"Sula s birthmark symbol" Essays and Research Papers

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    Symbol

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    Symbol | Meaning | Example | | delete | | | close up | | | delete and close up | | | caret | | | insert a space | | | space evenly | | | let stand | | | transpose | | | used to separate two or more marks and often as a concluding stroke at the end of an insertion |   | | set farther to the left | | | set farther to the right | | | set as ligature (such as ) | | | align horizontally | | | align vertically | | | broken character | | |

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    Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Birthmark is a story wrought with potent symbolism and destructive irony. It is the story of a cerebral scientist’s imprudent and superficial endeavor‚ and the all too trusting wife that had faith in him. This short story provides us with a moral allegory and theme that is universally vital through symbolism. The crimson hand-shaped mark bestowed upon the otherwise perfect face of a beautiful woman contains much meaning. Through his use of symbolism‚ Hawthorne addresses

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    outcome. Such is the case in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story‚ "The Birthmark." Aylmer’s persistent attempt to perfect nature is the cause of Georgiana’s demise and the affirmation that when man tampers with such a powerful component terrible things may occur. In this short story‚ Hawthorne uses symbolism to emphasize the strange shape of the "earthly imperfection" (204) and his desperate need to change it. The shape of the birthmark "bore a little similarity to the human hand" (204). Here‚ Hawthorne’s

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    daughter to her mother? How do a daughter’s personality form under her mother’s influence? These questions are answered in both novels Breathe‚ Eyes‚ Memory by Edwidge Danticat and Sula by Toni Morrison with some from similar views‚ and some from different views. For ages‚ a mother’s love is always mentioned as the symbol for pure and selfless love. Digging deep in the complex maternal love‚ nevertheless‚ both Morrison and Danticat draw an unexpected conclusion that daughters are somewhat detestable

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    African- American folklore is arguably the basis for most African- American literature. In a country where as late as the 1860’s there were laws prohibiting the teaching of slaves‚ it was necessary for the oral tradition to carry the values the group considered significant. Transition by the word of mouth took the place of pamphlets‚ poems‚ and novels. Themes such as the quest for freedom‚ the nature of evil‚ and the powerful verses the powerless became the themes of African- American literature

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    exists outside of baseball. In The Birthmark‚ by Nathaniel Hawthorne‚ the theme of human imperfection is present in the ideas of mortality‚ science versus nature‚ and

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    Sula by Toni Morrison‚ is a book about a black female and the various events throughout her life. The majority of these events were at the fault of Sula‚ but because of her past she did not know‚ or could not understand any better. Sula became the woman that she was because of the people and events that were around her during her childhood. When Sula was a child‚ she grew up faster than most children because of the things that she saw and heard‚ so it was almost as if she had a loss of childhood

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    The “Birthmark” was written by Nathaniel Hawthorne in 1843‚ while “Frankenstein” was written by Mary Shelly originally in 1831. These two stories share multiple similarities along with a few differences. For starters both stories have plots that of which are relatable to one another; such as losing loved ones and experimental mistakes. Themes are strongly stressed in either story but more-so the theme of “Playing God”. The characters themselves are widely different yet strangely similar‚ like the

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    from Eva concerning marriage and children‚ Sula declares‚ "I don’t want to make somebody else. I want to make myself‚"—a statement which illustrates her desire to generate her own identity and control her own life (Morrison‚ 92). When Sula and her friend Nel were young‚ they were “in [the] safe harbor of each other’s company [where] they could afford to abandon the ways of other people and concentrate on their own perceptions of things”‚ an attitude which Sula maintains into adulthood (Morrison‚ 55)

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    Intro: The short story “The Birthmark” and the movie episode “Eye of the Beholder” both compare the idea of beauty and perfection. The two stories use different literary devices to persuade a similar message about beauty. In “The Birthmark” by Nathaniel Hawthorne he uses gender criticism in order to get his message to his readers that people can have flaws and imperfections and still be beautiful. In the movie episode “Eye of the Beholder’ the author tells how if you aren’t the “normal” then you

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