
CHOOSE ANY
PAPER BELOW! SAME DAY DELIVERY IS AVAILABLE
VIA YOUR CHOICE OF E-MAIL OR FAX!
ONLY $9.95/pg
WITH A FREE BIBLIOGRAPHY!!! MAKE YOUR
SELECTION:
|
Papers On Literature
Page 61 of 738
|
|
John Updike’s “A&P”: Protagonist And Antagonist
[ send me this paper ]
1 page in length. The writer identifies the protagonist and antagonist in Updike’s classic story. No additional sources cited.
Filename: TLC1AandP.wps
O'Connor & Updike / Clash of Worldviews
[ send me this paper ]
A 10 page paper comparing the way Flannery O'Connor and John Updike develop a clash of worldviews in their short fiction. Stories analyzed are O'Connor's 'Revelation', and Updike's 'A & P'. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: Clasview.wps
Ralph Ellison's 'Invisible Man' vs. Updike's 'Rabbit, Run'
[ send me this paper ]
A 6 page research paper comparing Invisible Man with Rabbit Run. The writer begins by detailing the similarities and differences between each of these two works, and then goes on to give a detailed analysis of Invisible Man. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: Invisrap.wps
Sammy’s Two Worlds in Updike’s “A & P”
[ send me this paper ]
A five page look at this short story by John Updike. The paper shows how Updike places his main character in a struggle between two worlds -- one in which life is predictable, steady, stable, and reliable, and one defined by unconventionality and surprise. Sammy’s decision to choose the more unconventional lifestyle will ultimately affect his entire life. Bibliography lists three sources.
Filename: KBupdik2.wps
Self-Discovery in Updike’s “A & P”
[ send me this paper ]
A five page paper looking at this short story by John Updike in terms of the author’s development of the story’s theme, a young man’s moment of self-discovery. The paper traces Updike’s use of contrast and detail to paint a picture of an oppressively narrow-minded small town and its people. No additional sources.
Filename: KBupdike.wps
Sexism in Anderson, James, Updike and Welty
[ send me this paper ]
An 8 page paper that concludes: In these five stories, women are portrayed in various ways. Only Anderson's 'The Egg' continues to stress the inadequacy and calamity of women. James, Updike and Welty each present a twist on society's sexist view of women in the situations presented. Each writer provides redeeming qualities in their female characters, although the message is sometimes muddled in traditional constructs. In 'Daisy Miller,' James goes so far as to point out the error in those constructs, which is why the male character is named Winterbourne. The name itself infers that the man contributed to Daisy's death by not responding to his own perceptions incongruous with society's claims. His perceptions later proved to be accurate. Six sources cited.
Filename: Sexinlit.wps
RULFO AND THE BURNING PLAIN
[ send me this paper ]
This 5-page paper examines two stories from Rulfo's The Burning Plain: "We Are Very Poor" and "Talpa." The paper describes how these stories illustrate the hardships experienced by the Mexican people and human condition.
Filename: MTburpla.rtf
James Joyce's 'Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man' / Fascist
[ send me this paper ]
A 9 page paper examining the presence of proto-fascism and its antithesis, humanism, in Joyce's first novel. The paper asserts that while it is not technically correct to search for examples of fascism in the book since the term did not exist at the time the novel was written, examples of this type of mentality can be fruitfully analyzed in contrast to the book's celebration of humanism. Bibliography lists ten sources.
Filename: Fascism3.wps
A Portrait of James Joyce as a Young Man
[ send me this paper ]
A 10 page paper looking at the life of James Joyce and showing how it is reflected in his novel Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Particular emphasis is placed on the issues in Irish politics during Joyce's youth and the influence of Catholicism on his writing. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: Jameslif.wps
Death, Politics, and Memory in Joyce’s “The Dead”
[ send me this paper ]
A five page paper looking at the importance of these three themes in James Joyce’s classic short story. The paper maintains that Joyce views Ireland as a nation essentially dead, whose greatest power lays in its memories and imagination. Bibliography lists two sources.
Filename: KBdead2.wps
Freud Explains Joyce’s “Portrait of the Artist”
[ send me this paper ]
A five page paper looking at James Joyce’s coming-of-age novel in terms of Freud’s Civilization and its Discontents. The paper concludes that the reason young Stephen has so much difficulty fitting into society is that he cannot sublimate his artistic individuality into socially-acceptable channels. No additional sources.
Filename: KBjoyce3.wps
Images of Passion and Intellect in Joyce’s “The Dead”
[ send me this paper ]
A 6 page paper looking at this classic story by James Joyce in terms of its complex use of imagery to connote death, life, and death-in-life. The paper argues that Joyce’s story depicts the clash of the Dionysian (passionate) and Apollonian (intellectual) ways of life. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: KBdead.wps
Irish Identity Through Colonialism According to James Joyce & W.B. Yeats
[ send me this paper ]
This 8 page paper discusses how both the poet, W. B. Yeats, and the novelist, James Joyce, explored ideas of Irish identity through different aspects of colonialism. Joyce's 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man' and several of Yeats' poems are used as illustrative examples. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: Joycyeat.wps
James Joyce's 'Araby' / In A Boy's Dream
[ send me this paper ]
A 5 page essay which examines the rite of passage of a boy's first crush and the religious and political symbolism that James Joyce uses in this short story. No additional sources cited.
Filename: Arabyrp.wps
|