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    Feminism in Jane Eyre

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    Feminism in Jane Eyre After reading Jane Eyre‚ I think Jane Eyre is a great woman. Jane is disadvantaged in many ways as she has no wealth‚ family‚ social position or beauty. Jane does have intelligence though‚ and her disposition is such to make Rochester fall in love with her. Through a serious of troublesome situations between Jane Eyre and Mr. Rochester‚ the author set up a great female image before us: insisting on maintaining an independent personality‚ pursuing individual freedom‚ advocating

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    Vonnegut Jr.’s Harrison Bergeron and Orwell’s 1984 are based on the concept of negative utopia. The governments in both these novels control their masses using harsh methods. The government in 1984 uses brainwashing‚ doublethink‚ mutability of the past and vaporization to control its masses. The government in Harrison Bergeron uses physical and mental handicaps to control its masses and in the effort to make everyone equal. Both the governments have a tight control on its people but the government

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    In the short story‚ “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut‚ life is extremely different. Set in the futuristic time period of 2081‚ Vonnegut gives you a peek at a dystopian world‚ much different than what life is like now. In the story‚ everyone must be equal. No one is smarter‚ prettier‚ or stronger than anybody else. The new government punishes people who act on their own and gives handicaps to those who have “unfair advantages”. For example‚ the government put an ear piece in anyone’s ear who is

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    where there is oppressive societal control‚ no one will ever have the right to think outside of the box. Everyone will be forced into an unnaturally equal society where curing cancer is too abnormal to be accepted with open arms. Kurt Vonnegut wrote “Harrison Bergeron‚” in which people are forced to wear handicap harnesses in order to diminish any differences one possesses to another. An article states‚ “... the sports term handicap. It refers to a way to even up a game so that good‚ average‚ and poor

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    Jane Austen "On Women"

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    Jane Austen “On Women” In her role as a 19th century female author‚ Jane Austen has a privilege that many other women of her time do not have. She skillfully engages her audience and draws them toward her views of life through the characters she employs in her novels. Austen masterfully utilizes satire in her writings. As she portrays characters and circumstances‚ irony is her chief literary technique. The plots and themes of her novels are intensified as readers view the situations from the view

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    Read an article on a Doctor who operated on an unborn baby. Dr. Michael Harrison which referred to the unborn child a patient” It seem he was comfortable identifying the unborn as human. It appears that Dr. Michael Harrison‚ who called the babies he operated on a mere eight years after Roe “unborn patients‚” he was comfortable speculating that the unborn child is human. Also‚ it ought to be clear to anybody with an ethical area that regardless of the possibility that there was vagueness on the meaning

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    because of this‚ our society tries to place rules on us as individuals as to what is acceptable and what is not in order to achieve this sense of equilibrium. We are then left with deciding for ourselves whether to conform to such a social decorum. In Harrison Bergeron‚ we encounter a society that has finally reached complete equality in the eyes of the author. However‚ throughout the text‚ we learn that our expectations that are imposed by society could result in chaos and that there is an extent of danger

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    The movie” The hunger games” by Gary Ross ‚ and the story “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut share a lot of similar characteristics of dystopian fiction‚ unlike their counterpart “ There will come soft rains” by Ray Bradbury. Which is a short story that is written under the dystopian fiction‚ but is quite different compared to the other two. Both “the hunger games” and “Harrison Bergeron” share some of characteristics that clearly define a dystopian world such as lack of individuality‚ Protagonist

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    mental radio in his ear. Hazel Bergeron is the wife of George‚ she is “perfectly average intelligence”. Harrison Bergeron is the son of George and Hazel‚ he also wore the 47 pound weights around his neck just like George‚ he also to wear a big red clown nose and had a mental radio in his ear. People always made comments about Harrison. The government describes him as “a genius and an athlete”. Harrison is seven feet tall and burdened by 300 pounds of handicaps. George

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    Literary Analysis: Harrison Bergeron Kurt Vonnegut Junior’s passage “Harrison and Bergeron” is a brief story written in 1961. It is about Harrison Bergeron‚ an inmate who is forced to diminish his abilities because they are more enhanced than everyone else’s. When Harrison tries to rebel against the laws of the land‚ he is shot and killed. “Harrison Bergeron” is similar to “1984”‚ a book written in 1948 by George Orwell. In “1984” every single leader of society is overthrown by Big Brother

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