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Nervous Conditions Essay
Nervous Conditions The choice to resist or comply in situations greatly affects the success and
personal relationships of Tambu and Nyasha throughout the Nervous Conditions. Tambu arrives at
her uncle's school initially embracing her education and passion for learning, while there she begins
to notice the relationships that existed between the settlers and native, males and females in society.
Nyasha understood how awful these relationships were as a young girl. She suffers from severe
depression and an eating disorder while trying to cope with and understand these relationships. There
are many different decisions made with a variety of strategies that either helps them advance or
causes them to fall victim to the controls of...show more content...
Tambu decides not to go to the wedding; this is the first time she has stood up for herself in
Babamukru's house. After the ceremony she has some regret for not going but the fact that she
was able to make her own decision made it all worth it. ''guilt, so many razor sharp edges of it,
slice away at me. My mother had been right; it was unnatural; I would not listen to my own
parents, but I would listen to Babamukuru even when he told me to laugh at my parents. There was
something unnatural about me.''(Tambu, 167) This wedding made her realize how much she had
just been just doing everything he said even if it was wrong and this made her feel very week.
Making the decision not to go gave her a ''newly acquired identity''(Tambu, 171) and she gladly took
the lashings and punishment for it. When the nuns from Sacred Heart came to the mission school to
recruit they offer Tambu a scholarship and a position at the school. Maiguru stands up for Tambu
when Babamukuru shuts down the idea. She accepts the offer to the Convent School and becomes
so focused on her education she fails to see the effects of this situation on her personal relationships
with Nyasha and her friends. Nyasha writes her letters
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The Light In The Forest Book Report
Light In the Forest. The Light in the Forest is a book about True Son, son of Cuyloga. He was
kidnapped when he was 4 and adopted by the Indian chief Cuyloga. He lives in the Tuscarawas of
Ohio, speaking the Delaware language. After a treaty is made, True Son is to returned to his family
in Philadelphia, unwillingly he goes. True Son stays with his white family for a while, but after
escaping with Half Arrow they stay 2 ВЅ months in the forest and later returning to the Tuscarawas.
True Son receives a warm welcome from his family. The older brother of Little Crane, Thitipan,
wants revenge for his brother's death. They plan to get as many scalps for it to be a honorable
revenge. As they set off and get scalps, a boat full of white people is passing, Thitipan suggests an
ambush, True Son would pretend to be a white boy that is lost. For the reason of thinking of
Georgie,his younger brother, he tells the whites to turn back for it was an ambush. In the end True
Son is kicked out of the Tribe and parted by his father and cousin....show more content...
In the beginning of the movie, it showed how the treaty was made, while in the book it was
beforehand. Also True Son was calm when being exchanged, unlike the book he was stubborn and
aggressive. He attacked Del with a rifle in the movie though.
Another sign of difference would be how the character Georgie, True Son's younger brother. In the
movie he was replaced with Shenandoah the servant girl to make a happy ending, going to the next
point. It seemed the completed wiped Georgie of the list of characters.
The ending in the movie was a bit more exciting than in the book. In the book, True Son crosses
the river he had already crossed twice, with an unknowing end of what happened to him. The movie
however here returned back with a welcome from the whites, and fought his Uncle Wilse, also had a
happily ever after with
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Examples Of Superstition In Huckleberry Finn
Throughout Mark Twain's classic "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" the reader becomes
acquainted with superstitions that immensely affect the way people lived. Numerous superstitions,
that Huck presumed true, were bad omens; shriveled up spiders, spilling salt cellars, as well as
rattlesnake skins. At the onset of the novel Huckleberry was feeling extremely isolate and wishing
for a little company. Scanning his shoulder Huck noticed a spider, however that wasn't the
company he was hoping for. Huck flicked the spider off and into an ignited candle. Before he
could budge, the flame had scorched and withered the spider. "I didn't need anybody to tell me that
was an awful bad sign and would fetch me some bad luck... I got up and turned around...show more
content...
It is the only thing he knows to believe in. He introduces us to a second superstition during
breakfast. "I happened to turn over the saltcellar... I reached for some of it as quick as I could to
throw over my left shoulder and keep off the bad luck" (15). The widow stops him before he gets
the chance. Later, when Huck finds his father's tracks in the snow he blames it on the atrocious
superstition of spilling the saltcellar. A third superstition learned from Jim taught Huckleberry that
handling a serpents skin will bring the worst luck. Huckleberry Finn didn't believe this at first,
although that didn't last too long. To demonstrate to Jim that this superstition was merely
manufactured from fear, Huck found a rattlesnake, killed it, and curled it up at the foot of Jims
blanket. "When Jim flung himself down on the blanket while I struck a light the snake's mate was
there, and bit him" (53). This transposed Huckleberry's mind about superstition. As a result he
matures to be more and more superstitious as the book progresses. Superstitions infiltrate the life of
Huckleberry Finn, a few include shriveled up spiders, spilling salt cellars, along with touching
snakeskins. These superstitions may not be real, yet they still have an unquestionable effect on the
way
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The English Patient Film Compared with the Novel
The Novel:
The English Patient is a fantastic novel and is one of the few truly great novels written in the last
century. The author, Sri Lankan Michael Ondaatje, switches wonderfully between several scenes: the
desert, the Villa San Girolamo in Tuscany, Italy, Dorset inEngland and Cairo. Each one of these
perfectly crafted scenes is brought into being in an exciting and thought provoking way. The book is
centred on four main characters: Hana, a Canadian nurse who has taken it upon herself to be
separated from the other medical staff and remains behind in a mine–laden villa to tend to just one
patient, the English patient; Kip, a Sikh who was,...show more content...
The desert in the film is done very well and deserves a lot of credit. I feel that it is portrayed very
well. The desert seems to be very much the main scene in the film, with the plot focussing on this
aspect of the novel. However, in the novel, the desert is by no means the most important scene; it
is in fact the Villa. I personally don't seem to mind this too much and I feel that it is no injustice to
the book. I also think that the desert portrays namelessness and nationlessness very well. Although
the scene where they are having a Christmas lunch in the dessert is not particularly special and does
not really add anything positive to the film, it does portray the theme of namelessness and
nationlessness very well, as the idea of having a Christmas lunch in the desert with a man dressed in
a father Christmas suit is very obscure.
The scene at El Taj, where AlmГsy tries to borrow a jeep from the English is done brilliantly. It is a
huge contrast to the rest of the film, as it reminds us that although there is this feeling of
nationlessness and namelessness, there is still a war going on, and this comes before anything. So
when AlmГ sy goes to el Taj, we are brought back to reality about how there I this war that is going
on. I personally believe that should
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All quiet On the Western Front, a book written by Erich Maria Remarque tells of the harrowing
experiences of the First World War as seen through the eyes of a young German soldier. I think that
this novel is a classic anti–war novel that provides an extremely realistic portrayal of war. The novel
focuses on a group of German soldier and follows their experiences.
Life for the soldiers in the beginning is a dramatic one as they are ordered up to the frontline to
wire fences. The frontline makes Paul feel immediately different as described here. "As if
something is inside us, in our blood, has been switched on." The front makes Paul more aware and
switched on as if his senses and reactions are sharpened. I think Paul and his friends are...show more
content...
