Energgy source Total installed electricity capacity (2010‚ Enerdata) : 1‚659 MW - Hydroelectricity: 86% - Thermal 14% - Nuclear: 0% - Others: 0% Share of Total primary energy * 1717 kToe: Oil: 53.3% Natural Gas: 0.4% Hydro: 28.2% Biofuels and Waste: 13.4% Geothrmal/ solar/ wind: 0.20% Coal and Peat: 4.4% *Share of TPES excludes electricity trade Albania utilises both diesel fuel and hydropower to generate electricity‚ with the latter being more significant and having a greater
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wnThere are four main sources of Irish law: 1) The Constitution 2) EU law 3) Statute law (including statutory instruments) 4) Common Law & case law precedent. 1) Constitution - see www.constitution.ie for text and some official publications 2) EU law - see www.europa.eu (I’m not sure if that is the exact text but you can google) for EU laws 3) Statute law - see www.irishstatutebook.ie & www.oireachtas.ie 4) Case law & precents - see text books on Irish law or go to www.courts
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Frankenstein Quiz Letters—Chapter 17 1. Frankenstein is described as a Gothic novel. What are the ingredients‚ which define this type of work? 2. One of the key elements of the story is Victor’s state of mind. Show how the events in the story affect his behavior. 3. Frankenstein has three main storylines. What are they? 4. Sum up the letters 1-4 from Robert Walton and interpret their meaning. 5. What are the romantic elements contained in the letters
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exploiting mystery and variety of horrors. All of these qualities can be applied to Mary Shelly’s novel‚ “Frankenstein.” Frankenstein is a good example of a gothic novel which carries all above mentioned elements of a gothic novel. One of the innocent heroines of the novel is Elizabeth Lavenza‚ Frankenstein’s wife. She is an innocent character. On the very day of the honeymoon of Victor Frankenstein and Elizabeth Lavenza the cruel monster kills her without any pity and sympathy towards her. So here‚
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Symbols in Frankenstein A symbol is a person‚ object‚ or event that represents ideas in addition to their literal meanings. There are many types of symbolism. There are conventional symbols‚ which are the classic symbols like the cross‚ representing faith; the U.S. flag‚ representing freedom; and the four-leaf clover‚ representing luck. Another type of symbolism is literary symbolism. Literary symbols are things like common buildings like homes‚ representing a feeling of safety and love. A literary
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Mary Shelley’s Romantic Era novel‚ Frankenstein‚ is a multi layered frame story that consists of various characters and plot lines. Stitched together around the writings of a dream‚ Shelley’s novel is at it’s core a horror novel‚ and‚ on it’s outside‚ a social commentary. Using Frankenstein as a medium of expression through which she critiques the role of man with respect to nature‚ Shelley reveals her true inner thoughts about mankind. As a general push away from the Enlightenment Era‚ the Romantic
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if they possess no value. Whereas a self inflicted kind of isolation still hurts‚ but is not comparable to the pain of rejection‚ as shown by the monster in the novel‚ “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley. Through observing the monsters one sided relationship with the Delacey family‚ the monsters unrequited love for Victor Frankenstein‚ as well as the instances in which Victor isolates himself‚ the reader comes to understand that being exiled through rejection affects people in a different way than self
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Frankenstein by Mary Shelley In the Gothic novel Frankenstein‚ Mary Shelley integrates the rhetorical devices figurative language‚ imagery‚ and tone to impart the concept that the desire to acquire knowledge and emulate God will ultimately result in chaos and havoc that exceeds the boundaries of human restraint. I. Life of Mary Shelley / Characteristics of Gothic Literature A. Life of Mary Shelley 1. Eleven days after Mary Shelley’s birth‚ her mother‚ the famed author of A Vindication
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desires for family and any other important parallels you find. Do Victor and the monster become more similar as the novel goes on? How does their relationship with each other develop? In Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”‚ it is evident that there are many similarities compared between Victor Frankenstein and Victor’s creation; the monster Victor is seen as a man who is powerful‚ egotistical and bold‚ while his creation is perceived as a rejected and isolated character. Although Victor thinks his monster
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Frankenstein‚ Mary Shelley The notion of double in Frankenstein. All along the novel‚ the theme of the double is recurrent. The Merriam-Webtser defines a doppelgänger as a ghostly counterpart of a living person or the evil alter-ego of a person. In Frankenstein‚ Mary Shelley used that very motif to describe and characterize her characters. Indeed‚ the Creature can be seen as the double of Victor. He represents the dark side of Victor. If Dr Frankenstein appears as a nice and totally human and
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