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2612 The Characters
of Othello and Jane Eyre as 'Other'.
Both Shakespeare's Othello and Bronte's Jane Eyre feature the
theme of the treatment of the 'other' a theme that situates
the protagonist, in both of these texts, in a disadvantaged
position vis-a-vis the dominant culture. In varying ways, the
characters of Othello and Jane Eyre both experience the difficulties
of being different, or apart from the status quo. Othello's
color sets him notably apart from those around him. For Jane
Eyre, it is her low social status, at least at the novel's beginning,
although Jane is doubly disadvantaged being both impoverished
and female. In both cases, the protagonists are treated with
contempt, as if their status of 'other' renders such behavior
on part of the dominant culture acceptable. But beneath this
theme of marginalization and otherness that manifests itself
in both of these texts is a journey into the self: a journey
that ends in tragedy for Othello, as his is a path to self-deception,
but one of self-discovery and maturation for Jane Eyre. 6 pgs.
19 f/c. 2b.
Pages: 6
Bibliography: 2
source(s) listed
Filename: 2612 Theme
of Other.doc
Price: US$29.70
9.
2652 Comparative
Book Review.
This comparative book review discusses two authors regarding
the same subject. John Dittmer's work entitled Local People
that examines the story of the civil rights movement in Mississippi
while Adam Fairclough work entitled Race and Democracy examines
the freedom struggle in Louisiana. 4.5 pgs. 0 f/c. 2b.
Pages: 4.5
Bibliography: 2
source(s) listed
Filename: 2652 Comparative
Book Review.doc
Price: US$22.28
10.
2660 Coincidence
and Fate in the Works of Bronte and Dickens.
This paper looks at coincidence and fate in Charles Dickens'
"A Tale of Two Cities" and Emily Bronte's "Wuthering
Heights". 4 pgs. 12f/c. 3b.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 3
source(s) listed
Filename: 2660 Coincidence
and Fate.doc
Price: US$19.80
11.
2534 On The
Theme of Self-Knowledge And Human Nature In Shakespeare's Othello
and Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness.
This paper is an analysis of William Shakespeare's Othello,
and Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness. Although both works were
published over 300 years apart, it will be argued that they
share in a number of themes. It will be argued that both works
are important to the question or problem of self-knowledge,
and further, it will be argued that this self-knowledge is an
extension of the awareness of 'evil' or 'cruelty'. Both works
also display human nature at its very worst. 6 pgs. 11 f/c.
2b.
Pages: 6
Bibliography: 2
source(s) listed
Filename: 2534 Othello
and Darkness.doc
Price: US$29.70
12.
1511 A Question
of Desire: The Priority of Love Over Friendship.
The Roman politician and philosopher Cicero, in his writings
on friendship, conceived of it as being a high-order relationship;
a relationship that was so intense and personal that it seems,
in his view, to be more important than any other human bond.
However, Cicero was a philosopher and, as such, was honour bound
to give consideration to opposing arguments. One view of friendship
in particular - what may be termed the cynical or realistic
thesis - caused him great difficulty in his discussion. From
this perspective, friendship is nothing more than a mode of
exchange or an association between two parties for mutual profit
or benefit. In this paper we will examine the reasons behind
Cicero's difficulty in dismissing this counter-definition of
friendship. As a counterpoint to Cicero's view of friendship,
we will analyze the depiction of love in the love poetry of
John Donne. 5 pgs. 10 f/c. 2b.
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 2
source(s) listed
Filename: 1511 Friendship.doc
Price: US$24.75
13.
1726 The Representation
of Corruption in Dante's Inferno, Chaucer's "The Pardoner's
Tale", and Shakespeare's Hamlet.
A focus upon how these three giants of European literature represent
a particular aspect of their cultural and social contexts would
lead to insights, not only into their societies, but into how
artists manipulate contextual material for their own aesthetic
or critical purposes. Examining their treatment of the theme
of social corruption in three representative texts, we will
see that all three writers were engaged/removed to different
degrees with regard to their social contexts. This paper will
argue that, of the three writers, the Florentine Dante is the
most directly engaged with the theme of corruption in his society.
8 pgs. 12 f/c. 4b.
Pages: 8
Bibliography: 4
source(s) listed
Filename: 1726 European
Literature.doc
Price: US$39.60
14.
2777 On The
Motif of The Journey In Conrad and Theroux.
This paper is an analysis on the topic of Paul Theroux's Mosquito
Coast and Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness. This paper will
begin with a discussion of Theroux for the purposes of introducing
the motif's to be analyzed, and in turn, examine how there are
parallel themes in Conrad's Heart of Darkness. 5 pgs. 8 f/c.
3b.