"A wounded soldier? I shout to him–no answer– must be dead." The dead body has fallen out the
coffin and the coffin has been unearthed because of the shelling. Even the dead and buried cannot
rest in peace during this war. This just adds to the horror of the situation Paul is in.
Through out this book the author shows that war is not about heroism and fighting nobly for your
country, war is a terrible thing. Paul and his friends are on the frontline in the shelters for days
and the pressure gets to the men as Paul says here. "The recruit who had the fit earlier is raving
again and two more have joined in. One breaks away and runs for it." This shows that the frontline,
added by lack of food, has driven the young recruits mad and so much so that one recruit runs away
out into the battle field with inevitable consequence of death. Paul describes the front line in many
ways to show the reader and give the reader a good picture of what the frontline is like for a soldier,
as Paul expresses here." The front is a cage and you have to wait nervously in it for whatever
happens to you", and Paul also says. "I can be squashed flat in a bomb–proof dugout, and I can
survive ten hours in the pen under heavy barrage without a scratch." This shows the reader that it is
very unpredictable on the frontline and that a soldier owes his life only to lucky chances that they
have not yet been killed.
Paul and his platoon have been turned into machines due to the war, controlled by
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Dark They Were, And Golden Eyed Analysis
Things aren't always as they seem– not even to yourself. In the short story " Dark They Were, and
Golden Eyed" by, Ray Bradbury and radio play by, Michael McDonough this is absolutely true.
There are two different emotions within the radio play and the short story. The radio play gave
you more emotions to of the characters and the plot. Yet, the plot is developed differently in both
versions of the text. The plot is developed in a different tone in both versions of the story. In the
actual textual part, the mood isn't as brightened. For example, it starts out on page 127 paragraph 2,
"The man felt his hair flutter and the tissues of his body draw tight as if he were standing at the
center of a vacuum." This gives a permeating feeling through the reader's mind. Yet, in the radio play,
they start out with the sound affects at about 3 minutes, the sound effects and worrisome emotions
with characters really drew you...show more content...
In the text Harry was really the protagonist because he was featured and pictured the most. For
example, you could feel his emotions better, on page 129 paragraph 34, "Alone, thought
Bittering. Only a thousand of us here. No way back. No way. Sweat poured from his face and his
hands and his body;he was drenched in the hotness of his fear." So, the author Ray Bradbury,
wanted to really portray Harry's feelings. Although, in the radio play McDonough wanted to present
all of the characters in a different way. He wanted to have you get the feeling of not just Harry but
everyone's emotions in a way. At around 15–20 minutes Harry was in town talking to some of the
other humans and they teased Harry a little bit when he was working on the rocket. Yet, there was a
different mood presented in each version of, "Dark They Were, and
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Huckleberry Superstitions Quotes
In the first chapter of Huckleberry Finn, Huck is stuck in a "sivilized" world, when he would
certainly prefer to live free. He ends up moving in with the Widow Douglas and her sister Miss
Watson. The widow changes his clothing and makes him learn the bible. Huck disliked the
clothing very much saying "She put me in them new clothes again, and I couldn't do nothing but
sweat and sweat, and feel cramped up." (156) Ironically, the widow will not allow him to smoke
even though she secretly uses snuff. Miss Watson thinks he should get an education and takes it
upon herself to teach him spelling and proper behavior. Huckleberry finds spelling very difficult
to learn and hates her lectures so much that he decides that Hell has got to better than Heaven. He
states, "Well I couldn't see no advantage in going where she was going, so I made up my mind I
wouldn't try for it." (156) With this reference Twain is reminding us as the reader, of Huckleberry's
childhood innocence. A child would choose hell over heaven. Along with Huckleberry's questioning
of heaven and hell in the first chapter, his superstitions come to the forefront. Some examples of
Huck's superstitions are in his interpretation of the night sounds as death, and in how he believes
the spider burning to death in the flame of his candle is an omen of bad luck. After accidentally
killing the spider, Huck attempts a to prevent the bad luck from happening. (I got up and turned
around in my tracks three times and crossed my
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Essay on Tsotsi, by Athol Fugard
The novel Tsotsi, by Athol Fugard, is a story of redemption and reconciliation, facing the past, and
confronts the core elements of human nature. The character going through this journey, who the
novel is named after, is a young man who is part of the lowest level of society in a poor shanty
town in South Africa. Tsotsi is a thug, someone who kills for money and suffers no remorse. But
he starts changing when circumstance finds him in possession of a baby, which acts as a catalyst
in his life. A chain of events leads him to regain memories of his childhood and discover why he is
the way he is. The novel sets parameters of being "human" and brings these to the consideration of
the reader. The reader's limits of redemption are challenged as...show more content...
It is from this inhumane being that the novel begins the story of change.
At the start of the novel Tsotsi knows very little about himself and endeavours to keep it that way.
It is a rule of his to not think about his past or raise any questions about it. "His second rule which
operated then on through every other moment of the day was never to disturb his inward darkness
with the light of a thought about himself or the attempt at a memory" (36). This is because he
doesn't know the answers to questions about his past and instinctually fears memories, the reason of
which is revealed later. But it is Boston, a member of his gang who is the one to raise questions,
which initiates a thought process. He became conscious of the fact that he does not know very much
about himself. It is in this mind state that he discovers a catalyst in his life.
By chance Tsotsi is given a baby. The effect that this baby has on him is life changing, because
rather than abandoning it he cares for it. This involves him learning to look after it, against
everything that he previously knew about himself and at the risk of his reputation. He doesn't know
at first why he cares for it but gradually learns. The baby evokes unknown feelings in Tsotsi, but
more importantly it brings forth the memory of a yellow bitch. This memory has a powerful effect
on Tsotsi and for once he found that "he was curious" (59) about his
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Differences Between The Veldt Book And Movie
Hannah Vu–8FA
Many popular movies these days are based on world famous books and stories, like "The Veldt"
by Ray Bradbury. Some movies may be very similar to its story, but usually they're quite different.
This is usually caused because the movie will be too long if they try to include all the details that
the book provides. But is it completely true? This is why I will be comparing a short story to it's short
film, called "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury.
First, the characters, in this story they're five main characters, one of them being George Hadley,
the father, George is striker in the story and consistent with his decision, and Lydia Hadley, the
mother was really paranoid but became more laid back towards the end. In the movie though they
switched roles. George was not consistent with his decisions and was very easygoing at the start of
...show more content...
The plot had some major differences as well as its similarities, for example, when Lydia was
frightened by the lions and when Peter and Wendy"killed" their parents. The film did follow the
same storyline and had the same plot but also had some slight differences here and there, for
example ... In the story, George and Lydia found a wallet and a scarf in the nursery, but they
found a purse in the movie. The children didn't land in the "space ship" and they didn't even
mention the plastic carnival. There were no whining or jumping on couch's as referenced in the
story when the kids heard the news about locking up the nursery, they just got mad and ran
towards the nursery. When the Parents were supposedly chased by lions, Lydia wasn't crying, the
story made it seem more dramatic than it appeared in the video. As well as Peter called George
"George" in the movie instead of Father or Dad, this was not mentioned in the story, but it did
show how he didn't really think of George as his Dad. There were also a little foreshadowing at the
end when George told Lydia to RIP "Rest in peace" then shortly after they
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Examples Of Superstition In Huckleberry Finn
Superstition creates irrational thinking through a flawed thinking process. These beliefs deceive
people's thoughts throughout the novel, and they are used to cleverly influence their actions. As
events happen throughout the story, the characters begin to think their actions and the events that
happen to them are because of these superstitions that are introduced to them. As In The Adventures
Of Huckleberry Finn, Superstition is used to manipulate people.
