"The Passage" Essays and Research Papers

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    Game and Passage

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    body. On the basis of your reading of the passage‚ answer the following questions: a) What did Buddha find? (1) b) What news was brought to him and what was his reaction? (2) c) What desire took hold of him? (1) d) Why did he give up fasting? (1) e) What did he realize? (1) f) Find words from the passage‚ which are similar in meaning to the following: (2) i. Very bad pain. ii. A strong wish. 2. Read the following passage carefully: (8 marks) Once a famous tennis

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    Rite Of Passage

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    My first tattoo was a small tribal rose on my left calf I was 19 and the tattoo was free. After a few years I couldn’t wait to get it covered up. Another view of rite of passage is the Maori People‚ their intricate moko tattooing marks their rank the men are being heavily tattooed from face to feet and women wear only a facial tattoo on the chin. “You may lose your most valuable property through misfortune in various ways

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    Rite of Passage

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    In Conrad Philip Kottak’s “Rite of Passage” he mentions the three stages of a rite of passage. Anthropologist Arnold Van Gennep defines these stages as Separation‚ Margin‚ and Aggregation. Victor Turner‚ another anthropologist‚ focused on Margin‚ which he referred to as liminality. Not only can a rite of passage be an individual experience‚ but it can also be a communal experience which Turner called “communitas.” Many of us experience this “communitas” in different ways such as my Hispanic culture

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    Middle Passage

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    The Middle Passage The Middle Passage was the route slave trading ships took from the west coast of Africa‚ where slaves were taken from their homes‚ to across the Atlantic‚ where they were sold or traded for various goods and services. However‚ the Atlantic slave trade did not only take slaves from within Africa. Nearly as many Africans were exported across the Sahara Desert‚ the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean. Out of all the Africans that were forced to undergo the voyage to the Americas‚ it

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    Odyssey - Passage

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    Odyssey – Passage: Book V lines 224-233 "My lady goddess‚ here is no cause for anger. My quiet Penélopê --- how well I know --- would seem a shade before your majesty‚ death and old age being unknown to you‚ while she must die. Yet‚ it is true‚ each day I long for home‚ long for the sight of home. If any god has marked me out again for shipwreck‚ my tough heart can undergo it. What hardship have I not long since endured at sea‚ in battle! Let the trial come."

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    Passage to India

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    The Indian vs. the European Religion and Way of Thinking Religion is probably the most definitive factor in the way Indians lead their lives‚ particularly if they practice Hinduism and this is why the clash between Hinduism and Christanity in A Passage to India parallels the conflict between the Indians and the British. Hinduism is best represented in the novel by professor Godbole‚ and Christianity is epitomized in Mrs. Moore who comes to India with the kindness and understanding heart of a

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    A Passage to Africa

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    How does George Alagiah’s choice of language and sentence structure convey the suffering of the Somalian people? It touched me in a way I could not explain. It moved me in a way that went beyond pity or revulsion. George Alagiah’s commentary‚ A Passage to Africa‚ is about his experiences in Somalia during the Civil War. Paparazzi-like‚ he is in search of the “most striking picture” that will appeal to TV audiences back home. The scenes he witnesses‚ however‚ are heartbreaking; the images too disturbing

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    Crucible Passages

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    Crucible Passages 1. Page 11 Parris: “I saw Tituba waving her arms over the fire when I came on you. Why was she doing that? And I heard a screeching and gibberish coming from her mouth. She were swaying like a dumb beast over that fire!” 2. Page 15-16 Ann Putnam: “And so I thought to send her to your Tituba” Rev Parris: “To Tituba! What ma Tituba---?” Ann: “Tituba knows how to speak to the dead‚ Mr. Parris.” 3. Page 38 Ann Putnam: “Mr. Parris’s slave has knowledge of conjurin’‚ sir.” . . . Ann

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    Passage to india

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    Discuss the following passage; in particular the ways Forster presents Mrs Moore’s state of mind. ‘Quite right‚ now enjoy yourselves‚ and when you come back‚ tell me all about it.’ And she sank into the deckchair. If they reached the big pocket of caves‚ they would be away nearly an hour. She took up her writing pad and began‚ ‘Dear Stella‚ Dear Ralph’‚ then stopped‚ and looked at the queer valley and their feeble invasion of it. Even the elephant had become a nobody. Her eye rose from

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    Rite of Passage

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    Sergio Alvarez Prof. Shawrtz Everyone in their lives has to experience a rite of passage and mine was when I was just acquiring my drivers license. Many people go through the same situation when they are first getting their drivers license. This event made a significant impact in my life. It was an event that was accompanied by fear and anxiety which also contributed on how I saw myself as an adult. It also changed the way people around me saw me as an adult and not a child anymore. There

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