Literary Synthesis Essay

927 Words2 Pages

From colonization to now, literature has always had such a big part in America’s history and development. Letters turned to journals which turned into newspapers and finally into books that would be shared with the world. This fascination of writing down events sparked new ideas and ways to express oneself. Throughout many centuries, ideas have been absorbed from the Enlightenment, the Realistic, Romantic, Modern, and Postmodern movements, along with others, to finally transform into today’s contemporary literature. The course of literary advances ands changes to make literature more insightful are shown by Realists, Mark Twain and Henry James; Modernists, Susan Glaspell and Eugene O’Neill; and Postmodernists, Edward Abbey and Junot Díaz. Realism: …show more content…

Whar is you? Dog my cats ef I didn' hear sumf'n. Well, I know what I's gwyne to do: I's gwyne to set down here and listen tell I hears it ag'in"(109). different dialects that Twain exploits in this part of the passage. Aunt Sally, who lives on a cotton plantation and is a member of a higher social class speaks with correct grammar. Huck, in contrast, is poor and undereducated and speaks with broken grammar.}{The setting is described with much detail and imagery, so as to make it as close as possible to the actual surroundings.}
The Beast in the Jungle, Henry James- https://www.otherpapers.com/English/Realism-in-Henry-Jame's-a-Beast-in-the/25524.html {“The Beast” represents John’s inabilty to realize that May loves him and he loves her, yet he does not realize this until after she dies. Henry James does a great job illustrating how everyone tries hard to make it in life one day at time}{James writes, "The fate he had been marked for he had met with a vengeance--he had emptied the cup to the lees; he had been the man of his time, the man, to whom nothing on earth was to have happened" (James …show more content…

She says to Edmund, “[Jamie] can't help being what the past has made him. Any more than your father can. Or you. Or I” (Long Day’s Journey act 2) failure to stray from the ruts they are in but also — perhaps unintentionally — about her increasing inability to distinguish idealized memories from current reality} {Jamie and Edmund Tyrone are also alcoholics at different points in their descent into addiction. Their father, James — a functional alcoholic himself. To both his sons, James exclaims, “You’ve both flouted the faith you were born and brought up in — the one true faith of the Catholic Church — and your denial has brought nothing but self-destruction!” (Long Day’s Journey act

Open Document