Witchcraft was a common view in the culture of African American slaves in the era before the Civil
War. In chapter 2, Tom and Huck are sneaking outside when the pass Jim sleeping on a tree with a
hat on. Tom suggests tying him up, but instead Huck and Tom take his hat and hang it on the trees.
This twists Jim's mind because he begins to believe that witches are haunting him because he does
not know any better and lived knowing about the superstitions of witches. This influences his actions
by making him vulnerable, scared and shows his gullibility to their pranks....show more content...
While they are out on Jackson's Island, Huck touches a snakeskin with his hand and Jim believes
bad luck will come. Days later Huck plays a prank on Jim and puts a rattlesnake he killed in bed
with Jim. While in his bed, the rattlesnakes mate was in the bottom too and bites Jim right on his
heel. Jim makes him chop of Huck explains, "...he said that handling a snake skin was such awful
bad luck that maybe we hadn't got to the end of it yet." Jim's beliefs that this snake skin will cause
misfortune further on influence Huck to never want to touch a snakeskin again, and make him prefer
another superstition to happen. "Anybody that don't believe yet, that it's foolishness to handle a
snake–skin, after all that that snake–skin done for us, will believe it
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Examples Of Superstition In Huck Finn
Superstition is characterized as "a belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown,
trust in magic or chance, or a false conception of causation" (merriam–webster.com). Throughout
Huck Finn, superstitious beliefs are prominent in many scenes, as well as the development of many
character. Within this novel, superstition is used to develop characters through bold senses of
belief, along with use of different examples of superstition to allow a thorough sense of
understanding in the meaning of a superstitious person. Examples of superstition range from Huck
wondering about the dead man and Jim's response to how he feels about wondering about the man,
to Jim's response to the birds flying overhead and what them flying overhead means, and even Jim's
belief in touching a snakeskin with your bare hands. Indeed, Jim may be the most prominent view of
...show more content...
In Huck Finn, Jim believes that if you touch the skin of a dead rattlesnake, you will be granted bad
luck. "Now you think it's bad luck; but what did you say when I fetched in the snake skin that I
found on the top of the ridge day before yesterday? You said it was the worst bad luck in the world
to touch a snakeskin with my hands" (Twain, 59). It is understood that Jim has strong beliefs in bad
luck occurring from the varying things humans do. Through this, we are able to infer that Jim may
have fears about many things within day–to–day life. Superstitions like these could have come from
his ancestry, to his life being a slave. Jim believes strongly in the bad luck side of superstition,
leading a reader to believe he has seen a multitude of bad luck in his life. This bad luck, as
mentioned, may fall from being a slave. All in all, Jim's portrayal of superstition shows a very new
side to him, while allowing us to both learn, and to make inferences about
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Creative Writing: HUCK (D)
HUCK (CONT'D) contacting your husband, and officers are currently looking over the security
footage to find the man Olivia has described to us, I'm just going to need you to come down to the
police station where we can talk some more. Alright? You're husband can meet us down there.
MELLY
Sir please I just need to find my son, I'll cooperate in whatever way you need me too. You have to
find him, he's my only child. I don't know what I will do. He's just a little boy.
Crying and distraught Melly is helped into the patrol car by Huck.
CUT TO:
INT. LOCAL SOPCHOPPY FLORIDAPOLICE DEPARTMENT, THREE O'CLOCK
Melly's sitting at Officer Billy's desk. Many people walking around them. Melly's husband walks
into the room, looking in circles for
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Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson Essay
Speak is a cleaver and an ironic title for a story in which the main character chooses not to speak.
The story is written in first–person narration from the point of view of protagonist, Melinda
Sordino. Speak is written like an interior monologue in the mind of an introverted teenage girl,
like excerpts from her personal diary during her miserable freshman year of high school. Instead of
blending in and finding her way through high school. She withdraws and secludes herself from the
other students. She calls herself an "outcast." Melinda is so desperate to hide from the world; she
turns an old janitor's closet at the high school into her safe haven. She cuts classes to hide in her
closet. How lonely could this teenage girl be? All...show more content...
And there is a clique of girls at the school who refer to their group as "the Marathas," that is the
Martha Stewart wannabes. There doesn't seem to be a place where Melinda fits in. Where does a
girl who has been sexually assaulted fit–in? Melinda isn't speaking to anyone, and no one will talk to
her, except the new girl, Heather, who moved from the state of Ohio. Realistically, Heather being
the new girl just wants to make friends. Heather doesn't know what is really going on with
Melinda because she just moved to town. Heather has no idea what happened the night when
Melinda called the police, which busted a summer party. In fact, no one knows, except for
Melinda, what happened to her at the party? She is convinced that because she is a victim, no one
understands her. The whole world, including her world, is out to get her and so it is best for her
to remain silent. Ironically, the person Melinda finds as the outlet to help her express her
feelings is her art teacher, Mr. Freeman. In a class assignment, Melinda is assigned to create an art
project based on a tree. She begins to express her inner angst through this art project. At one point,
she uses dried bones to sculpt a picture of a skeleton. Then she glues broken knives and forks to
the project so that the bones look like the plastic utensils are stabbing them. It is a grim depiction of
how Melinda feels, and is immediately praised by Mr. Freeman.
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Huck Finn Superstitions In Chapter 4
In chapter four there are superstitions about spilling salt and the hair ball oracle. Huck explains that
one morning, at breakfast he "happened to turn over the salt–cellar...[he] reached for some of it as
quick as [he] could to throw over his left shoulder". Unfortunately for Huck, Miss Watson stopped
him on account of him making a mess. He goes on to say, " I started out, after breakfast, feeling
worried and shaky, and wondering where it was going to fall on me..." (14). By "it" huck means
bad luck. When he spilled the salt, he wasn't able to throw it over his shoulder and because of that
he was afraid of when bad luck would get him. Coincidentally, Huck say tracks in the snow that he
recognizes as his father's tracks– Huck thinks his bad luck has come....show more content...
Jim told Huck that "there was a spirit inside of it, and it knowed everything". After the hair ball
"spoke" to Jim, he told Huck "Yo'ole father doan' know, yit, what he's a–gwyne to do. Sometimes he
spec he'll go 'way, en den agin he spec he'll stay. De bes' way is to res' easy en let de ole man take
his own way... You gwyne to have considable trouble in yo' life, en considable joy..."(16). This
example of a superstition in the novel shows how fear of the unknown makes people like Huck and
Jim turn to unconventional methods to make sense of the things happening around them. Huck is
characterized as childish. Huck saw the shoe tracks and immediately sought help in a so–called
magical hair ball to learn about what his father was doing in
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The Sentimentality Of William Tavener Analysis
The passage from "The Sentimentality of William Tavener" begins with a mom and talking about
whether or not their sons should be able to go to the circus. The mom wants her sons to go because
she believes that they deserve it. The dad believes that they should be working instead. The plots
starting point begins with the mother and father expressing opposing opinions. The plot of the
passage starts out with Hester, the mom, and William, the dad, expressing opposing opinions, and
half–way through they started reflecting on their experiences with the circus. The two characters had
grown distant over the years, but the nostalgia made them seem closer than ever. The way the author
has the plot ordered introduces the type of relationship and discussions
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Turning A Book Into A Movie
Turning a Book into a Movie for Whose Gain?
