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· 21-25 · 26-30 · 31-35 · 36-40 · 41-45 · 46-50 · 51-55 · 56-60 · 61-65 · 66-70 · 71-75 ·Theme in Nathaniel Hawthorne's " Young Goodman Brown" (Imagery and Symbolism)
Providing a 3 prong thesis and then to analyze "Young Goodman Brown" in terms of what this text says about good and evil and puritan morality in general. This is what I have developed for a 3 prong thesis: Nathaniel Hawthorne uses imagery and symbolism. These fictional elements are evident in the author's use of sexuality, the representative social hierarchy and the Puritanical idea of the "wilderness" to illuminate the reader's understanding of the moral polarity faced by the Puritan audience.
Subject:
English
Topic:
American Literature
Posting ID:
37074
OTA ID:
102789
This guide enables students to deconstruct "Hills Like White Elephants."
This posting helps students to interpret Hemingway's "Hills Like White Elephants."
Subject:
English
Topic:
American Literature
Posting ID:
46072
OTA ID:
104719
Select one character (whom you know or about whom you have read) and write contrasting paragraphs about that character. In the first, try to make the character likeable. In the second, attempt to arouse a hostile reaction toward the character. Finally, in the third paragraph, choose the one you think is more successful and explain why. How do I tackle this?
Subject:
English
Topic:
American Literature
Posting ID:
48139
OTA ID:
104365
Character creation is modeled.
Create a character, real or imagined, with a distinct manner of behaving or style of talking. Put this character in a situation where he or she plays a public role (the public persona shown to others) and contrast it with the character's private persona (the real character when no one is watching). Narrate your episode or vignette in first person point of view (as in the Bambara story) or in third person point of view (as in the Parker story). You are creating a new character, not writing about a character in literature, movies, or TV.
Subject:
English
Topic:
American Literature
Posting ID:
48476
OTA ID:
104365
Create a character, real or imagined, with a distinct manner of behaving or style of talking. Put this character in a situation where he or she plays a public role (the public persona shown to others) and contrast it with the character's private persona (the real character when no one is watching). Narrate your episode or vignette in first person point of view (as in the Bambara story) or in third person point of view (as in the Parker story). 200-300 words, 1-2 paragraphs You are creating a new character, not writing about a character in literature, movies, or TV. The same character must possess different traits depending on setting. For instance, a CEO who is a tyrant at work, but ca... click for more
Subject:
English
Topic:
American Literature
Posting ID:
48524
OTA ID:
102789
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