YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Postcolonial Fiction and Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood
Essays 1 - 30
In seven pages postcolonial fiction is defined in order to determine whether this 1996 novel is representative of the literary gen...
that there is always a tidy or satisfactory resolution to the womens dilemmas. In fact, in the case of the intentionally ambiguou...
give clues as to what is going on in the mind and the past of the person having it. She convincingly creates a context for dream s...
This 5 page essay analyzes discourse as it manifests in these books. Reality differs according to narrator perception. 2 sources...
This paragraph helps the student begin to assess how trust is established in Atwoods text. Atwoods "Alias Grace" is something of a...
of another. You dont look back along time but down through it, like water. Sometimes this comes to the surface, sometimes that, s...
This 7 page essay focuses on gender and sexuality as defined by the social class structure detailed in Alias Grace. These factor...
preserve at least the signs of order" (Atwood 93). The narrators past contained so many painful memories that she created a fict...
This 5 page paper discusses two subjects with regard to The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood. One topic is the narrative structu...
to be sure that fertile women are available to the society. The society is class-based and those who are lucky are provided wives....
she is known for. This particular compilation of stories was written prior to her incredible fame and would thus indicate that she...
In four pages this paper examines how personality is affected by freedom in this analysis of Toni Morrison's 'Beloved' and Margare...
In five pages this paper examines how the power of language is considered in Margaret Atwood's essay 'An End to Audience' and how ...
that instead of continued efforts toward gender equality, the social "pendulum" might actually carry society backward in regards t...
understand our world and as we seek to communicate with that world. As the poem progresses we surely see elements that speak of...
Clearly this essential theme is one that speaks of a cultural nightmare for the idea of feminism. Women today are women who unders...
in the first section of the novel, while "Evidence" leads to no final truths or understanding. Born as he is between the worlds ...
hold much power today. One author notes that the novel of Atwoods specifically seems to target "fundamentalist Protestants in Amer...
his needs" (Atwood 8). Atwood obviously feared the emerging strength of the religious far-right and saw in its rejection of rights...
purely in terms of their ability to create a child. Offred has been robbed of her identity and objectified because it is her socie...
her youth she experienced the suicide of a friend in the woods while camping. The body was never found and this woman, Lois, was n...
a month for the sole purpose of procreation, they are now in a place where its very risky to be seen. But they are there at the C...
ways these boys are reflective of society in that the author is arguing that societies of all kinds need rules to keep them safe a...
seems to address in her works include that of lost culture and a sense of longing to return to a time which is perceived to be mor...
The very nature of such a situation requires that the primary character survive that which the reader is not sure he or she could ...
Austen and Cesaire present two very diverse approaches to the notion of time, in that ones perspective takes the form of British v...
"moves slowly, but surely into a plotline filled with many serious topics: abuse, rape, the inability to love, the immediate reper...
Offred, whose first-person narrative comprises most of the text, falls somewhere between the two female extremes. Her first-perso...
In seven pages this paper examines the conflict that exists between public and private interests in a consideration of Faces at th...
In five pages the fictional representations of women featured in The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood and As I Lay Dying by Will...