The plot of this story was surprising and unexpected at the same time. In the beginning, the scene is described as: “Clear and sunny, with the fresh warmth of a full-summer day.” Ironically, this makes the reader think this is going to be a positive story. Later, we shockingly find out that: “Someone’s life is going to be over.” This clearly tells us that someone is going to die in this story. Finally, in the end Tessie screams: “It’s not fair, it isn’t right!” Lastly, the story ends and we then know that Tessie has been killed. These three significant changes that transpire during the plot make it a more compelling story.…
In The Hunger Games, twenty four children are chosen to fight to the death until there is one last standing. Rue, a 12 year old girl, makes an alliance with the main character, Katniss, until her abrupt end where she is stabbed through her stomach, resulting in her death. Rue’s death devastates Katniss, but continues the plot, making Katniss struggle through loss while attempting to defend herself from others. To contrast from this character committed violence, in My Sister’s Keeper Anna, a 13-year-old girl, struggles with the fact that she was born as a savior sister for Kate, her sister who is dying from leukemia. Anna get a lawyer and sues her parents whom want her to donate her kidney to Kate. In the end of the novel Anna gets into a car accident and is deemed brain dead. The author causes the car crash to further along the plot and complete the story where Anna donates her kidney to her sister. In conclusion, the Interlude and Chapter 11 of Thomas C. Foster’s, How to Read Literature Like a Professor have taught me to critically evaluate and categorize different types of violence found in literature. These chapters have also displayed the effects and reasons of why violence is incorporated into novels, stories and…
Through his manipulation of relationships and religious tensions throughout his novels, James Baldwin effectively highlights his belief that true relations and trust can only be realized through acceptance of difficulties and differences. Baldwin promises redemption and relief through acceptance of divine justice and admission of sins. At the same time, the suffering was caused by the sin and oppression of thought are the sources of the suffering (Welsh). In "Everybody’s Protest Novel,” Baldwin writes:…
* Tessie’s death is an extreme example of how societies can persecute innocent people for absurd reasons. Those who are persecuted become “marked” because of a trait or characteristic that is out of their control like in the Crucible they cannot control who was blaming them. Just as the villagers in “The Lottery” blindly follow tradition and kill Tessie because that is what they are expected to do, people in real life often persecute others without questioning why. As Jackson suggests, any such persecution is essentially random, which is why Tessie’s bizarre death is so universal.…
At its surface, a work may prove to be entertaining and playful, pulling the reader further and further into its plot. However, it is often not the depth of the plot that we must concern ourselves with, but rather the depth of its message and the means by which the author achieves a significant meaning. Symbolism and allegory, both elements of literature that convey more than what they might first suggest, are therefore commonplace in well-written pieces and their unity to the central theme is a reliable indicator of a work’s literary merit. Susan Glaspell expertly employs symbolism to a great extent in “A Jury of Her Peers” to demonstrate the complexity of determining guilt.…
From early 1992 to 1999, Colombia experienced a period of terror and anguish. Hundreds of families were victims of disappearances of their sons, who was being kidnapped, raped, tortured and killed by the hands of a heartless unscrupulous man, whose name is Luis Alfredo Garavito better known as the Beast. The most famous serial killer in Colombia.…
Tess pays in many ways throughout the novel and often Tess’ misfortune is related to male superiority within the society. She is the embodiment of the tragic figure and when Hardy writes ‘President of Immortals’ saw the protagonists life as a ‘sport’ showing Tess’ life was always determined by an omnipresent force. The diction ‘sport’ reflects the fleeting interest that these Gods had with Tess, and that her struggle was merely a pastime. Moreover, the contrast in significance between “Gods” and “Tess” demonstrates her vulnerability. It is clear that Tess’s tragic journey was something she was ‘doomed to receive’; but the bildungsroman is written in such a way that the reader is left wondering whether the course of Tess’s life would have changed had she not been treated ‘so monstrously’ by the ‘cruel, cruel’ men she met along the way. Alec, the archetypal seducer in Victorian melodrama, after his violation of Tess’ virginity, doesn’t realise his sin. The fact he doesn’t realise his sin shows how Hardy presents the idea of sin of males to females and how they differ under this society. What’s more he blames Tess for tempting him with her beauty and she, as a consequence, is paying…