The article: Turning a Book into a Movie: An Author's Perspective, written by Michael Murie as a
summary of a panel, at the Boston Book Festival, in which five authors discussed their experiences
when their books were turned into movies. The five authors were: Nick Flynn, Daniel Handler,
Buzz Bissinger, Rachel Cohn and Andre Dubus III. Just as each of the authors books were different,
their experiences in the filmmaking process were very different. Cohn was thrilled with the
production of her novel, Nick& Norah's Infinite Playlist. Cohn saw the movie as a "Two–hour
advertisement for your [her] book" (Murie). In contrast, Bissinger was disappointed with the movie
and TV series, which although...show more content...
They both get publicity from each other, and both receive a share of the profit. If you remember
in Michael Murie's article Cohn says "It's [the movie] like a two hour advertisement for your [the
author's] book" (Murie). Cohn's quote illustrates the publicity the book gets from the movie, by
comparing it to an advertisement. The movie gets publicity from the book in similar ways. For
example the cover of my paperback copy of J.R. Tolkien's Hobbit exclaims in bold letters "Now a
Major Motion Picture". Not only do both sides get publicity from each other, but both sides also
share in the profit. Authors receive a profit by selling the rights of their book. Movie Producers
make a fortune if the movie is a success.
In addition to the publicity and profit, movie producers also receive a foundation for the movie
and fans from the start, when they base their movies on books. Even though a book provides the
movie producers with a foundation, the book can also stifle creativity. The five authors in
Murie's article all agreed that books do not make good scripts (Murie). Often the fans of the book
transform into fans and supporters of the movie. Interest in the movie is generated before the
movie is even created. However excitement for movies can be generated in other ways just as easily.
For example fans of Marvel Studio movies will be excited for the next Marvel movie because it
carries the Marvel name. Or a certain
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Huck's Character Analysis
Because of Hucks childhood and how he grew up, he struggles with a lot of things. Huck began
to freak out because he was so close to freedom, and worried they were going to get caught. He
started thinking "why me?". Huck was struggling with everything illegal they had done, and
couldnt wrap eevrything around his head. Huck thought he was to blame for everything that has
happened. He grew up getting beat up, and being told everything was his fault so I dont blame
him for thinking this. Your past expieriences does not give you any exuse to act a certain way, but
its also not easy to just forget about. He started feeling bad for Miss Watson, and started thinking
"what did she do for me to treat her how I did?". He starts to reflect on his life
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In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, the theme of superstition is
obviously portrayed in both views of Jim and Huck. Huck shows his beliefs in superstition
throughout the entire novel, but especially in the beginning. Between Huck And Jim, Jim is by far
the most superstitious. Huckleberry Finn is superstitious out of terror, while Jim is superstitious
out of beliefs and his education. Huck and Jim have different point of views on how they see
superstition. Jim, is Huck's best friend on the long journey down the Mississippi, who seems to be
more superstitious. Though Huck seems to believe things out of horror, Jim is superstitious because
of his beliefs and experiences over time. This may be because of his...show more content...
Huck began to believe in this superstition when the snake bit Jim in the heel and things began to
go down hill. Jim is superstitious to the point where it is almost ridiculous where as Huck is more
rational and trusts what he knows. Through out this novel, Huck and Jim show there ways of
superstition. They both have different beliefs. Huck only believes that when he uses his
superstition it is only for a good reason. However, Jim's superstition is very strong and can't live
without it. In chapter 1, Huck shows he is superstitious when he flicks the spider off his shoulder,
it ends up falling in a candle and lighting it. Huck then stood up and went back in his tracks three
times and crossed his breast every time. Huck then tied up a little piece of his hair with a thread
to keep the witches away, "Pretty soon a spider went crawling up my shoulder, and I flipped it off
and it lit in the candle; and before I could budge it was all shriveled up"(3). This makes Huck's
view of superstition very visible. Huck tends to believe things out of fear when something awful is
about to happen. Like for instance, in chapter 4, Huck wants to throw salt over his shoulder because
he thinks that some of the "bad Luck" will stop following them. During this, Miss Watson, his owner,
was there to stop him and tell him that it won't help him one bit, "One morning I happened to turn
over the salt–cellar at breakfast.
Get more content on HelpWriting.net
The Well Elizabeth Jelley Analysis
Research Essay: The Well by Elizabeth Jolley
Literary works have the ability to inform our thoughts, and give us insight into the human condition.
The novel The Well (1986) by Elizabeth Jolley may be read as a comment on various aspects of
human nature. The text tells the story of Hester Harper, an old, crippled land owner, who adopts
Katherine, a young, bright orphan. The novel is set in in rural Western Australia, and depicts the
extravagant domestic life the two women have built together, isolated from the rest of society.
Through Jolley's use of characterisation, symbolism, and plot, the text comments on the innate
human need for companionship, and the human desire for power.
The need for companionship is explored in this text, with...show more content...
The characterisation of Hester reinforces this reading, as although she is established to be
repressed emotionally and displays a disinterest in romantic relationships, readers see in chapter 4
that this was not always the case. As a child, Hester's hopeful and romantic expectations are shown
through her relationship with Hilde, and it is described that the two 'washed their necks every day
with cold water so that it would be beautiful to receive...the necklaces and pendants and jewels some
man would want to cherish her with' (pg. 70). This implies that the idea of marriage and romantic
relationships once appealed to Hester when she was a child. Although she has forgone any attempts
at romance in her adulthood, Hester still displays a desire for companionship, and achieves this
through her relationship with Kathy. Her desperation to keep Kathy as a companion is reinforced
through her extravagant spending, spoiling Kathy with 'clothes, foods, furniture, cassette players
and transistors' as 'there was no end to their wishes and to their shopping'. This text may therefore be
read as a comment on the nature of human beings, as it naturalises the human need for
companionship through Hester's past and present desires for a
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The Theme Of Hope In The Great Gatsby
In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, hope is a major theme throughout the novel. Hope is the
act of wanting or wishing for something to happen. Gatsby, for example, is hoping that Daisy will
leave her husband to be with him, this eventually leads to his death. Despite the recurring nature of
the theme of hope, it is not portrayed in a completely favorable light. In fact, there is a complex
attitude towards the nature of hope as shown through the narrator Nick. He believes hope is a human
instinct, but it is something undoubtedly pointless in the long run. Nick seems to believe that hoping
for things is redundant. That no matter what the things that people hope for will either never happen
or they will never achieve their goals. As...show more content...
As previously stated, Gatsby is murdered before he can achieve the future he is hoping for, thus
proving Nick's belief that hope is a pointless feeling as one never reaches the outcome they want.
However, while Nick felt the idea of hope was all in all a pointless endeavor, he still believes that
hope is something people can't help but feeling. He believes that everyone can't help but hope or
wish for something better, that it is just a part of human nature. For example, "So we beat on,
boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past" (182). The use of diction,
specifically with the phrases beat on and ceaselessly, create a confident tone that defines human
nature. Beat on shows how restless Nick believes humans to be. He believes that no matter what
happens, they will pick themselves up again and continue on with their lives. This is shown in
Daisy's actions when Gatsby died. Nick watches as rather than face the consequences of what she
did, she picks up her family and moves on with her life, thus cementing the idea of this is how
humans act into Nick's mind. Similarly, the use of ceaselessly shows Nick's belief that people refuse
to quit and that they will continue tirelessly until they reach what they want in life. He sees this
through Gatsby. Gatsby threw extravagant parties every week in order to attract Daisy's attention.
