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Jackie Le

Literary Reference Center - powered by EBSCOhost: The anatomy of a flashback: Use it sp... - 0 views

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    Argument: Flashbacks, if utilized efficiently, can be a revealing part of a story. Claim: Flashbacks have to have a proper transition in and out of the story. They connect with the story and give more exposure however cannot deter from the main story itself so much that events are overshadowed. Make sure flashbacks are motivated Evidence: "By all means use flashbacks, but for good reason: not because you want to use them, but because your story demands them. Ask: Does the flashback deepen our understanding of a character or a relationship? Does it provide needed background? In the end, it comes down to what a story needs."
daniel dasilva

Of Mice and Men, Innocence - 1 views

Arguement: We must understand that innocence, or innocent people cannot be evil or have any true hatred. They may be hatefull or do evil things, but such acts are not under their control, nor would...

cannery row steinbeck of mice and men innocence lennie george

started by daniel dasilva on 20 Jan 12 no follow-up yet
Kirsten R

EBSCOhost: Literary Relations: Anne Shirley and Her American Cousins. - 0 views

    • Kirsten R
       
      varriations of an ideal of female childhood that... trancends boundries
    • Kirsten R
       
      moral superioity moral purity -> nature
    • Kirsten R
       
      through p.9
    • Kirsten R
       
      The First Life: Exposure The Story of an Orphan. Poverty and Neglect. Dispossessed Royalty and the Vanished Happy Time. Parent's Violation of a Marriage Prohibition. The Journey. The Second Life: Social Problems Destination: The Big House and the Great Outdoors. Adoption by a Second Family. Surrogate Parents of a Different Social Rank. The Same-sex Antagonist. Opposite-sex Helpers or Outsiders. Triumph over the Antagonist. The Child Emerges as Savior. The Third Life: Return Issues of Identity Are Resolved. Recognition Ceremonies. Accommodation of Two Lives. (pp. 5-9)
Sydnee Arnson

EBSCOhost: Exodus Inverted: A New Look at The Grapes of Wrath - 0 views

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    Argument: This article is about the second book I am reading. In this abstract it talks about religion. Sometimes religion can be controlling. Control is what I am writing about for my paper. Claims: Control can be found in many aspects of life. I would research different religions and find controlling things about them. Evidence: "The Grapes of Wrath has been read typically as a period of social activism". "...emerging from a self-satisfied and legalistic moralism into a new ethos of universal love in pattern of Christ".
Crystae Rohman

Literary Reference Center - powered by EBSCOhost: When I Was in Kneepants: Ray Bradbury - 0 views

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    Argument- Bradbury has an issue letting go of an idea or a point, "squeezes it dry." This is order to make sure his point gets made through all types of his literature. Claims - Since he began writing his final works acquired a large amount of depth and polish, much more extensive than his sometimes disturbing first works. -Bradbury attempts to display machines and large things as evil as they tend to represent the adult life, something Bradbury seems to fear. -Most of his earlier stories, lacked the idea of a true story and were rather just intensely realized fragments. Evidence- "but because they are grownup things; because they symbolize the big, loud, faceless, violent, unromantic world of adults" -The author discusses how like other science fiction writers, that Bradbury's goal is to demonstrate new ideas not normally thought about. -Also, the author demonstrates his opinion of the dark side of Bradbury and his inability to properly adress the things he hopes to, as his works are sometimes more sickening than intended.
Megan Gibson

Cell Literary Criticism - 0 views

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    Argument: King satirizes society and their dependence upon material things. Claims: The use of cell phones in the novel is effective because it is relateable to nearly all modern societies. Evidence:"King's use of cell phones as the mechanism to reduce the vast majority of Americans (the characters assume a worst-case worldwide scenario) to mindless zombies offers the opportunity for observation and commentary about the near-ubiquity of cell phones and society's infatuation with and dependence on them. Rather than develop this richly fertile ground for satire, though, King opts for a serious horror novel" (Avinger)
Ashley Prosser

So What is Normal? | Welcome to So What is Normal? - 0 views

shared by Ashley Prosser on 08 Feb 12 - No Cached
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    We are seen by many to behave beyond social norms: 'ranting and raving'- when spaces are consistently designed that render us stuck. We are not abnormal: our diversity labels shoves us in a bag marked 'divergence from the norm'. It's time to get out of the bag and into the pot.
Jesse Kreutz

Literature Resource Center - Document - 0 views

    • Jesse Kreutz
       
      So, Historical Fiction is hard to define since many authors have settings based in history, without them being considered Historical Fiction. Interesting; I never thought of it like that, but it makes sense
  • Almost all literary authors mine the past at some point.
    • Jesse Kreutz
       
      Ah, so he makes the argument that Historical Fiction often crosses the boundaries between fact and fiction, and stretches the truth to make a quick buck.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • 'historical truth' (a concept that is itself notoriously unreliable)."
    • Jesse Kreutz
       
      What is Historical truth? In many cases, this can be very hard to determine. If an entire genre can be so hazy in its guidelines, how can it continue to function?
  • I stick with the facts until the facts run out. I don't try to improve on them
    • Jesse Kreutz
       
      She takes the stance that the job of a Historical Fiction writer is to keep as close to the facts as possible.
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    Jesse, make sure to clearly label the argument, claims, and evidence to avoid losing points on the next post.
liza sejkora

Sound and The Fury - 4 views

Sudhanshu, for evidence, I want you to list quotes that you may use in your paper.

sound fury william faulkner

paulo dasilva

J.D. Salingers use of irony and his stories divergent criticisms - 1 views

Argument: Pointing out the several times that J.D. Salinger uses extreme irony the article attempts to explain one of the reasons why stories like The Catcher in the rye are so widely critisized in...

