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Erica Jensen

Literary Analysis 3 - 4 views

Can you include the link to the article?

criticism literary

Sebastian Shores

Life After Irony - Girlfriend in a Coma - 1 views

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    Argument: Coupland uses noteworthy pop-culture to name and create his novel Girlfriend in a Coma. The Smiths' a popular band of the '80s was the reason behind the books title while Karen Ann Quinlan was the true reason the teenage girl in the book who slipped into a coma was also ironically named Karen. Starting with the basics Coupland constructed Girlfriend in a Coma to mean more than what was put on the surface. The turning point of Coupland's career as a serious author blossomed after he successfully published Girlfriend in a Coma, a dark and daring book that involves post-apocalyptic events. Difficult overbearing situations was what fascinated Coupland and was one of the main influential reasons Coupland wrote the novel Girlfriend in a Coma; the thrill of watching teenagers and later on adults survive in a world where their only worry was to find their true purpose on Earth. Evidence: "On the surface, the book seems vintage Coupland, taking a cue from pop-culture icons like Karen Ann Quinlan, the New Jersey teenager who spent 10 years in a coma before dying in 1985, and The Smiths, the quintessential band of '80s disaffection from whose song the book takes its title." ". And yet, Girlfriend in a Coma is Coupland's most audacious novel to date, and it marks something of a watershed in his career." "Sitting in a posh Toronto hotel lounge sipping coffee, Coupland struggles to find words to describe the genesis of Girlfriend in a Coma. "It's so weird to talk about this out loud," he says. But eventually, between frequent changes of subject, he remembers that it began with a quote from novelist Thomas Pynchon. "He said the way young people deal with the overwhelming-ness of existence--I'm paraphrasing--is through time travel or sleep," Coupland says. "So what I wanted to do was present sleep and time travel, and the coma as the embodiment of both." "Then there was his fascination with Karen Ann Quinlan. "I just remember in the '70s, every
Alissa Jones

Article analysis 4 - 2 views

The author's purpose of the passage is to critique Alice Sebold's novel, Almost Moon. The effectiveness of the structure of the argument is very effective, and stays consistent. The evidence given ...

started by Alissa Jones on 28 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
Elizabeth Tuttle

Literary Analysis #4 A Streetcar Named Desire - 4 views

Argument: In A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams portrays the role of women as a traditional house wife. Williams does this in order to teach women who read the play how they should act ...

started by Elizabeth Tuttle on 27 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
Kara Danner

Jhumpa Lahiri-Voices from the gaps - 0 views

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    ARGUMENT: Jhumpa Lahiri's central theme in both The Namesake and Interpreter of Maladies is Diaspora, isolation, and search for identity and fulfillment. Jhumpa Lahiri is the "voice from the gaps" because she puts the "in between" identity feeling into a compelling story that many can relate to. SUPPORT: "Both Interpreter of Maladies and The Namesake contain themes of conflict in relationships between couples, families, and friends. Through these relationships she explores ideas of isolation and identity, both personal and cultural. The characters in both works frequently encounter crises of identity, which are tied to their inabilities to reconcile their American identity with their Indian identity. " "She often correlates her characters' cultural isolation with extreme personal isolation, suggesting that the cultural isolation causes the personal." "In their isolation, these characters feel that they are missing something vital to their identities. It is this missing "something" that defines them. It seems that few characters in these stories have any idea of who they are or where they are going in life." THOUGHTS: The authors Gipe, Greco, Spencer and Yang provide key facts about Lahiri's background in India and why she chooses to write novels about Diaspora because she relates to the feeling of being "in between" cultures. The article is concluded well by referring to the ending of The Namesake where Gogol finally realizes that he doesn't have to choose between cultures, his identity is both of them meshed together.
Steve Baker

Catch-22 Literary Analysis - 1 views

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    Argument Heller used juxtaposition and the idea of "déjà vu" to create the insight on the world that Yossarian had been it at the time (World War 2). By the use of "black" comedy and the influence of works such as Crime and Punishment and Dante's Inferno, Heller was able to craft such a fine "epic" that there are authors today who use the similar style of non-organized (or non-chronological) order - such as William Faulkner. Evidence * "Most significant is Heller's incremental repetition of the Snowden episode; he presents fragments of the scene and builds to a climax where Yossarian learns the extent of his gunner's injuries." * "Heller relies heavily upon patterns of recurrence-whether of scene, image, or verbal exchange-so that the reader experiences a sense of deja vu." * "Heller uses the technique of black humor, juxtaposing comic and tragic effects, mixing the slapstick with the grotesque." Thoughts This article stresses the importance of the non-chronological order that Heller had to defend upon Catch-22's initial release - in which critics were just stupid and though he did it out of panic and misrepresentation rather than using it as a true surface style with meaning.
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    Author is not stated directly - blocks the page when clicking on source information (@ school).
Jon Collins

Argument- The augmen - 2 views

Argument- The augment is that even when a sober alcoholic has even a small drink, they would have an over whelming craving for more alcohol and continue to drink after that. Therefore when a person...

started by Jon Collins on 28 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
Jon Collins

Argument- The augmen - 0 views

Argument- The augment is that even when a sober alcoholic has even a small drink, they would have an over whelming craving for more alcohol and continue to drink after that. Therefore when a person...

started by Jon Collins on 28 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
Julia Hahn

Wrting style in Othello V. Comedy of Errors - 1 views

The writing style in both of the plays are different. Thats what seperates the comedies from the tragidies. Shakespeare had done this on purpose because it was meant to reach a certain audience. Ba...

Criticism literary

started by Julia Hahn on 28 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
adrian patterson

"You shall not murder" -Exodus 20:13 - 2 views

In the novel "Under the Banner of Heaven", John Krakauer wrote about two brothers, the Lafferty boys, that are indoctrinated into the Mormon faith. On July 24, 1984 these brothers killed a woman an...

started by adrian patterson on 28 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
Jon Collins

Stillness is the move - 3 views

Argument- People are never truly satisfied with themselves. Always trying to one up what they have and not focusing on the items, physical and mental, which they already have. There for people who ...

lit cricism

started by Jon Collins on 03 Feb 11 no follow-up yet
adrian patterson

The journalist - 1 views

Jon Krakauer is a "best-selling journalist and author of Into the Wild, Eiger Dreams and Into Thin Air. Many of Krakauer's books originally start out as stories for the popular outdoors magazine", ...

started by adrian patterson on 15 Feb 11 no follow-up yet
Bryan Myrick

30 Seconds To Mars - This Is War Lyrics - 0 views

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    War could be seen as an allusion to the social decay of every culture, because everyone will be affected by the decay. A war to end and reverse the decay, or even just to handle the ever present decay. http://www.lyricsmania.com/this_is_war_lyrics_30_seconds_to_mars.html
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