He refused to stop, continuing this trend for years until she finally waltzed back into his life.
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Novel Essay Example

  • 1. Nervous Conditions Essay Nervous Conditions The choice to resist or comply in situations greatly affects the success and personal relationships of Tambu and Nyasha throughout the Nervous Conditions. Tambu arrives at her uncle's school initially embracing her education and passion for learning, while there she begins to notice the relationships that existed between the settlers and native, males and females in society. Nyasha understood how awful these relationships were as a young girl. She suffers from severe depression and an eating disorder while trying to cope with and understand these relationships. There are many different decisions made with a variety of strategies that either helps them advance or causes them to fall victim to the controls of...show more content... Tambu decides not to go to the wedding; this is the first time she has stood up for herself in Babamukru's house. After the ceremony she has some regret for not going but the fact that she was able to make her own decision made it all worth it. ''guilt, so many razor sharp edges of it, slice away at me. My mother had been right; it was unnatural; I would not listen to my own parents, but I would listen to Babamukuru even when he told me to laugh at my parents. There was something unnatural about me.''(Tambu, 167) This wedding made her realize how much she had just been just doing everything he said even if it was wrong and this made her feel very week. Making the decision not to go gave her a ''newly acquired identity''(Tambu, 171) and she gladly took the lashings and punishment for it. When the nuns from Sacred Heart came to the mission school to recruit they offer Tambu a scholarship and a position at the school. Maiguru stands up for Tambu when Babamukuru shuts down the idea. She accepts the offer to the Convent School and becomes so focused on her education she fails to see the effects of this situation on her personal relationships with Nyasha and her friends. Nyasha writes her letters Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 2. The Light In The Forest Book Report Light In the Forest. The Light in the Forest is a book about True Son, son of Cuyloga. He was kidnapped when he was 4 and adopted by the Indian chief Cuyloga. He lives in the Tuscarawas of Ohio, speaking the Delaware language. After a treaty is made, True Son is to returned to his family in Philadelphia, unwillingly he goes. True Son stays with his white family for a while, but after escaping with Half Arrow they stay 2 ВЅ months in the forest and later returning to the Tuscarawas. True Son receives a warm welcome from his family. The older brother of Little Crane, Thitipan, wants revenge for his brother's death. They plan to get as many scalps for it to be a honorable revenge. As they set off and get scalps, a boat full of white people is passing, Thitipan suggests an ambush, True Son would pretend to be a white boy that is lost. For the reason of thinking of Georgie,his younger brother, he tells the whites to turn back for it was an ambush. In the end True Son is kicked out of the Tribe and parted by his father and cousin....show more content... In the beginning of the movie, it showed how the treaty was made, while in the book it was beforehand. Also True Son was calm when being exchanged, unlike the book he was stubborn and aggressive. He attacked Del with a rifle in the movie though. Another sign of difference would be how the character Georgie, True Son's younger brother. In the movie he was replaced with Shenandoah the servant girl to make a happy ending, going to the next point. It seemed the completed wiped Georgie of the list of characters. The ending in the movie was a bit more exciting than in the book. In the book, True Son crosses the river he had already crossed twice, with an unknowing end of what happened to him. The movie however here returned back with a welcome from the whites, and fought his Uncle Wilse, also had a happily ever after with Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 3. Examples Of Superstition In Huckleberry Finn Throughout Mark Twain's classic "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" the reader becomes acquainted with superstitions that immensely affect the way people lived. Numerous superstitions, that Huck presumed true, were bad omens; shriveled up spiders, spilling salt cellars, as well as rattlesnake skins. At the onset of the novel Huckleberry was feeling extremely isolate and wishing for a little company. Scanning his shoulder Huck noticed a spider, however that wasn't the company he was hoping for. Huck flicked the spider off and into an ignited candle. Before he could budge, the flame had scorched and withered the spider. "I didn't need anybody to tell me that was an awful bad sign and would fetch me some bad luck... I got up and turned around...show more content... It is the only thing he knows to believe in. He introduces us to a second superstition during breakfast. "I happened to turn over the saltcellar... I reached for some of it as quick as I could to throw over my left shoulder and keep off the bad luck" (15). The widow stops him before he gets the chance. Later, when Huck finds his father's tracks in the snow he blames it on the atrocious superstition of spilling the saltcellar. A third superstition learned from Jim taught Huckleberry that handling a serpents skin will bring the worst luck. Huckleberry Finn didn't believe this at first, although that didn't last too long. To demonstrate to Jim that this superstition was merely manufactured from fear, Huck found a rattlesnake, killed it, and curled it up at the foot of Jims blanket. "When Jim flung himself down on the blanket while I struck a light the snake's mate was there, and bit him" (53). This transposed Huckleberry's mind about superstition. As a result he matures to be more and more superstitious as the book progresses. Superstitions infiltrate the life of Huckleberry Finn, a few include shriveled up spiders, spilling salt cellars, along with touching snakeskins. These superstitions may not be real, yet they still have an unquestionable effect on the way Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 4. The English Patient Film Compared with the Novel The Novel: The English Patient is a fantastic novel and is one of the few truly great novels written in the last century. The author, Sri Lankan Michael Ondaatje, switches wonderfully between several scenes: the desert, the Villa San Girolamo in Tuscany, Italy, Dorset inEngland and Cairo. Each one of these perfectly crafted scenes is brought into being in an exciting and thought provoking way. The book is centred on four main characters: Hana, a Canadian nurse who has taken it upon herself to be separated from the other medical staff and remains behind in a mine–laden villa to tend to just one patient, the English patient; Kip, a Sikh who was,...show more content... The desert in the film is done very well and deserves a lot of credit. I feel that it is portrayed very well. The desert seems to be very much the main scene in the film, with the plot focussing on this aspect of the novel. However, in the novel, the desert is by no means the most important scene; it is in fact the Villa. I personally don't seem to mind this too much and I feel that it is no injustice to the book. I also think that the desert portrays namelessness and nationlessness very well. Although the scene where they are having a Christmas lunch in the dessert is not particularly special and does not really add anything positive to the film, it does portray the theme of namelessness and nationlessness very well, as the idea of having a Christmas lunch in the desert with a man dressed in a father Christmas suit is very obscure. The scene at El Taj, where AlmГsy tries to borrow a jeep from the English is done brilliantly. It is a huge contrast to the rest of the film, as it reminds us that although there is this feeling of nationlessness and namelessness, there is still a war going on, and this comes before anything. So when AlmГ sy goes to el Taj, we are brought back to reality about how there I this war that is going on. I personally believe that should Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 5. All quiet On the Western Front, a book written by Erich Maria Remarque tells of the harrowing experiences of the First World War as seen through the eyes of a young German soldier. I think that this novel is a classic anti–war novel that provides an extremely realistic portrayal of war. The novel focuses on a group of German soldier and follows their experiences. Life for the soldiers in the beginning is a dramatic one as they are ordered up to the frontline to wire fences. The frontline makes Paul feel immediately different as described here. "As if something is inside us, in our blood, has been switched on." The front makes Paul more aware and switched on as if his senses and reactions are sharpened. I think Paul and his friends are...show more content... "A wounded soldier? I shout to him–no answer– must be dead." The dead body has fallen out the coffin and the coffin has been unearthed because of the shelling. Even the dead and buried cannot rest in peace during this war. This just adds to the horror of the situation