Papers On Literature
Page 102 of 691
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Romantic Love in Austen, Smith, and Robinson
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A 20 page paper looking at the way three late eighteenth-century women writers -- Jane Austen, Charlotte Smith, and Mary Robinson -- portray romantic love. Specific works considered are Austen’s “Sense and Sensibility,” Smith’s Sonnets II, VIII, and XII, and Robinson’s “January 1795” and “Stanzas Written Between Dover and Calais, July 20, 1792.” Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Filename: KBromant.wps
Sisterhood In Austen And Alcott
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A 4 page paper comparing and contrasting the relationships between sisters in Austen's Sense and Sensibility and Alcott's Little Women. The paper argues that the ideological clashes of Alcott's Marches are more believable than those of Austen's Dashwoods because Austen was using the characters to prove a philosophical point. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: Alcott.wps
Snobbery & Class In Austen & Gaskell
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A 6 page paper examining these issues in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice and Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South, dealing with the characters of Darcy and Thornton, respectively. The paper concludes that although class-consciousness became much more dependent on the possession of money after the Industrial Revolution, snobbery in both novels is a response to one's position being threatened. Bibliography lists four sources.
Filename: Gasaust.wps
Socializing in Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”
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A six page paper looking at the importance of parties and visiting in establishing and reinforcing social contracts in Jane Austen’s novel. The paper concludes that socializing is how Austen’s characters establish the parameters by which the contracts of life are forged, and how they move in and out of these parameters to get things done. No additional sources.
Filename: KBpride.wps
The Shallowness of Marriage in 'Pride and Prejudice'
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A 5 page paper which examines the shallowness of life as presented in Jane Austen’s 1813 novel, 'Pride and Prejudice,' concentrating on marriage, which was little more than a game based on wealth and social position. No additional sources are cited.
Filename: TGpride.rtf
What Elizabeth Learns in Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”
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A 6 page paper looking at four pivotal chapters in Jane Austen’s novel -- Chapters 34-37. The paper shows that in
these chapters the protagonist, Elizabeth Bennet, learns valuable lessons about human nature, and emerges with a finer sense of discernment. No other sources.
Filename: KBauste2.wps
John Gardner's 'Nickel Mountain'
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A 6 page paper reviewing John Gardner's book 'Nickel Mountain.' Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: Gardner.doc
Baldwin's 'Sonny's Blues' / Suffering
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A 3 page analysis of suffering in Baldwin's short story. Listening is the whole point of Baldwin's story and also something so many have so much difficulty doing well. Sonny admires the woman's singing, but rather than being able to enjoy her music for what it is and take only the superficial view of it, he is compelled to hear the emotion that drives her voice, her intonations and inflections. No additional sources cited.
Filename: Sonsuff.wps
Escape in Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”
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A six page paper discussing the different life choices made by the two brothers in James Baldwin’s classic story. The paper shows that both Sonny and the narrator have found their own mode of escaping the violence and harshness of the ghetto, different though those modes might be. No additional sources.
Filename: KBsonny.wps
James Baldwin's 'Going to Meet the Man'
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James Baldwin, one of the primary African American writers of the twentieth century, reflects on the link between man's struggle with self-identification and the expected role he plays in the world in his short story 'Going to Meet the Man.' In his collection of short stories of the same title, Baldwin's reflections about the capacity of men, especially Black men, to define themselves in a culture, address their personal development and consider the implications through out their life struggles are significant themes in his short stories. This 2 page paper considers these themes as they are related in 'Going to Meet the Man.' No additional sources cited.
Filename: Jbald.wps
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