you going‚ where have you been?” by Joyce Carol Oats embraces some ideas of existentialism theory‚ popular in the sixtieths of the past century‚ that a person’s true and best qualities reveal during dramatic situations‚ usually during their fighting for life. This story is about a teenage girl‚ whose behavior and a perception of self drastically changes within minutes because of a brutal reality breaking into her life and destroying it. Connie is a protagonist of the story. She is a fifteen year-old
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horrific atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Should the bombs have been used? The answer to that is undoubtedly clear: no. The bombs did more harm than good. The US had conducted “the world’s most devastating military mission”1‚ effects of which are still evident today. World War II was primarily caused by Germany‚ Italy and Japan‚ influenced by fascist revolutions. While Germany and Italy dealt with matters in Europe‚ Japan had plunged itself in a Pacific War with Australia‚ New Zealand‚ Singapore
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Where are you Going‚ Where have you been? Is a short story written by Joyce Carol Oates. The story involves a 15 year old girl named Connie that is rebelling against her mother’s whishes. Connie often rides with her friends to a shopping plaza to hang out and meet other people. One evening while she is out with her friends she leaves with a boy named Eddie. On the way to Eddie’s car she sees a stranger in a convertible that tells her “Gonna get you‚ baby”. Then one Sunday after missing church Connie’s
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The women we’ve read about in both “A Jury of Her Peers‚” and “The Yellow Wallpaper‚” share two aspects. They share the bondage of male oppression‚ and their resilient spirits. I both stories‚ the characters face a struggle regarding both their household and the men within them‚ and must go to great lengths to overcome them. Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale directly defy the men of the story‚ where the narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper‚” defies her husband in a fashion unimaginable. Both sets of characters
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"Her First Ball" is a short story written by Katherine Mansfield in 1921. A young girl‚ about 18 years of age called Leila is the protagonist of the story. The story expresses the Excitement and Anxiety of Leila‚ who is extremely self conscious at the prospect of attending her first formal ball. The prose is written in Third person Omniscient‚ where the narrator is not a character in the story nor Leila‚ but tells the story strictly through her eyes only and we read the thoughts going on in her mind
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only left her home once in the last 20 years of her life. The few people she came in contact with after her official shut-in had a very large effect on her work. By 1865‚ she had written more than 1100 poems (PoetryFoundation.org). [Therefore‚] Emily Dickinson is an astounding and original American Poet from the nineteenth century whose influence to write came from her friends and other authors. She spent the last 20 years of her life as a recluse‚ only coming out of her house once before she died.
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Alison Bechdel records her unusual relationship with her late father Bruce Bechdel and reveals her family secrets. Throughout Chapter Three‚ she speculates about the cause of her father’s death after first knowing this catastrophe and makes a comparison between F. Scott Fitzgerald’s famous character Jay Gatsby and her father. In this allusion‚ Bechdel highlights the deep influence of Fitzgerald on her father‚ in that Bruce was fascinated by Fitzgerald’s lifestyle and sentiment. She then shifts to the
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themselves. In both “Just Like Her Mother” and Much Ado About Nothing‚ both stories show a concurring theme on public shaming and how it fabricates various doubts and impacts on people‚ therefore bringing a new image to many characters. There is a visible chronological order in both stories from the shame to the impact and reactions it brings and finally the eradication of the false images created onto the protagonists. Shame targeting is dominant in “Just Like Her Mother”‚
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1. “Where are You Going? Where Have You Been?”: What is an allusion? Read the story with an eye to allusions of “Little Red Riding Hood”. What is an archetype? What archetype does the description of Arnold Friend suggest? What does Arnold’s car represent? What archetype do Connie and her description suggest? What archetype does the conflict between Connie and Arnold suggest? Can this story be considered as a cautionary tale? An allusion is something that relates a subject or idea and
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what would happen. He was crying now‚ tears streaming down my face. I saw the moist steam before I saw the water. I watched the water leave the kettle‚ flowing almost in slow motion in an arc to my feet. The pain of contact was so pure‚ so scalding‚ I felt nothing for a second. And then I screamed” (Adichie‚ 194). This was one of many intense moments for Kambili‚ the protagonist‚ and her father. In the fictional novel Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie‚ Kambili portrays her and her parents
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