"Social darwinism and how to build a fire" Essays and Research Papers

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    “To Build a Fire” is a story about one character‚ the man. This man throughout the story doesn’t say one word. He is pretty calm throughout the story. The main man or the only man for that matter seems to be a hard working man but is lacking in imagination. I believe this man has no imagination because he doesn’t think he needs one. Jack London writes about a man around his fifties or sixties for this story. The only other “character” in this story is the dog that the man runs into. Like the man

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    during a naturalistic time period (The Literature Network). This novel was written with many themes that define naturalism‚ such as greed and lust. Social Darwinism‚ which can be defined as “survival of the fittest” also played a huge role in Norris’ making of this novel (schoolworkhelper). Using the themes of lust‚ sexual tragedy‚ and Social Darwinism‚ Frank Norris wrote one of the most controversial novels that our world has come about to this day in McTeague. Frank Norris‚ a Midwestern-born man

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    worked in hell‚ while the elite one percent lived in heaven as money became a god to society! Something had to change! The Gilded Age is a term coined by writer Mark Twain in The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today (1873)‚ which satirized an era of serious social problems (Doc 2). The Gilded Age was an era of rapid economic growth. Cities grew as people moved from rural areas and immigrants arrived from other countries in search of a better life. Instead they found a hard life in the urban hells called cities

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    seen the sun in days. Jack London‚ the author of To Build A Fire‚ goes into immense detail throughout the story to draw his readers into the setting of the crisp winter chill. London’s vast description of the environment allows his readers to picture every single object throughout the mountains as if the reader was experiencing the exact situation. As the protagonist travels miles to reach his destination where his friends await him with food and fires‚ the setting intensifies the man’s conflicts and

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    cannot control nature‚ man can defeat nature. However‚ human errors can cause nature to defeat man. The two main guides‚ Rob hall and Scott Fischer in Into thin Air and the Man in “To Build a Fire” errors played a huge role in their battle against nature. In Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air and Jack London’s “To Build a Fire”‚ man’s propensity to underestimate nature’s strengths and excessive pride led to nature’s victory. In Into Thin Air‚ the guides’ propensity to underestimate nature’s strengths was

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    fifty degrees below zero Yukon in Canada be considered? To travel in a foreign land without any people within a mile is quite a dangerous and ignorant idea‚ yet doing this in weather that is fifty degrees below zero is absurd. Jack London’s “To Build a Fire” depicts a man with nothing but a husky and a couple of biscuits traveling in the Yukon‚ and he dies while trying to survive this journey‚ for he faces adversity by traveling in brutal weather‚ by having to make crucial decisions‚ and by fighting

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    become desperate‚ you will do things you would not usually do otherwise. Say you get thrown into a pool and you have no idea how to swim‚ your first instinct will be to scream and fight your hardest to get out of the water. You are not just going to get thrown in and calmly let yourself drown without a fight. That is the human nature to stay alive. There are many examples of how human nature can take over without even realizing

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    admiration of others through courageous deeds and noble traits; the main character in “To Build a Fire” by Jack London lacks all of these characteristics. The man makes many rookie errs throughout the short story and utilizes numerous tips from an old timer from Sulphur creek to try and fix them‚ he is grateful to the old timer‚ save for when he believes he is no longer in danger. After building a successful fire rather than thank the old timer he says to himself “well‚ here he [is]; he [has] had the

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    former president of South Africa Nelson Mandela once said: “Do not judge me on my successes‚ judge me by how many times I fell down and got back up again.” He is verifying the many people of this world to live life with grit‚ and to understand everyone’s own failures turned successes. It’s good advice that everyone should follow. It’s also the main idea of the Jack London short story “To Build a Fire.” In the story an unnamed man needs (not wants) to make it to his friends. The reason he needs to make

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    “To Build a Fire” is a short story that was written by Jack London in 1908. It tells the story of a man traveling through the woods in severely cold conditions‚ with only a dog and not nearly enough knowledge on how to make it back to his camp safely. While reading this‚ you notice several aspects of the man‚ specifically how he relates to his dog and the environment he is in. From the beginning‚ you notice the man doesn’t really have a special relationship with his dog. In fact he seems to only

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