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    were broken‚ a time known as the Great Awakening. This was such an important time in history‚ it swept the nation‚ and had a big impact on New England. When the Church of England was established as the Reigning Church of the country‚ the Great Awakening was put in motion. Religion became an unchanging routine‚ the people did not feel the connection to god anymore‚ so they began to put emotions into it‚ they spoke to god with their heart and soul. The Great Awakening was this time period of spiritual

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    Humbert's The Awakening

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    His tactic is crystal clear: if the child is too scared to be separated from him‚ she will keep her mouth shut regarding anything that could compromise her (and by extent Humbert). He begins by mentioning that she is an orphan therefore all alone without him which is meant to scare her into not wanting to be abandoned. Moreover‚ the man is appealing to things that she enjoys like clothes and makeup and threatening to have those things removed from her. He is also implying that there is something

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    Mallard's Awakening

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    Kate Chopin’s‚”The Story of an Hour‚” is an ironic and symbolic story as it portrays an innuendo of repression through the example married women. Chopin’s short story begins with Mrs. Mallard becoming lurid as she hears of her husband’s death. Consequently‚ Mrs. Mallard underwent changes from depressed to an elated state of emotion. Chopin displayed Mrs. Mallards’ grievances and attitude towards freedom through her diction. Just as Mrs. Mallard perceived that she gained her freedom‚ news was delivered

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    The Awakening by Kate Chopin exemplifies how characters get caught between colliding cultures that deal with ethnic and institutional issues. The protagonist Edna Pontellier deals with cultural collisions‚ due to their role in the awakening of her desires. This cultural collision happens between the Creole women from New Orleans and Edna’s own accustoms‚ this collision causes Edna to have an epiphany. Edna realizes how different she is from the Creole women and begins to question where she really

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    Lebrun In The Awakening

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    Edna was searching for her purpose while trying desperately to be the leader of her life. She turned away from the responsibility of taking care of her husband and children. She wanted to provide for herself. She eventually moved away from the family home into a home of her own. Edna loved her children but did not want to lose herself along with her needs. One summer she met Robert Lebrun and fell in love. When Robert left for Mexico for work‚ Edna was heartbroken and fell into a depression. She

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    Chopin's The Awakening

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    What started as a solitary leaf dancing in the wind quickly evolved‚ becoming a thunderous beast smashing against the entrance to the dank cellar I found myself in‚ deep in the rolling plains of Poland. The wind conveyed to me a sense of indignation‚ and at the same time‚ isolation. I could feel the wind stinging across my face‚ leaving me shivering and anxious. With a final‚ abrupt roar of the wind‚ I was ripped from my fictitious cellar‚ back into the closed confines of my room in Long Island.

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    Chopin’s The Awakening represents a work whose title can only be fully understood after the incorporation of the themes and content into the reader’s mind‚ which can only be incorporated by reading the novel itself. The title‚ The Awakening‚ paints a vague mental picture for the reader at first and does not fully portray what content the novel will possess. After thorough reading of the novel‚ one can understand that the title represents the main character‚ Edna Pontellier’s‚ sexual awakening and metaphorical

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    In the feminist bildungsroman The Awakening (1899)‚ Kate Chopin highlights the internal struggles of a Victorian woman restricted from achieving artistic‚ financial‚ and sexual freedom due to conventional gender roles and expectations imposed upon her by society. The author explores the journey of Edna Pontellier‚ a dissatisfied Protestant wife living in the Creole society of late - nineteenth century New Orleans. The protagonist is on a quest to reclaim independence and unity with herself. Along

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    Dream” was in the minds of many Americans. The novel Great Gatsby‚ the American Dream has been portrayed as corrupt or wrong way to live as opposed to the pure and honest way. In the 1920’s‚ the idea that the American Dream is about wealth and possessions have somehow leaked into people’s brains. As a result of this dream‚ The Great Gatsby and the other characters got so immersed in trying to live this dream that they ended up suffering Great Tragedies. In the time of the 1920’s‚ American’s outlook

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    Awakenings Personal Essay

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    Personal Essay June 6th 2014 Topic Question: How is the human spirit more powerful than any drug? Awakenings The movie Awakenings portrays the true story of a doctor named Dr. Malcolm Sayer‚ and the events of the summer of 1969 at a psychiatric hospital in Brooklyn New York. Dr. Sayer is a research physician he’s never worked with people before; Sayer’s carrier has been dealing with plants and some insects. Dr. Sayer is confronted with a large number of patients once he accepts the job

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