YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Stories by Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner
Essays 421 - 450
In five pages this essay considers the narrative action and the main theme's implications within the context of the short story. ...
conforming to gender role expectations in other areas, such as his taking the bags to the train. It is not that she is portrayed ...
"association of love with life, and the consequent indissolubility and self-sufficiency of the relationship" (Tyler). However, lov...
The boy was intrigued by Santiagos resolve and had faith this man he admired would come through. On one of their early fishing ex...
This essay discusses the themes, symbolism and context of the conflict between the genders that defines this Hemingway short story...
offers a very powerful image of the lives these people live trapped in a tiny apartment and in their individual lives. Melville...
Readings are taken from three works, The Sound and the Fury, The House of the Seven Gables and A Farewell to Arms, in this paper w...
In five pages the interaction between character and participation in an event that generates conflict is considered in 'Barn Burni...
In five pages this essay examines the influence of the Book of Genesis on such authors as William Faulkner and Thornton Wilder. T...
In nine pages this essay discusses the consequences of time on the Compsons featured in The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner...
This paper examines the important role the past plays in Absalom, Absalom! a 1936 novel by William Faulkner in six pages. There a...
to acquire land that turns a profit from their constant toil. "...The land is made habitable and profitable for him by the black ...
This paper examines how the Bildungsroman or coming of age technique is employed by William Faulkner in the portrayal of his 11 ye...
In five pages this paper discusses how the past is revived in 'Babylon Revisited' by F. Scott Fitzgerald and in 'A Rose for Emily'...
Character strengths and weaknesses and their family relationships are examined in this analysis of As I Lay Dying by William Faulk...
The entire story of the Bundren family is tragic with its tale of poverty in the South and a family whose members are so caught up...
and "marrying well". In the twentieth century, however, the Compsons breed a retarded child; two of the siblings have an incestuou...
Northerners make such a big deal out of something that wasnt originally a big deal to Southerners at all. Bayards Granny, like man...
In a paper consisting of seven and a half pages the ways in which the transition from Old to New South are conveyed by William Fau...
death, Addie exerts control over her family because they seek--by fulfilling her last wish--to somehow make a connection with her ...
her best friend, about Joe Starks, who is an ambitious man that soon becomes the mayor of a small town called Eatonville. But Jani...
Murry Falkner was interested in railroads, hunting and drinking, not necessarily in that order. Alcoholism was the Falkner family...
he recognizes the inconsistencies between the social representation of men and women, and is bold enough to comment upon them. Th...
overrule her inherent independence as a strong, black woman by telling Phoeby she can "tell em what Ah say if you wants to. Dats ...
to admit for three days that he was dead. The narrator says, "We did not say she was crazy then. We believed she had to do that. W...
indescribable evil. Symbols always present another layer to a story, as well as another realm for questioning. Hawthornes repea...
lives, and all this really comes out as people and their relationships to the place that formed them (Smith ppg). Duality shown i...
In five pages the fictional representations of women featured in The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood and As I Lay Dying by Will...
In 6 pages this paper discusses human and cosmic justice within the context of this novel by William Faulkner and also considers h...
how Over three thousand die in the Macondo massacre, and the only surviving witnesses are Jose Arcadio Segundo and a small child. ...