Paul is in. Through out this book the author shows that war is not about heroism and fighting nobly for your country, war is a terrible thing. Paul and his friends are on the frontline in the shelters for days and the pressure gets to the men as Paul says here. "The recruit who had the fit earlier is raving again and two more have joined in. One breaks away and runs for it." This shows that the frontline, added by lack of food, has driven the young recruits mad and so much so that one recruit runs away out into the battle field with inevitable consequence of death. Paul describes the front line in many ways to show the reader and give the reader a good picture of what the frontline is like for a soldier, as Paul expresses here." The front is a cage and you have to wait nervously in it for whatever happens to you", and Paul also says. "I can be squashed flat in a bomb–proof dugout, and I can survive ten hours in the pen under heavy barrage without a scratch." This shows the reader that it is very unpredictable on the frontline and that a soldier owes his life only to lucky chances that they have not yet been killed. Paul and his platoon have been turned into machines due to the war, controlled by Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 6. Dark They Were, And Golden Eyed Analysis Things aren't always as they seem– not even to yourself. In the short story " Dark They Were, and Golden Eyed" by, Ray Bradbury and radio play by, Michael McDonough this is absolutely true. There are two different emotions within the radio play and the short story. The radio play gave you more emotions to of the characters and the plot. Yet, the plot is developed differently in both versions of the text. The plot is developed in a different tone in both versions of the story. In the actual textual part, the mood isn't as brightened. For example, it starts out on page 127 paragraph 2, "The man felt his hair flutter and the tissues of his body draw tight as if he were standing at the center of a vacuum." This gives a permeating feeling through the reader's mind. Yet, in the radio play, they start out with the sound affects at about 3 minutes, the sound effects and worrisome emotions with characters really drew you...show more content... In the text Harry was really the protagonist because he was featured and pictured the most. For example, you could feel his emotions better, on page 129 paragraph 34, "Alone, thought Bittering. Only a thousand of us here. No way back. No way. Sweat poured from his face and his hands and his body;he was drenched in the hotness of his fear." So, the author Ray Bradbury, wanted to really portray Harry's feelings. Although, in the radio play McDonough wanted to present all of the characters in a different way. He wanted to have you get the feeling of not just Harry but everyone's emotions in a way. At around 15–20 minutes Harry was in town talking to some of the other humans and they teased Harry a little bit when he was working on the rocket. Yet, there was a different mood presented in each version of, "Dark They Were, and Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 7. Huckleberry Superstitions Quotes In the first chapter of Huckleberry Finn, Huck is stuck in a "sivilized" world, when he would certainly prefer to live free. He ends up moving in with the Widow Douglas and her sister Miss Watson. The widow changes his clothing and makes him learn the bible. Huck disliked the clothing very much saying "She put me in them new clothes again, and I couldn't do nothing but sweat and sweat, and feel cramped up." (156) Ironically, the widow will not allow him to smoke even though she secretly uses snuff. Miss Watson thinks he should get an education and takes it upon herself to teach him spelling and proper behavior. Huckleberry finds spelling very difficult to learn and hates her lectures so much that he decides that Hell has got to better than Heaven. He states, "Well I couldn't see no advantage in going where she was going, so I made up my mind I wouldn't try for it." (156) With this reference Twain is reminding us as the reader, of Huckleberry's childhood innocence. A child would choose hell over heaven. Along with Huckleberry's questioning of heaven and hell in the first chapter, his superstitions come to the forefront. Some examples of Huck's superstitions are in his interpretation of the night sounds as death, and in how he believes the spider burning to death in the flame of his candle is an omen of bad luck. After accidentally killing the spider, Huck attempts a to prevent the bad luck from happening. (I got up and turned around in my tracks three times and crossed my Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 8. Essay on Tsotsi, by Athol Fugard The novel Tsotsi, by Athol Fugard, is a story of redemption and reconciliation, facing the past, and confronts the core elements of human nature. The character going through this journey, who the novel is named after, is a young man who is part of the lowest level of society in a poor shanty town in South Africa. Tsotsi is a thug, someone who kills for money and suffers no remorse. But he starts changing when circumstance finds him in possession of a baby, which acts as a catalyst in his life. A chain of events leads him to regain memories of his childhood and discover why he is the way he is. The novel sets parameters of being "human" and brings these to the consideration of the reader. The reader's limits of redemption are challenged as...show more content... It is from this inhumane being that the novel begins the story of change. At the start of the novel Tsotsi knows very little about himself and endeavours to keep it that way. It is a rule of his to not think about his past or raise any questions about it. "His second rule which operated then on through every other moment of the day was never to disturb his inward darkness with the light of a thought about himself or the attempt at a memory" (36). This is because he doesn't know the answers to questions about his past and instinctually fears memories, the reason of which is revealed later. But it is Boston, a member of his gang who is the one to raise questions, which initiates a thought process. He became conscious of the fact that he does not know very much about himself. It is in this mind state that he discovers a catalyst in his life. By chance Tsotsi is given a baby. The effect that this baby has on him is life changing, because rather than abandoning it he cares for it. This involves him learning to look after it, against everything that he previously knew about himself and at the risk of his reputation. He doesn't know at first why he cares for it but gradually learns. The baby evokes unknown feelings in Tsotsi, but more importantly it brings forth the memory of a yellow bitch. This memory has a powerful effect on Tsotsi and for once he found that "he was curious" (59) about his Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 9. Differences Between The Veldt Book And Movie Hannah Vu–8FA Many popular movies these days are based on world famous books and stories, like "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury. Some movies may be very similar to its story, but usually they're quite different. This is usually caused because the movie will be too long if they try to include all the details that the book provides. But is it completely true? This is why I will be comparing a short story to it's short film, called "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury. First, the characters, in this story they're five main characters, one of them being George Hadley, the father, George is striker in the story and consistent with his decision, and Lydia Hadley, the mother was really paranoid but became more laid back towards the end. In the movie though they switched roles. George was not consistent with his decisions and was very easygoing at the start of ...show more content... The plot had some major differences as well as its similarities, for example, when Lydia was frightened by the lions and when Peter and Wendy"killed" their parents. The film did follow the same storyline and had the same plot but also had some slight differences here and there, for example ... In the story, George and Lydia found a wallet and a scarf in the nursery, but they found a purse in the movie. The children didn't land in the "space ship" and they didn't even mention the plastic carnival. There were no whining or jumping on couch's as referenced in the story when the kids heard the news about locking up the nursery, they just got mad and ran towards the nursery. When the Parents were supposedly chased by lions, Lydia wasn't crying, the story made it seem more dramatic than it appeared in the video. As well as Peter called George "George" in the movie instead of Father or Dad, this was not mentioned in the story, but it did show how he didn't really think of George as his Dad. There were also a little foreshadowing at the end when George told Lydia to RIP "Rest in peace" then shortly after they Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 10. Examples Of Superstition In Huckleberry Finn Superstition creates irrational thinking through a flawed thinking process. These beliefs deceive people's thoughts throughout the novel, and they are used to cleverly influence their actions. As events happen throughout the story, the characters begin to think their actions