The major story line behind Tess of the d’Urbervilles is the tragic life of Tess. Because she accidentally kills Prince, the family Horse, she must help her family make money (TD 22-24). This leads to her meeting an Alec d’Urberville (TD 28) who ends up raping her and impregnating her (TD 58 and Phase 2). Because of this, later on in life when she meets the man of her dreams, she is viewed as being impure and ghastly (TD 181-183). Her life is miserable and she faces much self-loathing. Because of all of these misfortunes, Tess undergoes exposure to the psychology of guilt.…
Even if your sister was chosen to be stoned to death, you would still do it because it wasn’t you that was selected. They didn’t think about the position that Tessie Hutchinson was in because they were blind to her feelings and her thoughts. This story also shows that the evil in everyone is just waiting to emerge and when it does, you don’t think of anyone but yourself.…
One literary device shown in the book is the symbolism of T.J. Eckleburgs sign in the valley of ashes acting as the “eyes of god”. An example of this would be is when Nick, Jordan, and Tom are riding to NYC in Gatsby’s car and they stop to fill it up and Nick sees the sign and feels like someone is watching him. This symbolizes the “eyes of god” because it watches over the valley and sees all the bad that happens. Another example of this is when Daisy runs over Myrtle Toms mistress in Gatsby’s car the sign is watching as Myrtle gets hit. T.J. Eckleburgs sign was like God watching over the valley of ashes and seen all the bad stuff going on like when Tom would come to pick up Myrtle and take her…
Tess, or as Jack calls her Tessie-T, has some interesting feelings. Tess is a very strong hearted, thick skinned, young teenage girl whose life got turned upside down. Tess loves to have fun with her best friend Isabel, and keep track of what mug Mr. Holdsworth- Tess’s favorite (math) teacher- uses each morning. Some problems that Tess have result in a change of life so big that she goes mute for a good while. Tess found out that her mother had a sperm donor and her life then spun out of control. Tess goes mute to keep her life somewhat together and calm, excluding herself from the world. Tess later confessed because she is honest and genuine. When she talked to her Mum and Dad, Tess felt relieved and loved. Tess’s personality changed throughout the novel for better, and…
Thomas Hardy also alleges Tess’s character, primarily innocence, through the description of the landscape. The symbolism used, highlights Tess’s innocent state and purity,’ secluded region’. This is symbolic of Tess’s vulnerability and innocence and also to suggest that Tess is on her own. The euphemism ‘untrodden’ suggests Tess’s purity and virginity. Hardy gives the impression that Tess is a vulnerable character, he does this to foreshadow coming events. It is Tess’s vulnerability that puts her in unfortunate circumstances later in the novel. Hardy portrays Tess as a victim on all fronts. She is exposed as a young girl who is growing up quickly, almost too quickly and…
Both protagonists are naïve and easily influenced in the beginning of the novels and their misinterpretations draw the narrative to a conclusive disaster. In Spies, Stephen misinterprets the Mrs Hayward’s diary’s x’s and exclamation marks for some form of German “code” and believes that she is a spy- “she actually is a German spy”- Similarly in Atonement, where Briony misinterprets what she witnessed in the library which leads her to the conclusion that Robbie raped Lola, which she sticks to with conviction “it was Robbie”. The misinterpretations made by the protagonists reflect the lack of knowledge about the adult world and emphasise their innocence in the beginning of the novels. In Atonement the peak of Briony’s innocence is at the beginning with the “Trials of Arabella” and sulking when she gives up the main part of “Arabella” by killing nettles which foreshadows the impending doom of her actions. I believe at this point Briony triggers a transition to adult knowledge with the letter and therefor conclusively decides the narrative with her intrusion of Robbie and Cecilia’s privacy; however…
1. (TCOs 2, 3, 7, and 9) You currently work for a home improvement store. Your company continues to grow, and is considering expansion scenarios. The company currently has three locations (East, West, and Central) in one state, and wants to consider expanding within the same state. Your boss has presented you with the sales figures for the last three years for each of the locations. Based on this information, you have been tasked with analyzing current sales and providing recommendations.…
As a single parent, Gladys worked during the day and left young Monroe with neighbors. Unfortunately for Monroe, Gladys was not well; she was in and out of mental hospitals until she was ultimately institutionalized at the Norwalk State Hospital for Mental Diseases in 1935. Nine-year-old Monroe was taken in by Gladys’ friend, Grace McKee. Within the year, McKee was no longer able to care for Monroe and she was forced to take her to the Los Angeles Orphanage. Devastated, Monroe spent two years at the orphanage and in and out of a succession of foster homes.…