Tolerance‚ inclusion‚ diversity; the main topics of our creative project that will form an illustrated children’s book. Written by Emily Hardy‚ Cindy Kim‚ Karina Corral-Rodriguez and myself with illustrations done by Emily and publishing done by Shutterfly. The target audience is elementary kids approximately 6 to 10 years old. We chose this age because it’s the age that children are more receptive towards others people attitudes about themselves and others. We are hoping to have the storyboard drawn
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Thatcher: Old Workman: the thatcher described from outside the mason speaks for himself Heaney accents strangeness and skill Hardy emphasises endurance Although methodical‚ there is a touch of the magical to the thatcher. We appreciate the mason’s humanity and kindness‚ rather than his skill. Similarities and differences in the poets’ attitudes and the candidates’ personal preference: What each poem is about: Thatcher • A description of a local workman: his manner‚ equipment
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Ordinary Wolves by Seth Kantner is told from the eyes of a ten year old boy living away from civilization in the winter of 1978. Cutuk Hawcly has blonde hair and blue eyes which makes him stand out in Alaska where most natives have dark skin. Because of his different appearance he has to try and prove that he is as nätive as the people in the village. Cutuk ends up getting beat up by some boys in the village. Afterward a lady shouted‚ "Hey‚ what you try let them boys do? Don’t always pick fight"(52
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on the Ways Hardy Presents a Sense of Loss in “Your Last Drive” The sudden loss of a loved one can reveal that a seemingly intimate‚ idyllic relationship can in fact be complex‚ distant and lifeless. In "Your Last Drive"‚ by Thomas Hardy‚ it is indicated that although there may be no afterlife‚ the dead live on in our memories and through imaginative recreation. Hardy manages to depict these concepts through his intricate control of language. One of the foremost ways in which Hardy expresses his
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How does Hardy present the character of Tess in the first three chapters? Tess is presented as a member of a poor agricultural family. Despite her modest background‚ Tess is portrayed as anything but ‘simple’. Instead‚ Hardy presents her as a young‚ hugely diverse women through a series of paradoxical contradictions. The tragic trajectory of the novel is evident from the introduction of Tess as a victim of her social circumstances and gender. Hardy portrays Tess’s character as pure and innocent
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town. In this novel‚ Thomas Hardy explores the cultural and economic evolution of England during his lifetime‚ and he also explores the unraveling of traditional moral codes in a society marked by increasing levels of industrialization and urbanization. Though Thomas Hardy abandoned Christianity himself during a portion of his lifetime‚ he uses The Mayor of Casterbridge to reveal to readers the decreasing moral and religious standards in the world they lived in. Hardy realizes the potential harm
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understanding of the characters. The method in which an author conveys the setting‚ society‚ and feelings is crucial in the attempt to impart an idea to the readers. In both A Jest of God by Margaret Laurence and Tess of the D’Ubervilles by Thomas Hardy‚ the authors use techniques to convey their own ideas of society through the main characters. In Hardy’s novel‚ we see him use several means to demonstrate the rigours of the society in which both he and Tess lived. Similarly in Laurence’s novel‚ we
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D.H. Lawrence‚ throughout the story teaches that the greed of wanting money leads to insanity and unhappiness by using foreshadowing. In the text it states‚”Two nights before the Derby‚ she was at a big party in town‚ when one of her tushes of anxiety about her boy‚ her first-born‚ gripped her heart till she could hardly speak.” This line of foreshadowing is trying to say that something bad is going to happen to her son. She usually never feels worried about her son while intending these kinds of
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Explore how Hardy so powerfully expresses the theme of resignation in the poem ‘The Pine Planters’ The poem ‘The Pine Planters’ by Thomas Hardy presents the theme of resignation‚ nature and time passing through reflecting upon shock‚ despair‚ resignation and reconciliation. The poem is about Marty South’s unrequited love. It is written as a persona which allows the reader to sympathise with the character. It is a poem of lamentation and has elements of being an elegy‚ as Marty seems to be in
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The author Thomas Hardy lived and wrote in a time of difficult social change‚ when England was making its slow and painful transition from an old-fashioned‚ agricultural nation to a modern‚ industrial one. Businessmen and entrepreneurs‚ or "new money‚" joined the ranks of the social elite‚ as some families of the ancient aristocracy‚ or "old money‚" faded into obscurity. Hardy ’s novel Tess of the d ’Urbervilles clearly illustrates his views on the harsh social changes in his time period‚ which were
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