|
ESSAY TOPICS |
|
MEMBER LOGIN |
|
|
|
English Essay Writing Help
The Jungle 3
Words: 1083 / Pages: 4 .... in Packingtown, a predominantly immigrant community in Chicago. He promises to work harder; he wants to achieve the American dream.
After pooling the family¹s resources, Jurgis is able to leave a dilapidated lodge-house for a ³new² modest home (which had hidden costs) where his family would reside. When Dede Antanas, Jurgis¹ father, loses his job and is forced to kickback a third of his paltry salary in order to get a new job working in a dark, damp, ³pickle room², Jurgis begins to lose faith in America. Jurgis witnesses the darkside of American society, and the resultant lassitude in the workforce. Jurgis observes the butchery of .....
|
The Terminal Man By Crichton
Words: 702 / Pages: 3 .... had his operation soon after he was admitted to the hospital. The operation took roughly three hours and in that time they drilled into his head and inserted the electrodes. They also put in the microcomputer and the power pack at this time. After the operation was over Harry was heavily sedated and put in a room. After the sedatives wore off Harry snuck into a closet and stole an orderly's gown and left the hospital. He was picked up by a lady named Angela Black, who Harry killed when they got to her apartment. After the investigation of the murder of Angela Black Dr. Ross went home to take a shower. When Dr. Ross got out of the shower she found H .....
|
Loving April
Words: 947 / Pages: 4 .... friends begins a friendship with Tony and this continues throughout the novel.
" 'Why don't I have any friends?' April sighed." Page 83
It is evident that the main character has a primary element, one which clearly indicates that she has no friends.
As the story goes on, April falls in love with Tony. April liked Tony from the beginning and her love for Tony grows throughout the story. This creates jealousy in two boys who love teasing April.
"April, beautiful April, wanted him as he wanted her." Page 103
This shows that April loves Tony and loves the thought of being with him. This continues throughout the story making the texts substant .....
|
Guy De Maupassants The Necklac
Words: 514 / Pages: 2 .... with what she did have, this entire conflict could have been avoided. The grass isn't alwaus greener on the other side.
When her husband came home with the dinner invitation is when I changed my perception of Mathilde. I wasn't too pleased with her in the beginning of the story but now was when I started to hate her. She had it pretty good. She had a husband that loved her and was willing to do anything to please her. Even if it meant giving up something he had been saving up for, a shotgun, just so she could feel like Cinderella for one night and get a dress that suited her needs. She was unable to stop at a dress though: she needed to have jewelry .....
|
The Trip To Halawa Valley
Words: 449 / Pages: 2 .... the experience she is
trying to convey. She does this by using a couple different characters
throughout the story. The main ones she uses are the parents, and that is the
very obvious example. A few other examples are not as clear, but they do show
how decisions are an important factor in life and once made are very hard to
turn around. Using Paul's brother Anthony, Schwartz shows that once he made the
decision to join the Hare Krishnas there was no turning back, even if that meant
not communicating with his parents anymore. Schwartz also uses Paul's other
brother Eric. When Eric announced that he was gay, his parents had to make the
tough .....
|
Bloody Merdian
Words: 793 / Pages: 3 .... dances to the beat of the Judge’s “fiddle.” What does the dance mean to the judge though? Its seems as though the “dance” represents life and life is only good for one thing, war. If one does not “offer up himself to the blood of war (pp.331),” then that man cannot dance and thus cannot live. Is this why the Kid must die in the end of the book? Because he had chosen to stray away from the fate the Judge had set for him and “elect therefore some opposite course (pp.330)?”
The opposite course the Kid elected for himself was one without pointless slaughter, and meaningless bloodshed. The kid want .....
|
Influence Of Traditional Ways
Words: 904 / Pages: 4 .... almost any cost. Faulkner emphasizes this many times by saying “She carried her head high enough... as if she demanded more than ever the recognition of her dignity as the last Grierson.”(469) and “...and the high and mighty Griersons.”(467) In the end of the story officials do not pursue her lover’s disappearance for the exact reason that they do not force her to pay taxes which is also the reason Emily does not rebel against her father and his wishes. This is all due to the fact that she is a Grierson. Faulkner also states that “none of the young men were quite good enough for Miss Emily and such.” (468) Her father, under the .....
|
Opinions And Social Pressure
Words: 495 / Pages: 2 .... The first two rounds go by with everyone agreeing, then on the third trial, the subject near the end of the group disagrees with the rest of the class. On the following trial, he disagrees again. Asch and his colleagues describe the person as becoming more
worried and hesitant as the experiment continues, and he may do things like pause before he speaks or speak in a low voice..... According to the author (338). The subject does not know that the rest of the group has been instructed by the experimenters to purposely give the wrong answer six out of the eighteen times.
Asch and his colleagues placed a total of one hundred and twenty three c .....
|
Familial Themes With Shakespea
Words: 1663 / Pages: 7 .... play. Lear’s madness and his obsession with being praised blinded him to the child who was really the only one who loved him, Cordelia. The same with the Earl of Gloucester, he was blinded by his illegitimate child, Edmund, who set out to turn him away from his heir, Edgar. Within the story, these two children and a few loyal servants try to help and eventually try to save the King and Gloucester, but they are both too stubborn to recognize the goodness and true bond in these people. The story of King Lear deals with the turmoil of a chaotic world began by the boundaries of family and personal relationships being turn upside down.
The sto .....
|
A Rose For Emily New South Vs. Old
Words: 963 / Pages: 4 .... progressed there
was not a steady progression of time. He changed from past to present in order to illustrate the
idea of conflict between new and old.
Emily personified a way of living, a society, that was slowly being dismissed. Examples
of her clinging to the old ways of the south are found everywhere. One example can be found in
this short excerpt from the story. "On the first of the year they mailed her a tax notice. February
came and there was no reply. They wrote her a formal letter asking her to call at the sheriff's
office at her convenience. A week later the mayor wrote her himself, offering to call or to send
his car for h .....
|
|
|