Two Works Essays

  • Comparing the Gettysburg Address and Ginsberg's America

    1530 Words  | 4 Pages

    Comparing the Gettysburg Address and Ginsberg's America Many writers have considered the identity of America. Two remarkable writers of two different time periods have shouldered this. They created two important works. The first, Abraham Lincoln; a great leader in the midst of an incredible time of change and confusion, delivered the Gettysburg Address to an assembly that came to him saddened and horrified by the trials of war. These same people left, changed, that day from the cemetery. The

  • A Feminist Perspective of John Updike's A&P

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Feminist Perspective of Updike’s A&P Two Works Cited    John Updike’s story, "A&P," starts off: "In walks three girls in nothing but bathing suits," and that pretty much sums it all up (Updike 1026). In the story, not only are the girls in bathing suits looked upon as sex objects, but other women are negatively viewed as witches, farm animals, or slaves. This story is about how a young man in the early 1960’s viewed women as a whole, including his own mother. At the beginning of the story Sammy

  • Essay on The Awakening and A Doll's House

    891 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ibsen, are two works of literature that can be readily compared. Both works take place in the same time period, around the late 1800s. Both works feature a woman protagonist who is seeking a better understanding of herself. Both Edna and Nora, the main characters, display traits of feminism. Both Edna and Nora have an awakening in which she realizes that she has not been living up to her full potential. Awakening and growth is one of the main themes in both of the works. Throughout the works, each woman

  • Finding Freedom in Kate Chopin's The Awakening

    671 Words  | 2 Pages

    to show that many things happen while Edna is sleeping that leads to awakening. In this way, the reader can only guess what occurs during sleep. I found I related to Harding Davis’ work more in that I can relate to Hugh and Deb’s oppression (politically, economically, class structurally). One thing the two works have in common is that both main characters (Hugh and Edna) actually hold the key to their own oppression, yet Edna’s social condition doesn’t require much sympathy from the reader. Also

  • Essay on Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Bladerunner

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    Similarities between Frankenstein and Bladerunner Many similarities can be found between Mary Shelley's 1816 novel, Frankenstein and the 1982 movie Bladerunner . The number of similarities between these two works, created more than two hundred years apart, is staggering. A cursory look at both works reveals these similarities: Both stories feature a very intelligent person trying to play God through the creation of life. Both of the creatures were subsequently mistreated by their maker and society

  • Comparing Jane Eyre and Yellow Wallpaper

    1645 Words  | 4 Pages

    of space in the two works, with the larger, upstairs rooms at the summer lodging and at Thornfield Hall being associated with insanity and the smaller rooms below being safer and saner. Gilman's narrator expresses an early desire to move downstairs to a smaller, saner room, but her wish is ignored. Large rooms become haunted rooms in both stories as typified by the room with the yellow wallpaper, the Red Room, and the third floor room beyond which Bertha is confined. Both works contain gothic elements

  • Comparing Aristotle, Antigone And Billy Budd

    4968 Words  | 10 Pages

    Aristotle, Antigone and Billy Budd  In Poetics, Aristotle explains tragedy as a kind of imitation of a certain magnitude, using direct action instead of narration to achieve its desired affect.  It is of an extremely serious nature.  Tragedy is also complete, with a structure that unifies all of its parts.  It is meant to produce a catharsis of the audience, meant to produce the emotions of pity and fear and to purge them of these emotions and helping them better

  • Comparing Emerson's Self-Reliance and Dunbar's We Wear the Mask

    1820 Words  | 4 Pages

    Emerson's Self-Reliance and Dunbar's We Wear the Mask In Self-Reliance, Ralph Waldo Emerson condemns false appearances. Paul Laurence Dunbar's We Wear the Mask also supports this belief. However, there is a difference in the views of these two works. Emerson believes that people can shed their false social appearances and live a life true to themselves and others. Conversely, Dunbar thinks these pretenses are necessary. The authors' word choices and images support this argument. Ralph Waldo

  • Free Essays: The Prologues of Oedipus Rex and Everyman

    831 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Prologues of Oedipus Rex and Everyman Two Works Cited    A prologue is a miniature version of the actual text. It answers the elements of literature in a work, and exposes the reader to essential facts, as well as foreshadows the outcome of the work. The prologue also introduces themes, characters, and literary devices to complement the work. Thus, through the study of the prologues of Oedipus Rex and Everyman, one may learn much about the nature of both plays. In the prologue of Oedipus, the

  • Freedom and Virtue in John Milton's Comus and Areopagitica

    1740 Words  | 4 Pages

    lines of these two men, John Milton's "Areopagitica" argues that the essence of life is freedom to choose how one lives it. In another of Milton's works, the masque play Comus, the Elder Brother's statements concerning virtue establish some of the foundations for his argument in the work he wrote "in order to deliver the press from the restraints with which it was encumbered" (716). The root of Milton's assertions lies in his complete hope in the prevailing of virtue. In these two works, confidence

  • Frederick Douglass and Henry David Thoreau

    1531 Words  | 4 Pages

    similarities between them.  The only real difference was the way they presented their ideas.  Both men either changed the way the country was run, or paved the way for change, being two of the first men that spoke up and stood up for what they believed, and did not let anything stand in their way. Works Cited Page Jacobus, Lee A.  Frederick Douglass.  "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave."   A World Of Ideas: essential readings for college writers. 

