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    Wild Life

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    INTRODUCTION The wild life laws have a long history and is the culminative result of an increasing awareness of the compelling need to restore the catastrophic ecological imbalances introduced by the depridations inflicted on nature by human being. The earliest codified law can be traced to 3rd Centuary B.C. when Ashoka‚ the King of Maghadha‚ enacted a law in the matter of preservation of wild life and environment. But‚ the first codified law in India which heralded the era of laws for the wild life and

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    Chris McCandless from Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer experienced a new idea of life from venturing off into the Stampede Trail. Growing up‚ Chris’ personality drove him to make decisions through his childhood and his young adult years. He knew at a young age that he had different goals than what his parents had hoped. "You had to learn to walk by yourself. There was no one around‚ neither family nor people whose judgment you respected. At such a time you felt the need of committing yourself to something

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    The Look Alikes “Knowing others is wisdom‚ knowing yourself is Enlightenment‚” said by Lao Tzu. The movie Into The Wild directed by Sean Penn and written by Jon Krakauer‚ takes the reader on a journey through Christopher McCandless journey through the wild. The book Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse is about a young man named Siddhartha leaving his life behind and starting a journey that gives his life enlightenment and meaning. The two main characters both went out to find their true destiny and get away

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    In his book‚ Into Thin Air‚ Krakauer describes climbing to the summit of Mount Everest as a ’breathtaking experience’. The thinning of oxygen is just one of the many perilous events that unfolds while the climbing of this monster of a mountain. There are illnesses that one can get while descending too high too quickly‚ and limbs to be lost to the freezing cold. Worse‚ one could inevitably come to their own death by falling into a crevasse or for loss of air supply. There is no doubt that climbing

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    Political Sins of Jon Stewart”‚ believe that Jon Stewart and his use of cynicism are harmful to Democracy. Conversely‚ Robert Harriman who wrote “In Defense of Jon Stewart” concedes that Jon Stewart is a cynic “for [the purpose] of coming to the key point of judgment” (274) although he considers Jon Stewart a helpful defender of democracy rather than a harmful offender. Similarly‚ Lisa Colletta the author of “Political Satire and Postmodern Irony in the Age of Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart” feels

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    today are Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer and The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Both these books share three valuable comparisons. One being that both protagonists go on a self-evolving and physical journey‚ another that both the fathers in the novel share demanding relationships with their sons‚ and the lessons that both boys learned. A journey does not have to be simply walking through the woods. It can actually be a person going through an internal transformation. In Into the Wild and The Road Chris

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    Home What is your definition of a home? In today’s society‚ some people would say a home is a place where you experience happiness. In the novel‚ Into the Wild‚ by Jon Krakauer‚ 24-year-old adventurer Chris McCandless decides to leave his family and travel to Alaska in order to experience happiness‚ however‚ he dies at the end due to the harsh Alaskan weather. Before Chris died‚ he was trying to search for his true self and look for a home‚ but‚ Chris struggled and never found a home in his life

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    Money is the priority. However‚ all the money in the world can’t make you prosper‚ but it’s the experience you’ve been through that makes you prosperous. Jon Krakauer in Into the Wild‚ he wrote about Christopher McCandless‚ an upper-class kid that donated all his money to charity‚ burned the cash in his wallet‚ abandoned his car‚ and hitchhiked to Alaska. McCandless embarked on a new life outside of society‚ seeking

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    Importance of Chris’s Journey The bus in “Into the Wild” is a very important symbol in the novel. The bus in “Into the Wild” is a very important symbol in this novel because it shows how nature was cruel to Chris. The bus also showed how nature is a relentless part of the world. It also shows us how we as humans can be disposable. The bus in “Into the Wild” shows how nature is cruel. For example‚ the author states‚ “S.O.S. I NEED YOUR HELP. I AM INJURED‚ NEAR DEATH‚ AND TOO WEAK TO HIKE OUT

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    The Wild Children

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    Wild Children In the beginning of the 1920’s‚ Russia was controlled by a communist era. Everyone struggled to survive in a country they have considered their own. Parents were taken away‚ children were stolen from homes. Everyone was oppressed from the right to live freely. Felice Holman‚ author of the book the Wild Children centers her book on how the children of Russia in the 1920’s sought refuge to survive and pushed through the limitation of childhood caused by societal revolution especially

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