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Papers On Literature
Page 100 of 738
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Eudora Welty's 'Why I Live at the P.O.' / Analysis
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This 5 page research paper examines the short story, 'Why I Live at the P.O.' by Eudora Welty. Specifically discussed are the eccentric and intriguing family members of an old maid post mistress who decides that moving to the post office is her only escape from their lunacy. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: Ewelty.wps
Imagined Interview with Eudora Welty
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This is a five-page fabricated interview with the twentieth-century author Eudora Welty. The emphasis is on relating the events and background of Welty’s life to the subject matter of her fiction. Endnotes and bibliography listing two sources appended to end of paper.
Filename: KBwelty.wps
Existentialism and Sartre’s “The Wall”
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A 4 page paper looking at the presence of existentialist thought in this short story by Jean Paul Sartre. The paper argues that for Sartre, the lack of causality in human life, together with the lack of a beneficent force in the universe, forces every human being to forge his own meaning -- something the protagonist has not done. No sources.
Filename: KBsartre.wps
Jean Paul Sartre's 'The Wall'
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A 1 page summary of Sartre's short story. It reflects Sartre's interest in the ultimate lack of causality in life through the depiction of the 'last night' of a group of prisoners condemned to die in the morning. The narrator in fact does not die, but he might as well have, because he has psychologically been absorbed into the wall separating life from death, and there is no going back. No sources.
Filename: Sartrwll.wps
Jean Paul Sartre's 'La Nausee'/ Motif of Nausea
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A 9 page paper examining the significance of the protagonist's sensation of nausea throughout this book. The paper concludes that for Sartre, the nausea symbolizes his protagonist's ultimate recognition of life's futility. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: Sartnaus.wps
Jean Paul Sartre's 'No Exit'
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(work is also known called 'Hois Clos') In this 8 page paper, the writer argues that the concept 'Hell Is Other People' is the primary theme of this classic existentialist drama ('No Exit' is a one-act play by Sartre) and it is just as resonant today as it was more than fifty years ago. Sartre's existentialist philosophy is examined in great analytical detail and the paper remains most concerned with explaining precisely what Sartre meant by 'No Exit' and how it applies to everyone's life. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: Noexitsr.wps
No Exit by Jean Paul Sartre
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It is commonly believed that the theme presented by Jean Paul Sartre in his 1944 play, No Exit was 'Hell is other people'. By exploring the other writings of Sartre one can begin to understand that the concept he was elucidating in the play was the exact opposite of the externalization of negative emotions. Rather, the play was another forum he chose in which to answer to the critics of the philosophy of existentialism. This 5 page paper asserts that the theme espoused by Sartre is actually the quest for freedom as defined by the individual's acceptance of oneself and the choices made throughout one's lifetime. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: KTsartexit.wps
Rachel Carson/Silent Spring
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A 5 page research paper on Carson's revolutionary book, which launched the US environmentalist movement. Carson warned about the negative effects of indiscriminate use of man-made chemicals, such as DDT. Her work not only launched the environmentalist movement in the US, but it also changed the perspective of a generation in the way it regards humanity's place in the natural environment. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: 90carson.rtf
Beaumarchais' 'Figaro'
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A 4 page discussion of characters (Figaro and the Count) in Beaumarchais' 'Figaro.' Writer examines elements that made the classic work so markedly reminiscent of the Enlightenment period. Bibliography lists 4+ sources used to validate points made in paper.
Filename: Figaro.wps
Dava Sobel/Longitude
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A 5 page analysis of Sobel's book that gives a wider historical perspective on the significance of this fascinating story of the invention of the chronometer. First, the writer relates the essence of Sobel's account of how an uneducated woodworker, John Harrison, solved the trickiest scientific problem of his age. Then, the writer relates this both to the Enlightenment and also to the market demands of that time. No additional sources cited.
Filename: 90lngtud.rtf
Ernest Cassara's The Enlightenment in America
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5 pages in length. An indepth look at Cassara's most well known book. The beginning history of America is based on this new age of enlightenment as outlined by such philosophers as Locke, Hume and Rousseau. Cassara explains this in his book which is reviewed here. Bibliography lists one source.
Filename: JGAcssra.wps
Literature in the Age of Enlightenment:
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This 9 page paper explores literature in the
eighteenth century in Europe, known as the Age of
Enlightenment, an age in which reason and common
sense, as demonstrated by the scientific method
were put forth as the real remedies of society's
ills and 'progress' was seen as a law of human
development.
Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: BBenlit.doc.
Montesquieu's 'The Persian Letters'
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A 5 page analysis of this classic novel of the seventeenth-century in which the writer demonstrates that Montesquieu's masterpiece reflects both the ideas and beliefs of the Enlightenment and the beginnings of the scientific revolution. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: Perslet.wps
Satire and the Enlightenment in Swift and Voltaire
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A five page paper looking at the way these two writers satirize the philosophies of the Enlightenment and their eighteenth-century world. The paper concludes that Swift epitomized the idea that if we all really operated logically, our minds would be in tune with our hearts and we would be compelled by conscience to reform the world accordingly. Voltaire, however, does not reflect any real hope that logic and reason are the answers to humanity's woes. Bibliography lists four sources.
Filename: KBsatir2.wps
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