ADOPTED FROM TASEKO In the short story “Adopted from Taseko”‚ by Christian Petersen‚ the setting contributes to the element of conflict. The place and time the characters in the story go hunting‚ creates a whole lot of problems for them. From the beginning of the trip to the very end‚ they encounter conflicts related to the setting; such as bad roads‚ extreme weathers‚ and very chilly temperatures. On the journey to their destination‚ the main characters: a boy‚ his father and a
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Experience is not what happens to a man; it is what a man does with what happens to him. Both short stories “The Technology of Simplicity” by Mark A. Burch and the short story “Taseko” by Christian Petersen‚ deal with the little boy hunting in the forest. because both narrators in their stories have different feeling and different understanding from their hunting experience‚ the hunting experience in the “The Technology of Simplicity” has more educational value. To begin with‚ the narrator in the
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! -140° -136° -132° ! Tutshi Lake Tagish Lake Gladys Lake Atlin Lake -128° -124° -120° Teslin Teslin Lake ! -112° Fort Liard RITOR IES EST TER NORTHW ! YUKON Watson Lake -116° British Columbia Development Regions Regional Districts 1 - Vancouver Island/Coast 17 19 21 23 25 26 27 43 45 Northern Rockies « 58° 0 35 Fort Nelson High Level ! Rainbow Lake Cry Lake Dease Lake
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the Tokugawa Bakufu‚ 1862-1868. Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii‚ 1980. Toson‚ Shimizaki. Before the Dawn. Trans. William E. Naff. Honolulu: University of Honolulu Press‚ 1987. 339-383. Walthall‚ Anne. The weak body of a useless woman : Matsuo Taseko and the Meiji Restoration. Chicago: University of Chicago Press‚ 1998.
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