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    Johnny Wong ENG 214-67 Nancy Sours Fall 2012 Irate Truth In his nonfiction book Into the Wild‚ Jon Krakauer starts out the story with the death of young Chris McCandless and his two-year adventure ending at Alaska in April 1992. The discovery of Chris McCandless’s body influences Krakauer to write a brief article of his death for the Outside magazine. Readers of the magazine had different point of views for Chris’s death. Some admired him for his “courage and noble ideals” (Author’s note)‚ while

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    Into the Wild Reaction Paper Dawn MB Nyberg COLS-100 Ever wonder what it would be like to be snow-bound‚ scared‚ alone‚ cold and hungry out in the wilderness of Alaska? Christopher McCandless knew and he knew it well; he knew that feeling so well‚ that he died. I don’t think he was a man with a mental illness or any personality disorders; even though Jon Krakauer states that‚”it’s not clear that much of values is learned by reducing Chris McCandless’s strange spiritual quest to

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    America Wild West

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    transformed into the Wild West‚ a romanticized version of the lifestyle‚ to entertain the masses. The romanticized perception of the Wild West differs extensively from the reality of western settlement‚ but in some aspects mirrors the true western lifestyle in the post-Civil War period. Native Americans and cowboys‚ for instance‚ are portrayed rather inaccurately in the romanticized adaptations of the West‚ while the images of towns and settlements are similar in both the mythological Wild West and the reality

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    Erikson and the Wild Strawberries In the Life Cycle Completed by Erik H. Erikson‚ Erikson talks about the stages in life those stages range from infancy to elderly age. The stages are basic trust vs. basic mistrust‚ autonomy vs. shame and doubt‚ initiative vs. guilt‚ industry vs. inferiority‚ identity vs. identity confusion‚ intimacy vs. isolation‚ generatively vs. stagnation‚ and finally integrity vs. despair. In Wild Strawberries the character Isak Borg goes through all the stages that Erikson

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    as into the wild is necessary? What if after all this you are finally at peace with yourself? In the book Into The Wild‚ Jon Krakauer demonstrates how Chris McCandless was an outsider of society who after accumulating bits of his identity‚ finds a place where he can be all of himself. The author suggests this idea of accumulation of self and how this affects his behavior especially in chapter 16. In this particular part of the story‚ Krakauer shows Chris arriving into the Alaskan wild

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    Wild Yella

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    star turns. The money earned was what they managed to accumulate when the plate was passed among the audience in appreciation of their performance. It was at this time that Gabrielle acquired the name "Coco"‚ possibly based on two popular songs with which she became identified‚ "Ko Ko Ri Ko"‚ and "Qui qu’a vu Coco"‚ or it was an allusion to the French word for kept woman‚ cocotte.[11] As cafe entertainer‚ Chanel radiated a juvenile allure that tantalized the military habitués of the cabaret.[9]

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    today are Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer and The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Both these books share three valuable comparisons. One being that both protagonists go on a self-evolving and physical journey‚ another that both the fathers in the novel share demanding relationships with their sons‚ and the lessons that both boys learned. A journey does not have to be simply walking through the woods. It can actually be a person going through an internal transformation. In Into the Wild and The Road Chris

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    Both McCandless and Krakauer‘s fathers where high achievers in life and McCandless and Krakauer both shared a similar perspective in their youth. I can envision Krakauer writing this book as a form of therapy for him. Enabling him to tell his story along with McCandless’s working out the issues he had with his father along the way. From the Authors point of view McCandless could do no wrong. Krakauer felt what I believe to be a deep connection with McCandless. He portrayed the similarities

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    Into the wild character comparison essay Into the wild is a story about a man named Christopher McCandless. In this story we learn that he gives up almost everything he owns to take a dangerous journey and live off the land. Along the way we learn about a man named Gene Rosellini who has a similar but different story to Christopher’s. Although these two men have a lot in common‚ they also have many differences. Christopher McCandless was a very intelligent guy. He graduated from Emory University

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    The Wild Bunch Essay

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    The wild bunch When Sam Peckinpah got back into making films he had the right people backing him up during this movie. The man that gave Peckinpah a chance for a comeback was Phil Feldman. Phil Feldman helped Peckinpah by getting him cast for the film the wild bunch. Peckinpah believe that Phil was on his side. Onset many believes Peckinpah was a madman on set and can trigger a lot of anger out the actors. And Feldman‚ though he refused to be steamrolled by the Peckinpah personality‚ backed his

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