"Margaret Thatcher" Essays and Research Papers

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    George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty Four and Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaids Tale are both novels in which the state‚ namely Oceania and Gilead‚ attempts to exert totalitarian control over the lives of its peoples. Through Orwell and Atwood’s subsequent portrayal on the ensuing dystopias we are clearly able to see the respective states desire to control love and emotion‚ which are considered undesirable distractions‚ as a means of achieving the totalitarian control that they so desire. It is thus in

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    Oppressed Rights by the Oppressive Regime in Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale delves well into the horrid nature of extreme control and immoral limitations in defining the corrupt theocratic government at large‚ and more specifically the effect this control has on the society’s women. In an age in which a newly emerged and merciless governmental system called the Republic of Gilead has “put life back to the middle ages‚” sparked by a widespread panic of infertility

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    Maya Angelou once said‚ “Freedom is never free.” This is true because a person always has to pay some sort of price in order to be free‚ whether in a literal sense or not. In the book Among the Hidden‚ by Margaret Peterson Haddix‚ Luke Garner is an illegal third child in a place where overpopulation forces the government to make unfair laws. Each family is allowed to have two children‚ so Luke envies his older brothers and cannot live his life the way he wants to. This is similar to in “Two Sisters

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    Have you ever felt out of place‚ even in your own home? Maybe you’re adopted‚ or feel like you aren’t appreciated. Maybe you’re just nothing like your parents and siblings. In Margaret Peterson Haddix’s The Missing: Revealed‚ Jonah and the readers learn that family isn’t always who you’re related to‚ but that it’s really who cares about you. This is taught through the story of Jonah‚ a kid stolen from the past and adopted by a family in the 21st century. Jonah must travel through time to save his

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    Anup Kumar Dey Assistant Professor Department of English Assam University‚ Diphu Campus Diphu‚ Karbi Anglong‚ Assam‚ India - 782460 deyanup1@gmail.com Woman‚ Land and Nation: An Ecocritical Reading of Margaret Atwood’s Poetry The word "ecocriticism" was probably first used in William Rueckert’s essay "Literature and Ecology: An Experiment in Ecocriticism" (1978) and was subsequently accepted in critical vocabulary when Cheryll Glotfelty‚ at that time a graduate student at Cornell‚ revived

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    Cora H. English III Honors 4 April 2013 WWOD: What Would Offred Do? How far would someone go to protect their rights? What is considered passive behavior during the fall of the free world? Would someone risk their life to defend freedom? Margaret Atwood raises these questions and many more in her novel The Handmaid’s Tale. She uses the character Offred to demonstrate passive behavior and acceptance of a totalitarian regime after the fall of the United States. In the new Republic of Gilead‚ Offred

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    Margaret Mead and Mary Catherine Bateson: Like Mother‚ Like Daughter? A Research Paper Presented to Dr. William Reckmeyer In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for 100W by Ashley Goularte December 15‚ 2010 Introduction Margaret Mead and Mary Catherine Bateson are not household names‚ but to anthropologists and other academics these two women have helped advance and shape the world of Anthropology. In the early 20th century‚ Margaret Mead was a part of small but influential

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    Margaret Atwood’s Novel thoroughly depicts feminist and government control issues. Atwood’s intent is to warn society about the dangers surrounding such issues in order to prevent a world like Gilead. Gilead is an anti-feminist society in which women have been oppressed for the sole reason of reproduction necessities and for the infertile women‚ they also have been deprived from any vocal expression or any textual knowledge in order to maintain power within the males and the regime; women are deprived

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    The Narrator’s Abortion Started the Process of her Mental Transformation Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing is a novel about a woman who seeks redemption because of having her baby aborted. Her name is never revealed what denotes a serious problem in her identity. She has lost all the human characteristics such as the ability to feel (Atwood 22)‚ love (Atwood 36)‚ dream (Atwood 37) or weep (Atwood 166). She has to go through both physical but mainly mental transformation to realize and find her real

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    counter his authority. When Senator Margaret Chase Smith spoke out against McCarthy’s actions on the Senate floor‚ she became the first Republican to openly criticize McCarthy. Although opposing McCarthy’s political crusade could have put here career to an end as she could have been McCarthy’s next targeted victim‚ her actions resulted in her emergence as a “woman of national importance.” Similar to the Senators appreciated in John F. Kennedy’s Profiles In Courage‚ Margaret Chase Smith adhered to her “independent

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