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    Summary of Time Machine

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    The Time Machine (by H.G Wells) Summary The narrator recounts the explanation of two difficult ideas by a man he refers to as the Time Traveller to an after-dinner group. The group includes a Psychologist‚ a Medical Man‚ a Provincial Mayor‚ and a few other men. The Time Traveller shows them a smaller prototype of the time machine‚ and when he pulls a lever‚ it disappears--into the future‚ he claims. At the next week’s dinner‚ the Time Traveller comes in midway through the meal‚ haggard and limping

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    When the Sleeper Wakes

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    When the Sleeper Wakes by Herbert George Wells First of all I chose this book not only because it was the first book I found that had 100 pages or more‚ but because the title interested me. I would say this book is a fiction story because no one can sleep for decades and then wake up. The story “When the Sleeper Wakes” is about a man that lives in London and has insomnia. Graham then falls into a strange sleep while he was at a friend’s house. When he wakes up 200 years later‚ he is immediately

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    Read the extract from The Time Traveler’s Wife that begins on page 398 from ‘Henry is sleeping‚ bruised and caked with blood’ to ‘anguish together’. Using integrated linguistic and literary approaches analyse Niffenegger’s presentation of Henry in this extract. Go on to compare the presentation of survival elsewhere in The Time Traveler’s Wife and in The Time Machine. Both The Time-Traveler’s Wife by Niffenegger and in The Time Machine by Wells present the reader with the idea of time travel despite

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    Feminism In The Time Machine

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    Charles Darwin once said: ‘We must bear without complaining the undoubtedly bad effects of the weak surviving and propagating their kind’. In this essay I will look at this quote in relation to the following texts: firstly‚ the science fiction novella The Time Machine by H.G. Wells and secondly‚ the play Mrs Warren’s Profession by George Bernard Shaw to decide whether or not Darwin’s statement is supported by these texts. I will be critically analysing the political ideologies of Wells and Shaw in

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    The Reason Utopian Societies Fail: Bad Leadership and the human condition. English Ms. Zimmerman Rios‚ Sergio 30/5/2012 Rios‚ Sergio Ms. Zimmerman English 30/5/2013 The Reason Utopian Societies Fail: Bad Leadership and the human condition. Utopian societies tend to fail because perfection itself cannot be achieved: factors such as discrimination and bad leadership make a utopian society nothing‚ but a myth. History has proven that humans that have leadership can shift things around

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    Maddie Elizondo Hr 5 Trapped in Tar and Time The article‚ “Trapped in tar and time‚” shows that while we do not know a lot about our past there is some factual evidence thats supports several theories. For example‚ while studying the La Brea Tar pits (The the tar tar pits) scientist were able to find a skull of a women‚ “This is a 9000 year old skull...studies of her skeleton show that she was 4’ 10” and was 20-25 years of age.” So make sure if you ever visit La Brea‚ you watch your step. There

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    Unwinds In The Giver

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    “In a perfect world everything would be either black or white‚ right or wrong‚ and everyone would know the difference. But this isn’t a perfect world. The problem is people who think it is.” ― Neal Shusterman‚ Unwind. A Utopia can never function long-term because there will always be someone who thinks differently that will go against the community‚ human nature of stealing and being difficult will get in the way of the rules‚ and because there is always a small group that has to suffer for the rest

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    The Giver By Lois Lowry

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    Most of us think that a perfect society would be great. But there are always some flaws to a utopian society. For example‚ in Lois Lowry’s novel The Giver‚ people think Release is just sending the people to a new place (freeing)‚ but really‚ they are being killed. I know because‚ “He killed it! My father killed it!” (188). In a modern day society‚ people can just die without having Release. Release is done to prevent sadness‚ but the people are oblivious to what they are doing. In modern day society

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    Essay Prompt: At the start of George Orwell’s dystopia novel‚ Animal Farm‚ the animals set out to establish a perfect community‚ a “society of animals set free from hunger and the whip‚ all equal‚ each working according to his capacity‚ the strong protecting the weak.” However‚ by the end of the novel‚ we see that a very different society is actually formed. A cruel dictatorship rules: no animal can speak his mind; all animals work in hunger‚ pain‚ and gross inequality. In a brief two-page essay

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    The Fear of Science

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    The Fear of Science To live in the today’s world is to be surrounded by the products of science. For it is science that gave our society color television‚ the bottle of aspirin‚ and the polyester shirt. Thus‚ science has greatly enhanced our society; yet‚ our society are still afraid of the effect of science. This fear of science can be traced back to the nineteenth century where scientist had to be secretative in experimenting with science. Although science did wonders in the nineteenth

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