  • Comparing The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olauda Equiano and The Death of My Father

    859 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olauda Equiano and Wiesel’s The Death of My Father This essay will focus on the two works, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olauda Equiano by Olauda Equiano and "The Death of My Father" by Elie Wiesel. Although these works are quite different, at the same time they are sadly similar. Both works have value to me as they describe events that have historical significance. Their personal descriptions of these events help one better feel

  • Comparing Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead and Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

    2956 Words  | 6 Pages

    later, Douglas Adams got the idea for his Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy while lying drunk in a field in Innsbruck, Austria. In 1978, he would use this idea to produce a BBC radio show, which would be published as a novel in 1979. How can these two works be compared in their use of satire and cynicism? There are many instances of satire in Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Adams begins his novel by describing the sun and goes on to say, "Orbiting this at a distance of roughly ninety-eight

  • Essay About Love in Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey

    859 Words  | 2 Pages

    Odyssey Homer’s Iliad was a tragedy illustrating the despair and useless suffering associated with war.    Homer's Odyssey was an epic tale of long suffering resolving in triumph.    Though there were a great many differences between the two works, there was an underlying theme of love which ran through both.     Not just the physical manifestation of infatuation, but the kind of love that makes one willing to die for another The events portrayed in the Iliad were set in motion by love

  • Comparing Zoline's Heat Death of the Universe and Calvino's Cosmicomics

    5023 Words  | 11 Pages

    what are the underpinnings of those cosmologies? If cosmological representations are created so that we can understand reality, in some sense, how is it done, and what questions do these cosmologies pose for the disciples thereof? I will look at two works in particular for this inquiry, Italo Calvino's short story cycle, Cosmicomics, and Pamela Zoline's short story, "The Heat Death of the Universe." I have chosen to focus my in... ... middle of paper ... ...osmos may be infinitely vast and awesome

  • Quest for The Dream in Black Girl Lost and Makes Me Wanna Holler

    1857 Words  | 4 Pages

    Quest for "The Dream" in Black Girl Lost and Makes Me Wanna Holler Donald Goines Black Girl Lost (1973) and Nathan McCall's Makes Me Wanna Holler (1994) are two works written by male authors who have first hand knowledge about the African American experience. A difference between the two works is that McCalls story is an autobiography of his life growing up in the streets/ghetto and Goines is a fictional story about growing up in the streets/ghetto, but from a young black female perspective

  • Comparing A Lost Lady and Like Water for Chocolate

    1421 Words  | 3 Pages

    imagery, and yet, if we look closely, we can find common threads woven between the two works. Although differences are obvious, subtle similarities exist in setting, conflict, and central characters. The above excerpt is provided to give the student an idea of the focus of this essy.  The complete essay begins below. Imagine, for a moment, Marian Forrester in her kitchen preparing a tray for tea. As she works, her mind wanders to the letter she received in the post today from Frank Ellinger

  • Comparing The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Pleasantville

    664 Words  | 2 Pages

    for themselves to the teenagers of Pleasantville they begin to notice that there are other places in the world, this begins to change things from black and white to colour. Both stories contain the motif of going west. Another motif in these two works is the Rebel vs. the Establishment motif. In Huck the rebel would be Huck and one of the establishments would be the "civilized" people in the book. Huck refuses to believe that people can be so shallow and religious, and also believes that this

  • Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment and Shakespeare’s Macbeth

    1397 Words  | 3 Pages

    Punishment explore the psychological depths of man. These two works examine tragedy as represented through the existential beliefs of many philosophers. Existentialist theory expresses the idea that man can satisfy his own needs, regardless of social codes, if he has the energy and ambition to act. Both Macbeth and Raskolnikov have the ambition to act, but each struggles internally with their actions, frightened of the consequences. Although these works examine the tragedy and remorse of Macbeth and Raskolnikov

  • Story-telling in Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club and Mother Journeys

    907 Words  | 2 Pages

    Luck Club: the need for transference of stories from mother to daughter. These two works have quite a few similarities, despite the fact that they are tales about very different cultural traditions. Is the cultural difference important? Or do these works reflect a universal truth about story-telling between mothers and daughters? First of all, what are some of the similarities and differences between these works? Like Jing-mei Woo, Rebecca does not learn the full story of her mother's past