"Mississippi" Essays and Research Papers

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    “Two Ways of Viewing the River” by Mark Twain: Response Paper “Two Ways of Viewing the River” is a short excerpt from Mark Twain’s autobiography that compares and contrasts Twain’s point of view as a Mississippi River boat pilot. In my opinion these few paragraphs are pitch perfect as well as technically masterful. The descriptive details in paragraph 1 were especially impressive. However‚ I’m also struck by how universal this essay is a metaphor for everyday life. It is‚ in a sense‚ a comment

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    all the way from October‚ 1862. One of his attempts included one on January 2‚ 1863 where his men marched from the Yazoo River to the Mississippi River. Grant decided he would need assistant generals‚ so he brought with him McClerland‚ McPherson‚ and Sherman‚ who also had planned to invade Vicksburg. Originally‚ the plan had been to attack from Rodney‚ Mississippi‚ but a local changed his mind‚ so they attacked from Bruinsburg. Smaller battles were on May 17‚ and May 19. On May 19‚ Union forces were

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    1837 helping speed farming across the Midwest. Due to increasing size of the United States‚ communication networks became very important. In 1844‚ Samuel F. B. Morse created the telegraph and by 1860‚ this ranged throughout the east coast to the Mississippi. Railroads became very important to the trade throughout the United States. By the start of the Civil War‚ railroads linked the most important Mid-West cities with the Atlantic coast. Railroads eventually opened the west and connected raw materials

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    Mark Twain

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    Twains books were really telling the story of his childhood. Huckleberry Finn was one of them‚ it was a story about a boy who had helped a African American get away from the south. When Twain was younger he learned how to sail by traveling up the Mississippi River. That is how Huck Finn helped Tom Sawyer escape slavery. Levy suggests that Mark Twain was a “remarkable writer.” His evidence supports his view‚ he stated “He wrote these

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    of the Mississippi… I was powerful glad to get away from the feuds… we said there warn’t no home like a raft‚ after all. Other places seem so cramped up and smothery‚ but a raft don’t. You feel mighty free and easy and comfortable on a raft." (128) Twain‚ Mark. _The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn._ New York: Penguin Books‚ 2003. Print. FUNCTION: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is about a young boy who runs away from his hometown and society and decides to travel down the Mississippi River with

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    literature. Good literature consists of meaningful symbolism‚ clever satire‚ and a dynamic character. Throughout the novel‚ Huck and Jim journey down the Mississippi River. Huck uses the river to avoid his drunken father and becoming civilized while Jim is escaping to the northern states to avoid being sold off to New Orleans. The Mississippi river comes to symbolize freedom‚ specifically the freedom in the South. When Huck and Jim are floating down the river in the raft‚ they become free and happy;

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    The autobiography “Coming of Age in Mississippi‚” by Anne Moody is the story of her life as a poor black girl growing into adulthood. Moody chose to start at the beginning - when she was four-years-old‚ the child of poor sharecroppers working for a white farmer. In telling the story of her life‚ Moody shows why the civil rights movement was such a necessity‚ she joined the NAACP to be a rebel‚ an also showed the depth of the injustices they suffered. In her story‚ Anne talked about how whites

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    this‚ they refused to leave and they also blocked the Mississippi River (Document F). This shows that the government was so weak that they choose not to even act upon this incident. (Document F)The Spanish refused to let the Americans use the Mississippi River for trade‚ even though they had agreed on it in the Treaty of Paris of 1783. This showed lack of enforcement because in the Treaty of Paris‚ 1783 it clearly stated that the Mississippi River would be open to everyone’s use. This caused the

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    Louisiana Coastal Wetlands: Restore or Retreat Imagine returning to your Hometown 30 to 40 years from now to find it completely replaced by wetlands. This is the reality that many Louisiana natives living along the coastline of the Gulf of Mexico will have to face if coastal erosion continues at the pace it is going. Costello proclaims‚ “Since 1932‚ when the Department of Natural Resources began keeping thorough‚ accurate records‚ Louisiana has lost over 1‚900 square miles or 1.2 million acres of

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    that Huck Finn and Jim can find freedom all along the banks of the Mississippi River.  Huck portrays the unwilling hero because he puts a lot of thought into something before he does it‚ even though it will benefit everybody.  He is also very hesitant to perform heroic acts.  The King and Duke show the archetype of the shape shifter because they are constantly lying about their identities and deceiving everybody.  The Mississippi represents the characters “haven”‚ and Huck and Jim’s home represents

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