Papers On British Literature
Page 77 of 103
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Moll Flanders by Daniel Defoe
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A 10 page paper which examines the character of Moll
Flanders from the book by Daniel Defoe. The paper also presents a biography of Defoe.
Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: RAmollfl.rtf
More's "Utopia" as a Call to Action
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A 7 page paper discussing Sir Thomas More's
motivations for writing Utopia as lying with the demise of fuedalism and the rise of
capitalism. More roundly condemns England's lawmakers for heaping myriad new laws on
the heads of the peasants, and for authoring those laws in a language not readily understood
by those most affected by them. The paper provides illustrations of some of More's
arguments that the worth of traditional European standards and values could no longer be
taken for granted. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: KSutopia1.wps
More's Utopia; Would You Want To Live There?
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This 5 page paper takes a look at Thomas More's Utopia, and consider whether or not is would be a desirable place to live. The paper argues that the land is a parody and a mockery of life in the real world at the time it was written, and that living there would be to live in a joke. The paper also considers the book from other perspectives, and argues the undesirability of residence in this land, using arguments form the book to justify the argument. The bibliography cites 1 source.
Filename: TEutoplv.wps
Mother Goose and the Cheshire Cat -- Charles Perrault and Lewis
Carroll
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This 5 page report discusses two of the Western world’s
great story tellers -- Charles Perrault and Charles Lutwidge
Dodgson (aka Lewis Carroll). “At the time it all seemed quite
natural,” Lewis Carroll wrote in the scene in which the White
Rabbit first appears to Alice. Likewise, Cinderella does not
seemed amazed when her godmother, who also happened to be a
fairy, sent her to the garden for a pumpkin that promptly became
a gilded coach. It is important for readers, both those of the
21st century and those that were contemporaries of the authors,
to understand that neither piece of literature is “just” a
children’s story. Each offers any number of ways of unfolding as
a fabric of symbols, psychological, political, and otherwise. No
additional sources.
Filename: BWperrau.wps
MRS. CLARISSA DALLOWAY
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This paper examines the female protagonist in Virginia Woolf's novel, Mrs. Dalloway, and discusses reasons why she married Richard Dalloway. The discussion includes financial security and upper class recognition. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: MTdallow.rtf
MYSTERY OF BLEAK HOUSE
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This paper examines the Charles Dickens Novel, Bleak House, and probes the mysteries that are within the plot, including Richard's demise and the revealing of Lady Dedlock's secret. Bibliography lists one source.
Filename: MTbleakh.rtf
Nature According to Wordsworth and Hopkins
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A five page paper comparing and contrasting the way Gerard Manley Hopkins and William Wordsworth regard nature. The paper argues that Wordsworth thinks God and nature are essentially the same thing, while Hopkins sees God's power reflected in nature's beauty. Specific poems discussed are Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," and Hopkins' "God's Grandeur." Bibliography lists three sources.
Filename: KBwords2.wps
Nature In “Beowulf” and “The Canterbury Tales”
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This 5 page
report discusses how both Geoffrey Chaucer and the ancient writer
of “Beowulf” present worlds in which human interactions with one
another are not necessarily less imprint than the interactions of
an individual with the natural world. The modern reader sees the
ways in which the various characters that inhabit “The Canterbury
Tales” as well as the epic of “Beowulf” are part of their
environment and the remarkably simple fact that they are
constantly influenced by that environment. Bibliography lists 3
sources.
Filename: BWnatbeo.rtf
Nature of Good vs. Evil in Literature
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A 10 page analysis that examines five classics from British literature and how these works characterize the struggle between good and evil. The works profiled are: Macbeth, Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde, Heart of Darkness, Fellowship of the Ring and A Christmas Carol. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khgvebl.rtf
Nightingale’s “Cassandra” and the Leisured Woman
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A 5 page paper looking at this polemic on women’s rights by the famous nineteenth-century British nurse Florence Nightingale. The paper asserts that Nightingale intended her tract to serve as a wake-up call to a generation of women tired of their leisured lifestyles and itching to find a new source of meaning in their lives. Bibliography lists three sources.
Filename: KBcass.wps
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