| Essay Title |
4 |
Jerome David Salinger was born in New York, New York on January 1, 1919 . Born to his Jewish father, Sol Salinger, and his Scottish mother, Jillich Salinger, he was the second child. |
1.7 |
Jabberwocky Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe All mimsy were the borogoves, And the mome raths outgrabe . ... Jabberwocky by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson 1832-1898 , or known by his pin name Lewis Carroll; is a clever poem using a mixture of nonsense with witty insight. |
6.6 |
Jack London Prince of the Oyster Pirates Jack London is known to many as the author of The Call of the Wild and White Fang. |
5.7 |
The naturalist author Jack London was an astonishing novelist that discussed the struggle between the common man and the reality of nature in many of his works such as The Call of the Wild and To Build a Fire. |
2.8 |
Jack London’s To Build a Fire is an accurate portrayal of the process known as naturalism and the old conflict of man against nature . London relies on a series of, or lack of, processes in this story. |
2.5 |
Jack London’s The Law of Life Throughout Jack London’s life he worked in many different areas and gained many different experiences that most other authors only heard about. |
2 |
The Sea Wolf In London’s classic novel, The Sea Wolf, the three elements of Naturalistic Novels are present in my opinion . ... London purposefully includes subtle allusions to these naturalistic elements in his attempt to incorporate these features into the novel. |
1.5 |
... Since I was young, I grew up watching my hero, Jack Skellington, from the Nightmare before Christmas . Every Halloween Jack and the ‘people’ of Halloween Town would vigorously prepare for the coming of their holiday, Halloween. |
3.5 |
Jack the Ripper The story about Jack the Ripper is one of the biggest mysteries ever when we are talking about police investigations . ... From the point of when the Jack the Ripper lived and today there has been a lot of evidence that has disappeared during the years, and some theories about Jack the Ripper are really writers’ own ideas and thoughts. |
3.5 |
Jackson Pollock was born in cody WY in the united states of amercia in 1912, In 1930 he began his artist career by enroling at the arts student league in new york where he took classes from thomas hart Boston who became his mentor. |
6.6 |
... Wayson Choy, in his novel The Jade Peony explores issues of culture through the eyes of four siblings . ... He also uses cultural objects like jade to represent the belief in tradition within the family, the precious jade peony, a carved stone the size of a large coin, knotted with red silk to hang like a pendent from the center, like the clapper of a sacred-bell. |
1.6 |
Compare and Contrast Essay Canada and China have many differences and similarities in culture, race etc . Since I had studied in China for 10 years and have been studying in Canada for 2 years, one of the most obvious differences I experienced between Canada and China is their schools. |
9.5 |
How effectively does Hughes convey the power of the jaguar ? Ted Hughes’’ poem ‘‘The Jaguar’’ describes the animals in a zoo and their lifestyles . It also compares them to the jaguar, which is an animal that lives differently to the others in the way that it views its life. |
3.1 |
The Jaguar by Ted Hughes Choose a poem in which an experience or individual is vividly described . ... The poem The Jaguar by Ted Hughes is a poem that paints a memorable picture and conveys a most thought-provoking theme. |
9.5 |
How effectively does Hughes convey the power of the jaguar ? Ted Hughes’ poem ‘The Jaguar’ describes the animals in a zoo and their lifestyles . It also compares them to the jaguar, which is an animal that lives differently to the others in the way that it views its life. |
1.7 |
... In The Jaguar and Second Glance at a Jaguar by Ted Hughes, both minor and major differences are evident in either Hughes’ style or the content of the two poems. |
8.3 |
... The same goes for Jamaica Kincaid . ... In Kincaid’s first book titled, At the Bottom of the River, and she uses her experience to focus on mother daughter relationships often told in the from of a dreamlike state in the short stories, Girl, In the Night, and My Mother. |
6.2 |
Jamaica Kincaid as Girl The relationship between mother and daughter in the short story Girl by Jamaica Kincaid is the central theme of the mostly one-sided conversation. |
12 |
... Annie, the protagonist in Jamaica Kincaid’s Annie John, represents the colonized island and therefore wants to please her own mother, while at the same time yearning for the freedom to discover her own identity. |
2.9 |
James Baldwin’s, Sonny’s Blues is a story of the title character's rehabilitation from drug addiction, reconciliation with his estranged brother, and recognition as a jazz pianist. |
5.4 |
... In the short story, Sonny’s Blues, by James Baldwin, the story is told from the eyes of the oldest brother . ... These short stories are similar in that both employ the technique of the epiphany, where a single moment of illumination awakens the narrator and reveals the deeper meaning of the text. |
1.2 |
The infatuation, lust and desire for an older woman have left the boy in a rage of anger, disappointment, and loneliness . The feelings are contributed from the beginning of the boys house containing the sense of a dead priest and his lost past. |
1.5 |
James Joyce’s short story Araby portrays an ironic contrast between dreams and reality . ... When she asks him if he is going to Araby, he feels a desire to prove his love to her. |
15.5 |
... Joyce, himself an expatriate, turns this insult around in Eveline we see not an ungrateful child, but an ungrateful parent . ... Joyce gives us in concise detail the terrible poverty and pressure of her situation. |
1.8 |
In the short story of Araby, James Joyce depicts the infatuation a young boy has for an older woman . ... In Araby , the main characters include the young boy, Mangan’s sister and a female working at the bazaar. |
