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subject list that categorizes our library of almost 20,000 essays
and term papers we have written since 1999. Feel free to find your
essay by selecting the subject that best fits the parameters of
your essay.
3387 The Six
Conventions in More's "Utopia" and Atwood's "The
Handmaid's Tale".
This essay discusses Margaret Atwood's "The Handmaid's
Tale" and Thomas More's "Utopia". It argues that
utopia is very much connected to utopia in the sense that both
authors show a certain picture of hell through the use of a
fantasy utopia. 12 pgs. 10 f/c. 8b.
Pages: 12
Bibliography: 8
source(s) listed
Filename: 3387 Six
Conventions.doc
Price: US$59.40
240.
3452 Marriage
in "Trifles" and "The Story of an Hour".
Both "Trifles" and "The Story of an Hour"
focus on death-a murder and an accident-and what these catastrophes
reveal about relationships between men and women, more specifically,
marriage. "Trifles" theme is captured in its title:
Men dismiss women's concerns as 'trifles.' They do so to such
an extent that they cannot understand a murder, the motive for
which is patently obvious to the other women involved. In "The
Story of an Hour" a women dies of disappointment when it
is revealed that her husband was not killed in a train disaster.
Both pieces use irony to illustrate the hollowness of marriage.
3 pgs. 0 f/c. 0b.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 0
source(s) listed
Filename: 3452 Hollowness
Irony Marriage.doc
Price: US$14.85
241.
3513 Symbolism
in Fiction.
This seven-page undergraduate paper discusses the significance
of symbolism in four classic short stories, Walter Van Tilburg
Clark's "The Portable Phonograph", John Steinbeck's
"The Chrysanthemums", D.H. Lawrence's "The Horse
Dealer's Daughter", and Shirly Jackson's "The Lottery".
7 pgs. 6 f/c. 9b.
Pages: 7
Bibliography: 9
source(s) listed
Filename: 3513 Symbolism
In Fiction.doc
Price: US$34.65
242.
3597 Social
Conservatism in Charles Dickens' "Hard Times" and
T.S. Ashton's "The Industrial Revolution".
This paper will be argued that a key similarity of both texts'
depiction of the Industrial Revolution is their representation
of the predominant social conservatism of an era known, paradoxically,
for its profound social and economic change. 5 pgs. Bibliography
lists 4 sources.
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 4
source(s) listed
Filename: 3597 Social
Conservatism.doc
Price: US$24.75
243.
2942 Men and
Women in "King Lear", "Paradise Lost" and
"Ulysses".
The relationships between men and women in Shakespeare's "King
Lear", John Milton's "Paradise Lost" and James
Joyce's "Ulysses" all reflect certain power structures
in the context of gender. But they also reveal the main ingredients
of the human condition, as love and forgiveness also play vital
roles. To be sure, these realities are about power, but they
entail human dynamics as well, which include every aspect of
male-female relationships. In examining each text, we begin
to understand love and forgiveness are very powerful themes
in each realm. There is a common theme of a spiritual journey
for each man and woman. 11 pgs. 12 f/c. 3b.
Pages: 11
Bibliography: 3
source(s) listed
Filename: 2942 Men
and Woman.doc
Price: US$54.45
244.
11800 Austen
and Balzac: An Analysis.
This three-page undergraduate paper analyzes why Jane Austen
concentrates so much on dialogue and personal interaction in
"Pride And Prejudice" whereas Honore de Balzac in "Pere Goriot"
focuses on social description. 3 pgs, bibliography lists 2 sources.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 2
source(s) listed
Filename: 11800
Austen And Balzac.doc
Price: US$14.85
245.
3145 Beth Henley's
"Crimes of the Heart" and "Miss Firecracker".
Beth Henley's plays "Crimes of the Heart" and "Miss
Firecracker" both very much reveals the theme of how humor
can camouflage human suffering and tragedy. "Crimes of
the Heart" examines the plight of three young women who
are betrayed by their passions. Each woman suffers a certain
tragedy in her own life, which is directly related to a certain
form of mental sickness, yet at the same time a certain humorous
angle exists in that life. The same can be said about "Miss
Firecracker," as the main actor appears to be a humorous
caricature of her very self. 5 pgs. 8 f/c. 6b.