and the events that happen to them are because of these superstitions that are introduced to them. As In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn, Superstition is used to manipulate people. Witchcraft was a common view in the culture of African American slaves in the era before the Civil War. In chapter 2, Tom and Huck are sneaking outside when the pass Jim sleeping on a tree with a hat on. Tom suggests tying him up, but instead Huck and Tom take his hat and hang it on the trees. This twists Jim's mind because he begins to believe that witches are haunting him because he does not know any better and lived knowing about the superstitions of witches. This influences his actions by making him vulnerable, scared and shows his gullibility to their pranks....show more content... While they are out on Jackson's Island, Huck touches a snakeskin with his hand and Jim believes bad luck will come. Days later Huck plays a prank on Jim and puts a rattlesnake he killed in bed with Jim. While in his bed, the rattlesnakes mate was in the bottom too and bites Jim right on his heel. Jim makes him chop of Huck explains, "...he said that handling a snake skin was such awful bad luck that maybe we hadn't got to the end of it yet." Jim's beliefs that this snake skin will cause misfortune further on influence Huck to never want to touch a snakeskin again, and make him prefer another superstition to happen. "Anybody that don't believe yet, that it's foolishness to handle a snake–skin, after all that that snake–skin done for us, will believe it Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 11. Examples Of Superstition In Huck Finn Superstition is characterized as "a belief or practice resulting from ignorance, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance, or a false conception of causation" (merriam–webster.com). Throughout Huck Finn, superstitious beliefs are prominent in many scenes, as well as the development of many character. Within this novel, superstition is used to develop characters through bold senses of belief, along with use of different examples of superstition to allow a thorough sense of understanding in the meaning of a superstitious person. Examples of superstition range from Huck wondering about the dead man and Jim's response to how he feels about wondering about the man, to Jim's response to the birds flying overhead and what them flying overhead means, and even Jim's belief in touching a snakeskin with your bare hands. Indeed, Jim may be the most prominent view of ...show more content... In Huck Finn, Jim believes that if you touch the skin of a dead rattlesnake, you will be granted bad luck. "Now you think it's bad luck; but what did you say when I fetched in the snake skin that I found on the top of the ridge day before yesterday? You said it was the worst bad luck in the world to touch a snakeskin with my hands" (Twain, 59). It is understood that Jim has strong beliefs in bad luck occurring from the varying things humans do. Through this, we are able to infer that Jim may have fears about many things within day–to–day life. Superstitions like these could have come from his ancestry, to his life being a slave. Jim believes strongly in the bad luck side of superstition, leading a reader to believe he has seen a multitude of bad luck in his life. This bad luck, as mentioned, may fall from being a slave. All in all, Jim's portrayal of superstition shows a very new side to him, while allowing us to both learn, and to make inferences about Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 12. Creative Writing: HUCK (D) HUCK (CONT'D) contacting your husband, and officers are currently looking over the security footage to find the man Olivia has described to us, I'm just going to need you to come down to the police station where we can talk some more. Alright? You're husband can meet us down there. MELLY Sir please I just need to find my son, I'll cooperate in whatever way you need me too. You have to find him, he's my only child. I don't know what I will do. He's just a little boy. Crying and distraught Melly is helped into the patrol car by Huck. CUT TO: INT. LOCAL SOPCHOPPY FLORIDAPOLICE DEPARTMENT, THREE O'CLOCK Melly's sitting at Officer Billy's desk. Many people walking around them. Melly's husband walks into the room, looking in circles for Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 13. Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson Essay Speak is a cleaver and an ironic title for a story in which the main character chooses not to speak. The story is written in first–person narration from the point of view of protagonist, Melinda Sordino. Speak is written like an interior monologue in the mind of an introverted teenage girl, like excerpts from her personal diary during her miserable freshman year of high school. Instead of blending in and finding her way through high school. She withdraws and secludes herself from the other students. She calls herself an "outcast." Melinda is so desperate to hide from the world; she turns an old janitor's closet at the high school into her safe haven. She cuts classes to hide in her closet. How lonely could this teenage girl be? All...show more content... And there is a clique of girls at the school who refer to their group as "the Marathas," that is the Martha Stewart wannabes. There doesn't seem to be a place where Melinda fits in. Where does a girl who has been sexually assaulted fit–in? Melinda isn't speaking to anyone, and no one will talk to her, except the new girl, Heather, who moved from the state of Ohio. Realistically, Heather being the new girl just wants to make friends. Heather doesn't know what is really going on with Melinda because she just moved to town. Heather has no idea what happened the night when Melinda called the police, which busted a summer party. In fact, no one knows, except for Melinda, what happened to her at the party? She is convinced that because she is a victim, no one understands her. The whole world, including her world, is out to get her and so it is best for her to remain silent. Ironically, the person Melinda finds as the outlet to help her express her feelings is her art teacher, Mr. Freeman. In a class assignment, Melinda is assigned to create an art project based on a tree. She begins to express her inner angst through this art project. At one point, she uses dried bones to sculpt a picture of a skeleton. Then she glues broken knives and forks to the project so that the bones look like the plastic utensils are stabbing them. It is a grim depiction of how Melinda feels, and is immediately praised by Mr. Freeman. Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 14. Huck Finn Superstitions In Chapter 4 In chapter four there are superstitions about spilling salt and the hair ball oracle. Huck explains that one morning, at breakfast he "happened to turn over the salt–cellar...[he] reached for some of it as quick as [he] could to throw over his left shoulder". Unfortunately for Huck, Miss Watson stopped him on account of him making a mess. He goes on to say, " I started out, after breakfast, feeling worried and shaky, and wondering where it was going to fall on me..." (14). By "it" huck means bad luck. When he spilled the salt, he wasn't able to throw it over his shoulder and because of that he was afraid of when bad luck would get him. Coincidentally, Huck say tracks in the snow that he recognizes as his father's tracks– Huck thinks his bad luck has come....show more content... Jim told Huck that "there was a spirit inside of it, and it knowed everything". After the hair ball "spoke" to Jim, he told Huck "Yo'ole father doan' know, yit, what he's a–gwyne to do. Sometimes he spec he'll go 'way, en den agin he spec he'll stay. De bes' way is to res' easy en let de ole man take his own way... You gwyne to have considable trouble in yo' life, en considable joy..."(16). This example of a superstition in the novel shows how fear of the unknown makes people like Huck and Jim turn to unconventional methods to make sense of the things happening around them. Huck is characterized as childish. Huck saw the shoe tracks and immediately sought help in a so–called magical hair ball to learn about what his father was doing in Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 15. The Sentimentality Of William Tavener Analysis The passage from "The Sentimentality of William Tavener" begins with a mom and talking about whether or not their sons should be able to go to the circus. The mom wants her sons to go because she believes that they deserve it. The dad believes that they should be working instead. The plots starting point begins with the mother and father expressing opposing opinions. The plot of the passage starts out with Hester, the mom, and William, the dad, expressing opposing opinions, and half–way through they started reflecting on their experiences with the circus. The two characters had grown distant over the years, but the nostalgia made them seem closer than ever. The way the author has the plot ordered introduces the type of relationship and discussions Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 16. Turning A Book Into A Movie Turning a Book into a Movie for Whose Gain? The article: Turning a Book into a Movie: An Author's Perspective, written by Michael Murie as a summary of a panel, at the Boston Book Festival, in which five authors discussed their experiences