Management BITS Pilani Department of Management BITS Pilani | Li Ning- Anything is possible | Case study analysis report | | | 1/24/2013 | | Submitted To: Dr. R. Raghunathan Department of Management BITS‚ Pilani Submitted To: Dr. R. Raghunathan Department of Management BITS‚ Pilani Submitted By: Name: MANJU ID: 2012H149239P Submitted By: Name: MANJU ID: 2012H149239P INTRODUCTION Li Ning established in 1990 was one of the leading sporting goods company
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Hurricane Dancers is primarily poetic fiction. For example‚ Bernardino de Talavera‚ the pirate who captures Quebrado‚ Ojeda‚ and other slaves‚ says “I offered the illusion of mercy/and Ojeda was desperate enough/to believe me.” (10) The author portrays Ojeda as an assassin killing for glory. But Ojeda seems weak in Talavera’s flashback‚ falling for his “fake mercy”. If the author kept Ojeda’s killer trait‚ Ojeda wouldn’t have certainly fallen for Talavera’s lie. But instead‚ Ojeda does fall for his
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Point of view and narrative mode in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s "The Yellow Wallpaper" supports and conveys the theme of sanity versus insanity in a number of ways. In her capturing of the authority of narration‚ Gilman leaves the reader questioning the narrator’s reliability. Her repeated use of self-reflexivity and the stream of conscious mode allow the reader to know in what way we are meant to comprehend the events of the story. Finally‚ the reader is bombarded by signs of the narrator’s descent
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Big Daddy- Marxist Point of View In the movie Big Daddy you can see that a theme that is presented is a Marxist one. This theme is hidden and represented in a two way form. The idea that Julian had been “adopted” by Sunny as his kid and that he can’t do things by himself is the whole Marxist concept. What supports this is the fact that Julian can’t cross the street without holding his hand‚ he needs Sunny to urinate with him‚ otherwise he can’t‚ and also that he needs to have a book read before
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Second Person Point of View in How to Become a Writer Lorrie Moore’s short story “How to Become a Writer” is a second person point of view short story; this point of view helps writer to develop the theme‚ in this story‚ which is‚ as you choose to become a writer‚ you will probably be isolated from the world. Second person point of view makes audience feel they are not only reading the stories but also being there and witnessing it. In the story‚ when Lorrie Moore shows her mom her writing
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In his book‚ “The Great Gatsby”‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald presents his own point of view about the American society in the 1920’s. He believes that people in the East coast lost their values and lost the American dream. He makes Nick Carraway an intelligent young man who isn’t fast to judge‚ is educated‚ who more or less has moïral value‚ and who is also looking. From this point of view we are able to judge other characters and see what F.Scott Fitzgerald thinks about this time in history. From
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In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s "Young Goodman Brown‚" the story is told from a limited omniscient third-person narrator point of view. Limited omniscient third-person narrator means that the focal point of the story is limited to one character. This technique works well with the story because it allows the narrator to portray what Goodman Brown is doing‚ and also allows him to assess and remark on Goodman Brown’s doings throughout the story. Sometimes this method is used to convey the beliefs of the author
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Point of view is the perspective or view from which a writer narrates a story. The reader’s understanding of a story all depend on the narrator’s opinions‚ personal judgment‚ and expression. Point of view can be in the form of first person narrative‚ second person narrative or third person narrative. Point of view raises questions about the narrator’s intent and motive. Why does the narrator present the reader with some information and leave out some details? Regardless the view the narrator
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Contracts – MacDougall 2010-2011 Sara Li FORMATION Offer & Acceptance Offer & Invitation to Treat Mere puffs Invitation to Treat Offer Mere puff: no reasonable person would take it as an offer Can the terms of the K (ie offer) only come from one party? * Battle of the forms - last shot/first blow? (Denning in Butler Machine Tool v Ex-Cell-O Corp) * Strict offer & acceptance is reaffirmed in Gibson v Manchester City Council [1979] - only extreme cases might not
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Point of View and Plot Development Third person omniscient point of view through Grenouille of passages in Perfume assist in the development of a plot for dramatic irony and also help to build tension in the plot. Grenouille says that his life will have no meaning without the girl’s (from the rue de marais) scent‚ so he kills her to get it‚ and finally feels happiness for the first time in his life. Diction that supports this is “no meaning”‚ “never”‚ and “happiness”. This passage builds tension
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