1.4 |
The main theme, which was represented by the story itself, was that once a person has experienced love it will control all of their thoughts, words, and actions. |
7.8 |
James Thurber Master of Illusion During the early twentieth century, American writers became known for their humor . ... James Thurber was thought to have been one of the greatest American humorists since Twain. |
2.3 |
One of the greatest American writers with humor, James Thurber, presented his humorous imagination in The Unicorn in the Garden . ... The way the woman reacted to the man when he went up to the bedroom where she was still asleep and woke her to tell her that There s a unicorn in the garden and that it is eating the roses , she opened one unfriendly eye and looked at. |
7.1 |
Our Home - Jan Carew Write an essay in which you critically analyse what this poem suggests about ‘home’ . ... The theme of ‘home’ is significant to Caribbean poetry, and surfaces again and again in this context in different forms. |
1.4 |
Jane Eyre, written in 1847, is a novel written in autobiographical style about an orphan girl’s quest for love . The novel reflects contemporary life of that period and everything that happens is seen from Jane Eyre’s, the protagonists point of view. |
10.1 |
Mansfield Park by Jane Austen is a classic realist text, which is almost exclusively focused on a small strip of society, namely the upper-middle class of rural England; the class to which she herself belonged. |
19.1 |
Context Jane Austen, whom some critics consider Englands best novelist, was born in 1775 in Steventon, England . The seventh of eight children, Austen lived with her parents for her entire life, first in Steventon and later in Bath, Southampton, and Chawton. |
2.3 |
Austen vs . Bronte If I had read Pride Prejudice and Wuthering Heights without knowing who wrote them, I would have assumed the author of both pieces to be the same person. |
2.8 |
Miss Temple Miss Temple is the kind and fair-minded superintendent of Lowood School, who plays an important role in the emotional development of Jane Eyre. |
3.4 |
... Biggs AP Literature 5 September 2002 JANE EYRE LITERATURE VS . ... Jane Eyre is a classic example of the intertwining of literature and cinema with the brilliant adaptation in the movie from the novel with the original themes, mood, characterization, and symbols. |
5.8 |
The novel, Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte is a story about a young orphaned girl and her quest for love . Jane, the young girl searches for love and acceptance through each setting; Gateshead, Lowood, Thornfield, Moor House, and Ferndean. |
3 |
In reading Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea one might compare and contrast the attitude of Mr . Rochester towards both Jane and Antoinette . Rochesters attitude is similar to the two women in that he at one point wanted to marry both of them, and he lived with them at the same time; his attitude contrasts to Jane and Antoinette in such a way that he hatede Antoinette for ruining his future love life,. |
5.3 |
Jane Eyre In-Depth Analysis The development of Jane Eyres character is central to the novel . From the beginning, Jane possesses a sense of her self-worth and dignity, a commitment to justice and principle, a trust in God, and a passionate disposition. |
4.6 |
... was one of Jane Eyre’s last words to Helen Burns as she slowly passed away . Charlotte Bront presents many religious characters in her autobiography of Jane Eyre. |
6.4 |
Jane Eyre Summer Reading Questions 1 . Jane a . ... Instead of professing his love for Jane, he makes her jealous by making it look as if he loved Blanche Ingram. |
1.7 |
In the novel, Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte, there are two key male figures in Jane’s life . Mr . Rochester is her employer and, ultimately her husband. |
8.1 |
How is Jane’s character and situation presented to the reader in the first two chapters and how do these chapters fit in with the rest of the novel? |
3.4 |
Charlotte Bronte uses nature imagery throughout Jane Eyre, and comments on both, the association of humans with the outdoors and of human nature . The Oxford Reference Dictionary defines nature as 1. |
7.8 |
Jane has endured hell . ... Helen Burns and Miss Temple teach Jane the British stiff upper lip and saintly patience . Then Jane, star pupil that she is, exemplifies the stoicism, while surviving indignity upon indignity. |
6.7 |
... If the girl is Charlotte Brontes heroine Jane Eyre, she takes the latter route . ... Jane Eyre showed that it was possible for a woman in the nineteenth century to achieve independence and success on her own, no matter what odds were against her. |
7.7 |
LAP Summary A young girl, Jane Eyre who was born between a member of the wealthy Reed family and an impoverished clergyman, was forlorn as both of her parents died from typhus, which Jane s father contracted while caring for the poor. |
20.7 |
Chapter 16 The next morning, Jane is shocked to learn that the near tragedy of the night before has caused no scandal . ... Jane cannot imagine why an attempted murderer is allowed to continue working at Thornfield. |
7.8 |
In Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte, the importance of God and religion is a central argument throughout the novel . The reason for such an argument is that the novel covers a wide spectrum of religious belief from a harsh and repressive Calvinist belief, to a pure and compassionate egalitarian approach; and it is within this spectrum that the character of Jane finds herself battling to find her position and. |
6.5 |
... Who is Rochester ? Before Jane even encounters Mr . Rochester the reader is given a brief oversight of who Rochester is and what he is like by Mrs. |
2.9 |
Jane’s brute honesty and forward attitude make her a rebel and pariah within the upper class females . Despite the fact that Jane is unique, she is still on a continual quest for love. |