when their books were turned into movies. The five authors were: Nick Flynn, Daniel Handler, Buzz Bissinger, Rachel Cohn and Andre Dubus III. Just as each of the authors books were different, their experiences in the filmmaking process were very different. Cohn was thrilled with the production of her novel, Nick& Norah's Infinite Playlist. Cohn saw the movie as a "Two–hour advertisement for your [her] book" (Murie). In contrast, Bissinger was disappointed with the movie and TV series, which although...show more content... They both get publicity from each other, and both receive a share of the profit. If you remember in Michael Murie's article Cohn says "It's [the movie] like a two hour advertisement for your [the author's] book" (Murie). Cohn's quote illustrates the publicity the book gets from the movie, by comparing it to an advertisement. The movie gets publicity from the book in similar ways. For example the cover of my paperback copy of J.R. Tolkien's Hobbit exclaims in bold letters "Now a Major Motion Picture". Not only do both sides get publicity from each other, but both sides also share in the profit. Authors receive a profit by selling the rights of their book. Movie Producers make a fortune if the movie is a success. In addition to the publicity and profit, movie producers also receive a foundation for the movie and fans from the start, when they base their movies on books. Even though a book provides the movie producers with a foundation, the book can also stifle creativity. The five authors in Murie's article all agreed that books do not make good scripts (Murie). Often the fans of the book transform into fans and supporters of the movie. Interest in the movie is generated before the movie is even created. However excitement for movies can be generated in other ways just as easily. For example fans of Marvel Studio movies will be excited for the next Marvel movie because it carries the Marvel name. Or a certain Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 17. Huck's Character Analysis Because of Hucks childhood and how he grew up, he struggles with a lot of things. Huck began to freak out because he was so close to freedom, and worried they were going to get caught. He started thinking "why me?". Huck was struggling with everything illegal they had done, and couldnt wrap eevrything around his head. Huck thought he was to blame for everything that has happened. He grew up getting beat up, and being told everything was his fault so I dont blame him for thinking this. Your past expieriences does not give you any exuse to act a certain way, but its also not easy to just forget about. He started feeling bad for Miss Watson, and started thinking "what did she do for me to treat her how I did?". He starts to reflect on his life Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 18. In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, the theme of superstition is obviously portrayed in both views of Jim and Huck. Huck shows his beliefs in superstition throughout the entire novel, but especially in the beginning. Between Huck And Jim, Jim is by far the most superstitious. Huckleberry Finn is superstitious out of terror, while Jim is superstitious out of beliefs and his education. Huck and Jim have different point of views on how they see superstition. Jim, is Huck's best friend on the long journey down the Mississippi, who seems to be more superstitious. Though Huck seems to believe things out of horror, Jim is superstitious because of his beliefs and experiences over time. This may be because of his...show more content... Huck began to believe in this superstition when the snake bit Jim in the heel and things began to go down hill. Jim is superstitious to the point where it is almost ridiculous where as Huck is more rational and trusts what he knows. Through out this novel, Huck and Jim show there ways of superstition. They both have different beliefs. Huck only believes that when he uses his superstition it is only for a good reason. However, Jim's superstition is very strong and can't live without it. In chapter 1, Huck shows he is superstitious when he flicks the spider off his shoulder, it ends up falling in a candle and lighting it. Huck then stood up and went back in his tracks three times and crossed his breast every time. Huck then tied up a little piece of his hair with a thread to keep the witches away, "Pretty soon a spider went crawling up my shoulder, and I flipped it off and it lit in the candle; and before I could budge it was all shriveled up"(3). This makes Huck's view of superstition very visible. Huck tends to believe things out of fear when something awful is about to happen. Like for instance, in chapter 4, Huck wants to throw salt over his shoulder because he thinks that some of the "bad Luck" will stop following them. During this, Miss Watson, his owner, was there to stop him and tell him that it won't help him one bit, "One morning I happened to turn over the salt–cellar at breakfast. Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 19. The Well Elizabeth Jelley Analysis Research Essay: The Well by Elizabeth Jolley Literary works have the ability to inform our thoughts, and give us insight into the human condition. The novel The Well (1986) by Elizabeth Jolley may be read as a comment on various aspects of human nature. The text tells the story of Hester Harper, an old, crippled land owner, who adopts Katherine, a young, bright orphan. The novel is set in in rural Western Australia, and depicts the extravagant domestic life the two women have built together, isolated from the rest of society. Through Jolley's use of characterisation, symbolism, and plot, the text comments on the innate human need for companionship, and the human desire for power. The need for companionship is explored in this text, with...show more content... The characterisation of Hester reinforces this reading, as although she is established to be repressed emotionally and displays a disinterest in romantic relationships, readers see in chapter 4 that this was not always the case. As a child, Hester's hopeful and romantic expectations are shown through her relationship with Hilde, and it is described that the two 'washed their necks every day with cold water so that it would be beautiful to receive...the necklaces and pendants and jewels some man would want to cherish her with' (pg. 70). This implies that the idea of marriage and romantic relationships once appealed to Hester when she was a child. Although she has forgone any attempts at romance in her adulthood, Hester still displays a desire for companionship, and achieves this through her relationship with Kathy. Her desperation to keep Kathy as a companion is reinforced through her extravagant spending, spoiling Kathy with 'clothes, foods, furniture, cassette players and transistors' as 'there was no end to their wishes and to their shopping'. This text may therefore be read as a comment on the nature of human beings, as it naturalises the human need for companionship through Hester's past and present desires for a Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 20. The Theme Of Hope In The Great Gatsby In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, hope is a major theme throughout the novel. Hope is the act of wanting or wishing for something to happen. Gatsby, for example, is hoping that Daisy will leave her husband to be with him, this eventually leads to his death. Despite the recurring nature of the theme of hope, it is not portrayed in a completely favorable light. In fact, there is a complex attitude towards the nature of hope as shown through the narrator Nick. He believes hope is a human instinct, but it is something undoubtedly pointless in the long run. Nick seems to believe that hoping for things is redundant. That no matter what the things that people hope for will either never happen or they will never achieve their goals. As...show more content... As previously stated, Gatsby is murdered before he can achieve the future he is hoping for, thus proving Nick's belief that hope is a pointless feeling as one never reaches the outcome they want. However, while Nick felt the idea of hope was all in all a pointless endeavor, he still believes that hope is something people can't help but feeling. He believes that everyone can't help but hope or wish for something better, that it is just a part of human nature. For example, "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past" (182). The use of diction, specifically with the phrases beat on and ceaselessly, create a confident tone that defines human nature. Beat on shows how restless Nick believes humans to be. He believes that no matter what happens, they will pick themselves up again and continue on with their lives. This is shown in Daisy's actions when Gatsby died. Nick watches as rather than face the consequences of what she did, she picks up her family and moves on with her life, thus cementing the idea of this is how humans act into Nick's mind. Similarly, the use of ceaselessly shows Nick's belief that people refuse to quit and that they will continue tirelessly until they reach what they want in life. He sees this through Gatsby. Gatsby threw extravagant parties every week in order to attract Daisy's attention. He refused to stop, continuing this trend for years until she finally waltzed back into his life. Get more content on HelpWriting.net