response from their readers are the writers who offer a happy ending through moral development.” By this she means that the character or characters reassess their background or decisions to be able to move on such as being out casted but by that they gain confidence in themselves or losing a loved
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The Role of Irony in "Everyman" The desire for wealth and prosperity is what drives many in this world‚ but is that truly the best motivation? In the play Everyman‚ irony is used to promote the idea that materialistic things are pointless and the only truly valuable thing is the goodness of a person’s deeds. When the time comes to leave this life‚ nothing but good deeds will follow over into the afterlife. Wealth and friends will not be able to help a person once they die. Help will come only
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InArt 005 28 November 2013 Guys and Dolls The show Guys and Dolls took place at the Playhouse Theatre on Friday‚ November the 8th at 7:30 PM. This show is a musical based mostly on lots of songs and toe-tapping dance. It is a story about love‚ romance‚ and much more. Overall‚ the show was simply great. Three reasons why the show was great was because of the cool background‚ a real band playing the music‚ and the moving props. Because of not only these three things but also many other little things
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The lamp in Katherine Mansfield’s "The Doll’s House" and the monkey in Liliana Heker’s "The Stolen Party" illuminate the common theme by showing children in the middle of learning a harsh reality about the world they live in. The young main characters‚ Kezia Burnell in "The Doll’s House"‚ and Rosaura in "The Stolen Party"‚ live in a society where classism is common. They are both naïve though‚ to the fact that classism exists and that people are seriously affected by it. The lamp and the monkey are
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Spielberg brought these questions to the forefronts of the minds of millions of people. Through their combined works of 1984 and A.I. they present the question of humanity and our ability to love with the use of imagery‚ symbolism‚ and situational irony. George Orwell’s depiction of Party members as animalistic‚ subhuman creatures paints a chilling portrait of our regression back to simple primates. Throughout 1984 a society where individual thought and emotions are smothered and annihilated to
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Nora has not always been a feminist; it is throughout the play A Doll’s House that she changes the way she reacts when interacting with others. She is introduced as a subordinate‚ submissive woman who tends to allow others to walk all over her. These "doormat" characteristics are especially prevalent beginning in Act I‚ where Nora keeps to herself and is used as a puppet by Torvald. For example‚ Nora states‚ "Yes‚ yes‚ as you wish‚ Torvald‚" in response to her husband’s orders (Ibsen‚ 111). As a
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In the story‚ “A Haunted House” by Virginia Woolf‚ a seemingly haunting‚ but wonderful story is told about a ghostly couple that is seeking out something they had “lost” in their old home from many years ago that another couple lives in now. The ghostly couple spends the night in this house searching high and low for a specific something that they cannot exactly put their finger on. As they search though the house‚ they relive some nostalgic moments that they had in the times they lived there and
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8476383 August 23 2012 Word Count: 1‚313 Henrik Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” Analysis Henrik Ibsen’s‚ A Doll’s House‚ was written in the late 19th century as a form of rebellious acts. At the time he lived in Rome and Amalfi‚ Italy living through the European revolution. Through this a “new modern perspective” was coming alive and Ibsen challenged the norms and traditions of a typical marriage‚ family and lifestyle. In‚ A Doll’s House‚ the idea of a realistic family living in a realistic life is being
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what is perfect. Too many woman try to fit this ideal of what we should be based on media and society in an imperfect world. Marge Piercy is criticizing this in her poem “Barbie doll”. The poem shows how ridiculous it is the way we try to conform to what society’s ideals are for the perfect woman. “And presented dolls that did pee-pee/ miniature GE stoves and irons/ and wee lipsticks the color of cherry candy” (2-4). These are all traditional toys for girls but also things that have an influence
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