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    The Breakfast Club

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    Introduction Attention getting material Imagine yourself in close proximity with 4 strangers nothing like you. That’s what the characters’ in The Breakfast Club were faced with. Tie to audience For this specific setting a group of 5 eclectic students are forced into serving 9 hours of Saturday detention for whatever they had done wrong. In attendance is a “princess” (Claire Standish)‚ an “athlete” (Andrew Clark)‚ a “brain” (Brian Johnson)‚ a “criminal” (John Bender) and a “basket case” (Allison

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    Purple Hibiscus Essay

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    TOPIC 2: Analyse the development of Kambili in Purple Hibiscus as she moves from strict‚ fearful obedience to tentative defiance of her father. In your response account for her initial subservience and explain what factors contribute to her increasing maturity and independence. During the novel “Purple Hibiscus”‚ we witness the transformation of Kambili Achike from a silenced‚ repressed and wary girl into a more confident‚ mature and happy young woman. This change is brought upon by significant

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    Essay 1 ½ pages (c) Select one of the members of the Birling family. Write a character study‚ using the text for reference‚ to show how Priestley uses the character to convey his own opinions and attitudes. The playwright of “An Inspector Calls‚” J.B. Priestley‚ was a dedicated supporter of socialism‚ and by writing this play‚ he vents his own opinions and attitudes through his characters. The play is set in 1912‚ two years prior to the First World War‚ in the home of a prosperous manufacturer

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    The critical essay that I found is from Cliff Notes titled “Social Stratification: The Great Gatsby as Social Commentary” by Kate Maurer. The essay discusses the theme that is one of the most developed in The Great Gatsby‚ being social stratification. Maurer explains that Fitzgerald carefully set up his novel into distinct social classes and he recognizes how each group has it’s own problems to deal with that comes with living during the 1920s. The groups that were created for the novel include old

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    Critically analyze the following claim: ‘Class is no longer relevant in Australia in the twenty-first century.’ The relevance of social class in Australia has been disputed as to whether it still exists. There are a lot of arguments and opinions on this issue but class inequality is evidently still in force in twenty first Australia. Contemporary Australian society discriminates the difference of social classes through economic status‚ education and geographic location. The power struggle in social

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    Conversational features

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    An alphabet of conversational features Conversations exhibit a very wide range of styles‚ nuances and linguistic strategies. If you approach analysis with a checklist of ’main features’‚ you need to be careful to identify which ones are most appropriate to the conversation you are investigating. It is an interesting linguistic fact that alphabetical ordering confers neither more nor less importance on each item. Remember that it is the concept behind the terminology that matters. If‚ for

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    Isolation and depression are constant throughout "As For Me and My House not only in the storyline‚ but in character development as well. Sinclair Ross creates believable characters by using the climate and weather as a way to emphasize their feelings and emotions. Depression and isolation are the obvious themes that emerge but through out the story a want for more is evident. It is not merely a desire for material possessions but more the desire for an emotional void to be filled. Mrs. Bentley displays

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    British Literature

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    British Literature 1. the Middle Ages the oldest literature monument of the Anglo – Saxon period is the old Germanic legend called BEOWULF. This heroic poem is about the strong and courageous pagan hero Beowulf John Wycliffe – is a professor of Oxford University. With his students he translated the whole Bible into English - he influenced Master Jan Hus and our Hussite movement very much 2. the renaissance and humanism Geoffrey Chaucer – Canterbury Tales – brilliant portrait of 30 pilgrims

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    Characterization: Reverend Twycott: Reverend Twycott was the vicar at Gaymead‚ a little village in North Wessex. Following the death of his wife‚ he became aware of Sophy’ s devotion and care for him. Following the sad little accident that left Sophy incapacitated‚ Twycott proposes marriage to her. Twycott has committed what in his eyes was “social suicide” and he moves‚ exchanging the charming Gaymead for dull and drab south of London. The Reverend seems to have had a poor opinion of Sophy as a

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    Book Review: On Paradise Drive How we live now (and always have) in the future tense By: David Brooks British philosopher‚ important critical and legal thinker Jeremy Bentham‚ the father of English innovation had ambivalent feelings about the United States of America. Although he disagreed with some of the main principles of the American democracy (its profess ideology of natural rights for example or the slave trading practices of the pilgrims in the New World) he never denied his amazement

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