J.D Salinger Catcher in the Rye Irony

started by paulo dasilva on 20 Jan 12 no follow-up yet
Kirsten R

1.3 EBSCOhost: Literary Relations: Anne Shirley and Her American Cousins - 0 views

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    Dawson, Janis. "Literary Relations: Anne Shirley And Her American Cousins." Children's Literature In Education 33.1 (2002): 29-51. Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Jan. 2012.
chelsea codd

Just Beast - 0 views

  • made an interesting discovery: what failed as poetry succeeded marvelously as prose. The capricious line breaks were annoying as hell, but Hopkins’ attempt to write something poem-shaped had the salutary effect of producing incredibly tight and evocative sentences, not a word wasted.
  • So much so that when her sister writes, telling Pattyn that their father has started beating his younger children, you fully expect that Pattyn is going to kick ass and take names.
  • I do demand that the plot twists, especially the drastic ones, be explicable upon careful re-examination of the story, and that tragic endings be justifiable, thematically, philosophically, geographically, whatever. Just so long as there’s a reason.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • ending was so wrong, so incredibly unjustified by the story preceding it, that it made the verse-format look like the greatest structural innovation in novels since the first person narrator.
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    Review of Burned
Ivan Munoz

EBSCOhost: Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical/ Anthem: Expanded 50th Anniversary Edition (B... - 0 views

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    Shelton, Robert. "Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical/ Anthem: Expanded 50Th Anniversary Edition (Book Review)." Utopian Studies 8.1 (1997): 225. Academic Search Complete. Web. 20 Dec. 2011.
Sydnee Arnson

Literary Reference Center - powered by EBSCOhost: Of Mice and Men - 0 views

  • which consists of “a little bit of land, not much. Jus’ som’thin that was his.” This is one of the central themes that propels the novel’s
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    Argument: The American dream is something that George and Lennie want in their lives. Claim: Each of their "dreams" consists of owning a farm
eureka lim

Madness-- Twelfth Night - 2 views

shared by eureka lim on 18 Dec 11 - No Cached
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    Criticism
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    Through out the whole play, shakespeare argues the different perspectives of madness. He is vsery intrested with the idea of mad and madness within the play. He doesnt give us a vivid definition as he wants us to define it ourselves through our own view. Madness such as being insane or just very creative. He claims that he uses "madness" to simply point out the characters. " Fetch him off, I pray you; he speaks nothing but madman" (1.5.87). "Sir Toby is -- Half Drunk" (1.6.96). "Like a drowned man, a fool, and a madman" (1.5.107.10).
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    Eureka, for the next entry, separate the argument for the claims.
Cameron Black

Mockingbird in Context - 0 views

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    Argument: Gurdip Panesar in her article "Mockingbird in Context" argues that "To Kill A Mockingbird" by Harper Lee is a rare single work of literature that is said to have attained a mythical status. Claim: Her view on this is that the story seems to "impress people on a deeply human level." She is saying that it has had deep impacts similar to the bible. The message in this book inspired many people and also helped the Black Rights Movement with it's racial conflicts and examples throughout the book. Evidence: " g o es on to n o te that the n o v el c a me in s e c o nd o n ly to the B i b le in o ne r e a d e r s' list of b o o ks that w e re felt to c o n t r i b u te m o st s igni f i c ant ly to i n d i v i d u al p e o p l e 's lives. Mockingbird is o ne of t h o se r e l a t i v e ly r a re s ingle w o r ks of lite r a t u re t h at c an t ruly be s a id to h a ve a t t a i n ed a my t h i c al s t a t u s; it is u l t im a t e ly l a u d ed less for its b r i l l i a n ce in t e rms of l i t e r a ry art t h an for t he w ay in w h i ch it s e ems to i m p r e ss p e o p le on a d e e p ly h u m an l e v e l."
Kirsten R

1.2 - 0 views

    • Kirsten R
       
      "it has long...series of nine books" 2nd page
    • Kirsten R
       
      p. 218 "New Woman and the codes... looks both forward and outward"
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    Argument- The timelessness of Anne Claims- Evidence- 2 sticky notes
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    Kirsten, make sure to state the claims next time to avoid losing points.
Heather Patterson

Literary Criticism: The Count of Monte-Cristo - 1 views

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    Argument: In his article, Wm. Laird Kleine-Ahbrandt, argues the motives behind Edmond Dante's reason for his actions as well as his motive behind his seeking revenge on all those who had hurt him. Claims: Along with a summary of the novel itself, Kleine-Ahbrandt also makes inferences that suggest that the author of the novel, Alexandre Dumas, saw him self as a version of Dantes, the main character of the novel. Kleine-Ahbrandt also gives more background as to why Dumas wrote the plot the way he did. Evidence: "Dantes is so consumed with a passion for revenge that he does not realize that he is in danger of losing his soul." "The official morality in Dumas's time was to punish the wicked and force sinners to atone for their sins" "Such satisfaction is worth a little moralizing"
Cameron Black

Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird.  - Slate Magazine - 0 views

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    Argument: That the problem with trying to write a literary criticism on TKAM is that there isn't anything to criticize. Claim: That TKAM is ranked as one of the most influential books in Americans' lives. Evidence: "To Kill a Mockingbird sells about a million copies per year, for a total of 30 million to date, and is consistently ranked in reader surveys as the most influential book in Americans' lives, after, of course, the Bible."
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