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    The Cycle of life One of John Cheever’s most critical short fiction of the 20th century‚ “The Swimmer‚” details the adventurous journey of Neddy Merrill as he swims his way across multiple pools in the county where he lives in order to back get home. The pools that make up what Neddy has named "the river Lucinda" create a very strict order for Neddy as he progresses in his journey home‚ this symbolizes a crucial point in time of Neddy’s life. He appears to have a perfect life on the surface with

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    Who Is Miss Brill?

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    In the short story “Miss Brill”‚ Katherine Mansfield narrates the protagonist’s activities on a typical Sunday. The protagonist‚ Miss Brill‚ spends the day at a park‚ observing and eavesdropping on the lives of others. In the story‚ the narrator describes Miss Brill’s observations and descriptions of other characters‚ the band‚ and the world surrounding her to indirectly reveal her personality. At the park‚ Miss Brill witnesses many events that reflect on her life‚ and realizes the fictional reality

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    Raymond Carver’s "Popular Mechanics" is a Post-Modern story that is also categorized as Dirty Realism. This story gives readers a glimpse into the life of a contemporary couple; It is a vision that is once disheartening and‚ perhaps‚ disturbingly realistic. "Popular Mechanics" can be read as exhibiting the Post-Modern attribute of hopelessness. Through his revision of myth‚ specifically through his adaptation of a parable from the Bible‚ Carver is showing readers that love has become selfish instead

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    A Cup Of Tea

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    A Cup of Tea by Katherine Mansfield The fragment analysis is taken from the short story “A cup of tea”. It is written by one of the New Zealand most well-known short story writer Katherine Mansfield. It’s my first reading experience with this author‚ but it’s lucky one. On the other hand‚ it’s difficult to understand author’s language. Therefore‚ I read this short story twice. To be honest‚ when I read the story‚ I thought “how absurd this is‚ how she can write uninteresting

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    Ryan Collins ENG 102 Section N02 February 10‚ 2014 An Interpretation of Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” tells the story in first person narration‚ of a man that at first when confronted with the notion of his wife’s blind friend Robert visiting them at their home‚ is hung up on the fact that he is blind and cannot really relate to that concept. The narrator’s wife became acquainted with Robert prior to her first marriage‚ which failed due to her then husband’s military

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    Mrs Brill's Suffering

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    Mansfield develops the character of Mrs. Brill as delusional and lighthearted initially. Miss Brill decides to take her fur out and she repeatedly strokes the fur calling it her “dear little thing.” Mansfield personifies the fur‚ bringing it to life‚ because to Mrs. Brill the fur remains her life. The reader can recognize Mrs. Brill’s possible loneliness because of the importance she places on the fur. When Mrs. Brill arrives at her regular destination‚ the park‚ she notices “two people [sharing]

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    In the novella the Death of Ivan Illych Tolstoy states the life of Ivan Illych is “most simple and most ordinary and therefore most terrible” and in order to make sense of this statement in the context of the story the author portrays Ivan as a common‚ unassuming conformist that is more concerned with meeting society’s standards than making his own choices. In his development of Ivan’s character combined with analysis of his life choices‚ Tolstoy criticizes a very shallow‚ materialistic society

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    Disjunction vs. Communion in Raymond Carver ’s Short Stories Raymond Carver‚ poet‚ essayist‚ and short story writer‚ was very different from some other writers in that he clipped his writing until only the essential remained. " Carver not only acknowledged the effect that fiction could have on readers‚ he proclaimed that it should affect readers."( Bonetti 58) Thus‚ when Carver writes about intimate relationships‚ the reader perceives the stories as more than entertainment or skillful

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    Comments on My Oedipus Complex Michael O’Donovan was of Irish blood‚ and in the Irish culture‚ it was common to have a stronger bond with the mother than the father. Michael O’ Donovan’s life is the epitome of this statement. In fact‚ O’Donovan had a great hatred for his father‚ and it was only suppressed because it enraged his mother. His pen name was O’Connor particularly because O’Connor was her mother’s maiden name (Minnie O’Connor). Furthermore‚ many have speculated that Frank’s bond with

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    The opening passage in Katherine Mansfield’s short story "A Cup of Tea" introduces the protagonist in a manner that will serve to underscore the importance of irony to the tale. What is easy to miss in this deceptively pedestrian opening is the invitation to the reader to become part of the storytelling process through an unexpected interrelation with the implied reader: "no‚ you couldn’t have called her beautiful." Not much later‚ the reader is again made complicit in the telling of Rosemary Fell’s

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