Landslide in a Village The rainstorm was over‚ I dashed out from the house to free myself. Spending hours in the house really made me feel bored rigid (extremely bored). I needed fresh air and so I went for a ride in the neighbourhood of Bukit Katil. I enjoyed cycling along the roads that ran parallel with rows of tall trees. The atmosphere around me was refreshingly cool. In the midst of admiring view‚ I caught the sight of a house that was partly buried in the mud. I halted (stop)
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with Strangers Every community has unwritten rules that only fellow citizens understand. These rules have inspired the American novelist and essayist Siri Hustvedt to write the essay “Living with Strangers” in The New York Times in 2002. The essay is about the cultural differences she had to deal with when she moved from Minnesota - where people are accused of being a snob if they don’t greet everyone they meet - to New York - where people live rather isolated lives and greeting strangers on the
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The places we live in are an important part of out lives. The places with many opportunities and better facilities ensure and enhance our lives‚ so people consider living at these places. Some people prefer to live in a small town while others prefer to live in a big city. In my view‚ it is better to live in a big city for two important reasons. First‚ there are more opportunities in a big city. It is often said that people do better when they get appropriate background‚ so if you are well educated
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12/31/2012 The Stranger: The Essay In the philosophical novel “The Stranger”‚ written by Albert Camus‚ the story ended with Meursault’s last thoughts. He thinks‚ “For everything to be consummated‚ for me to feel less alone‚ I had only wish that there be a large crowd of spectators the day of my execution and that they greet me with cries of hate” (Camus 123). The question is: Why does Meursault hope for this? Why does Camus end the novel at this point? And who is the “Stranger” and why? “The
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The Stranger We All Are and Deny A human is not born with the comprehension of morals or “adequate” behaviour‚ they are programmed by their environment and social interaction on a more of a precise right and wrong. Nobel Prize winning author‚ Albert Camus brilliantly paints the definition of cold‚ logical indifference with the protagonist‚ Meursault‚ in “The Stranger”. Through the unravelling of events and Meursault’s reactions towards them‚ the author succeeds into compelling the reader to question
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question. That is because we know that every question has to have an answer‚ whether it is right or wrong. When Albert Camus named his novel The Stranger he was asking his audience a question that will forever go unanswered. Camus was asking his readers who they thought the title “stranger” was. Therefore‚ when a reader may wonder as to who the said stranger may be‚ they somehow come up with a response. But a response is not an answer. Responses and answers are entirely contrasting things. An answer
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Living with strangers - essay analysis How people behave around eachother‚ and how they act and speak in manner of specific norms and unwritten rules‚ that is culture. What in one culture may be quite normal and reputable‚ such as kissing in the street‚ can in another culture seem provocative and offensive. Those are the cultural conflicts that can appear when you move from fx the countryside to the city. This subject of conflicts and cultural diffenrences are what Siri Hustwedt has experienced
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A Stranger Is Watching A Stranger is Watching is a terrific book. I enjoyed reading this book very much. The non-stop action kept me reading for hours. One of the best features of the book is how it was written.The point of view changes every chapter.For example Chapter 1 is written in the point of view of the infamous Foxy character.Chapter 2 is written in the point if view of our protagonist‚ Steve; and so on.I also liked how the author built the relationship of the characters up‚so you care
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Living with Strangers – Siri Hustvedt Every society and culture have their own way of behaving among one another. In a rural community‚ it is usually a custom to greet bypassing people politely‚ when it might seem as a strange gesture in the eyes of an urbanite. These norms are discussed in Siri Hustvedt’s essay‚ “Living with Strangers” (2002). Through descriptions of her own personal experiences‚ the surroundings and life in the city‚ Hustvedt reflects upon urban life and how society has developed
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