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Papers On Mixed & Comparative Literature - All Countries
Page 10 of 39
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The 'Feminine Principle' In Four Multicultural Authors
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A 6 page paper looking at the strength of the woman's perspective in four works from all over the world: James Joyce's 'Araby,' Chinua Achebe's 'Things Fall Apart,' Ding Ling's 'When I Was in Xia Village,' and Pramoedya Ananta Toer's 'Inem'. The paper concludes that of those stories discussed, the female principle is strongest in Achebe's African story because his women seem to have the strongest support system and strongest sense of self. Bibliography lists two sources.
Filename: Whood.wps
Anachronism Of Marriage In The Works Of Lord Byron & Samuel Butler
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A 6 page essay that looks at two works from each author, Don Juan and The Way of All Flesh respectively, in regards to their opinions on marriage with references from each book.
Filename: Byrbut.wps
Hierarchical Thinking In Dracula & 'The Most Dangerous Game'
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A 5 page paper on Bram Stoker's Dracula and Richard Connell's 'The Most Dangerous Game.' The writer notes that both stories involve a man who, whether out of hunger or for sport, hunts down human beings to destroy them, and analyzes the presence of such hierarchical behavior throughout both works. Bibliography lists three sources including the works themselves.
Filename: Dracgame.wps
Frankenstein's Creature and the Bible's Adam
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A seven page paper comparing these two famous creations in terms of their creators' intentions and reactions toward them. The paper concludes that whereas God loved his creation despite the fact that Adam sinned, Frankenstein hated his Creature who had done nothing wrong at all. Bibliography lists eight sources.
Filename: KBfrank2.wps
The Conflict Between The Notion Of Public Interest & Private Interest
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7 pages in length. The author uses 'The Federalist Papers', John Stuart Mill's 'On Liberty', Margaret Atwood's 'The Handmaid's Tale', and Derrick Bell's 'Faces at the Bottom of the Well' to discuss the notion of conflict between public interest and private interest. Addresses question of whether public interest is more important than private interest, vice versa, or -- are both public and private interest equally important. No bibliography.
Filename: Pubpriv.wps
Aristotle & The Tragedy of the Uncommon Man
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A 5 page paper analyzing the concept of tragedy as defined by Aristotle (and illustrated in Sophocles' Oedipus the King) and Arthur Miller's definition of the form (as described in his essay 'The Tragedy of the Common Man' and illustrated in Death of a Salesman). Bibliography lists one source.
Filename: Tragedy.wps
Meaning and Identity in Fromm, Miller, Frankl, Pearson, and Walker
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A five page paper looking at these five seminal twentieth-century writers and thinkers in terms of their ideas on our search for meaning in life. Writers and works discussed are Erich Fromm’s “To Have or To Be?”, Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman,” Viktor Frankl’s “Man’s Search for Meaning,” Carol Pearson’s “The Hero Within,” and Alice Walker’s “In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens.” Bibliography lists five sources.
Filename: KBmeanin.wps
Restoration Literature / Marriage
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A 6 page paper on four seventeenth-century Restoration authors and their works: Wycherley's The Country Wife, Behn's The Rover, Congreve's The Way of the World, and Gay's The Beggar's Opera. The paper shows how, through scenes of love and marriage as well as infidelity and prostitution, these authors juxtapose idealized views of the roles women and men were supposed to occupy in society against a caustic view of the way things really were. No additional sources cited.
Filename: Marrest.wps
"Death of a Salesman" and Oedipus: Stories of Two Tragic Heroes
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A 10 page overview of these two classic plays. Makes the contention that each is just as representative of the literary genre of classic tragedy as is the other. Observes that each is a different twist on one man's perception of the concepts of hope, fate, and destiny. Emphasizes that Oedipus believed that he could escape the hand of fate and create his own destiny. Willy on the other hand thought that he would ride the tide of fate to his ultimate destiny. The problems which resulted in each instance, however, was that the final outcome was very different than that which was envisioned by the hero of each tale. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: PPsalsmn.wps
"Devil In The Shape Of A Woman" By Carol Karlsen And "Salem Possessed" By Paul Boyer And Steven Nissenbaum: Comparison
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5 pages in length. There were a number of reasons why Salem became the historical foundation of witch hunts, but none were so powerful as the threat of female independence had at that time. Without out a doubt, the fear of women's emancipation was the foremost reason for the colonial New England witch hunts. When comparing Carol Karlsen's "Devil In The Shape Of A Woman" with Paul Boyer And Steven
Nissenbaum's "Salem Possessed," one immediately notes the incongruity of the two works, primarily due to the fact that Karlsen's perspective as a woman herself is significantly different from either of her male counterparts. No additional sources cited.
Filename: TLCwitch.wps
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