Papers On More Countries Literature
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Henrik Ibsen's 'Hedda Gabler' / Gender & Social Power
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A 5 page paper that discusses the role of power and gender in Ibsen's play. This paper demonstrates the way in which Hedda both manipulates and is manipulated by her vie for social power. No additional sources cited.
Filename: Hedda.wps
Henrik Ibsen's 'The Master Builder' # 2
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A 10 page paper on this work by Henrik Ibsen. The writer explores the characters, plot, themes, and analyzes the play. Bibliography cites 6 sources.
Filename: Masterb.wps
Henrik Ibsen: Hedda Gabler (1890)
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(5 pp) Tragedies in theater allow us to look at ourselves differently as we experience the visual tragedy of someone on the stage in front of us. In Ibsen's play Hedda Gabler, there is supposedly no one meaner than Hedda herself; the saddest part of this tragedy is that she is as mean to herself, if not more so, than she is to any one else. The personality of this main character is revealed through the dialogue of the play.
Filename: BBgabler.doc
Henrik Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” -- Creating a Movie from the
Play
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This 5 page report discusses how one would create a movie
to best portray the setting for Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House.” Set
design, the director’s vision, and costuming are discussed in the
context of the story. No additional sources listed.
Filename: BWdolmov.rtf
Herman Hesse’s “Siddhartha” and the Lessons of the River
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This 5
page report discusses Hermann Hesse’s Siddhartha, first published
in 1922 and translated to English in 1951. The river serves as
an important teacher in Siddhartha’s life lessons and
awarenesses. The single theme of the novel is Siddhartha’s
search for unity, which is identical with his search for the true
nature of the self. Siddhartha realizes that the river is the
same as life -- flowing without the artifical constraint of time,
moving as it will and must without concern for what it moves
through and over. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: BWriver.wps
Hosseini/The Kite Runner
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A 4 page book review. Khaled Hosseini, a native of Afghanistan, paints a poignant picture of friendship and bigotry in his novel The Kite Runner. A best-selling first novel, it is also the first novel to be written in English by an Afghan (Noor 148). It is the story of two boys, Amir, the privileged Pashtun, and Hassan, a Hazara servant. While Amir considers Hassan to be his friend, and the boys have virtually been raised together, Amir consistently takes advantage of that friendship throughout his childhood, playing cruel jokes on Hassan and basing this presumption on their difference in status. However, in later life, the fate of his friend comes to haunt him, causing Amir to return to Afghanistan in order to redeem his own and his father's sins. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: khkitrun.rtf
How the Reader is Positioned in “Cloudstreet”
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This 3 page paper discusses some of the techniques author Tim Winton uses to position readers of his novel “Cloudstreet.” Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: HVWinton.rtf
Husain Haddawy’s Translation of “The Arabian Nights”: Glossary, Symbols, Brief Outline, and Passages
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This is a 9 page paper discussing elements found in Haddawy’s translation of “The Arabian Nights”. Husain Haddawy’s 1990 translation of “The Arabian Nights” reveals to readers the enchantment he felt when he heard the tales growing up. He includes within the tales several explanatory footnotes which help readers identify the time frame, setting, historical, supernatural and religious significance found throughout the tales. Included within this paper is a analytical glossary of eight words specific to the tales; eight items or symbols which are found throughout the tales; a brief outline of the basic literary elements in the tales; and the significance of two passages within the work.
Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TJArabn1.rtf
I Heard the Owl Call My Name
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A 3 page essay that analyzes Margaret Craven's I Heard the Owl Call My Name (1973). This story concerns a young priest, Mark Brian, whom the reader learns immediately has a terminal disease that will kill him within three years. This information is kept from Mark by his Bishop who sends him to his hardest parish, a New Zealand Indian village, so that the young man may learn as much as possible in the short time remaining to him. As this indicates, the story is set up as a hero's journey that presents Mark involved in a quest for self-knowledge and growth. Examination of Craven's novel shows that the author emphasizes this underlying purpose by structuring Mark's story as if it were, itself, a native legend. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khcalowl.rtf
I, Rigoberta Menchu
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One word comes to mind when first reading the
testimonial of Roberta Menchu and then seeing and reading the criticisms
of her words: fear. This 10 page paper explores the concepts of human
rights and justice from the perspective provided in the book, I,
Rigoberta Menchu, An Indian Woman In Guatemala. Bibliography lists 2
sources.
Filename: KTmenchu.rtf
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