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    Subject Search for: Literature / Classic Literature

We carry over 20,000 term papers and research papers on so many topics we have categorized them by subject. Every term paper listed below is available for instant download after you purchase it. If you can't find a topic that suits your needs then order a customized term paper with all your requirements.

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78. 100 The Real And The Unreal In The Scarlet Letter.

This paper examines the characters in The Scarlet Letter. As real people often are in actual life, Hawthorne's three main characters - Dimmesdale, Chillingworth and Hester Prynne - are not in their inner world as they seem in the outside world. The two men, at least, have inner agendas they need to camouflage externally. On the other hand, Hester, despite the honesty, humility and penitence with which she accepts the censure and abominations of the people, remains unreadable to them in her unbroken silence as to her secret lover is and all the thoughts and feelings that nestle and wrestle within her and behind the scarlet letter on her chest.
  • Pages: 6
  • Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
  • Filename: 100 The Scarlet Letter.doc
  • Price: US$53.70

79. 101 The Guest By Albert Camus.

This paper examines and analyzes The Guest by Albert Camus. This is a story of lamentation where Albert Camus uses symbols alternately with plain language. Everything and everyone in it are everything and everyone in his own world and in the objective universe as he views it. Though sadness, wrath, and rebellion against an oppressive reality, Camus, through his character Daru, triumphs over it by turning compassionate, warm and just towards a victim of the state of things in reality and, thus, larger than that reality. Camus is both the Arab rebel guest and Daru, the schoolmaster. The guest is his personal embodiment : impoverished, sensitive, lost and crushed in a world too big and distant for him. He is an uninvited guest for the night at the deserted school, just like Camus feels about being in this world.
  • Pages: 4
  • Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
  • Filename: 101 Guest Albert Camus.doc
  • Price: US$35.80

80. 106 Gone With The Wind.

This paper discusses the novel Gone with the Wind. Houghton Mifflin had scheduled the publication of Alice Randall's story, entitled "The Wind Done Gone," in June last year when the lawyers of Margaret Mitchell's estate - represented by Sun Trust Bank -- sought for and obtained a preliminary injunction in April, stopping its publication (Associated Press 2001). Margaret Mitchell was the author of the classic novel and very famous movie, "Gone with the Wind," in 1939 and Alice Randall wrote "The Wind Done Gone" in 2001. The estate's lawyers held that Randall violated the Copyright Law by plagiarizing Mitchell's novel and that it was not simply a case of free speech, as claimed by Randall.
  • Pages: 10
  • Bibliography: 13 source(s) listed
  • Filename: 106 Gone With Wind.doc
  • Price: US$89.50

81. 154 The Bodies in the Canterbury Tales.

In the middle ages, three virtues, the vital, natural, and animal, were believed to control the body. To realize the exact extent of Chaucer's achievement in the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales, we must look at the descriptions he used to describe the bodies of these tales. This paper will take a look at several of Chaucer's bodies and the way in which he unfolds their persona. In all the tales, all human points of view have something to be said for them and something to be said against them. Chaucer's Knight is the personification of those [courtly] ideals, yet he is far more than the lay figure he would be were he that alone; like the other pilgrims taking this April journey to Canterbury, he is flesh and blood. He is one of those exceptional heroes who strive to live according to a great ideal yet who is at the same time understandably and understandingly human.
  • Pages: 6
  • Bibliography: 5 source(s) listed
  • Filename: 154 Bodies Canterbury Tales.doc
  • Price: US$53.70

82. 202 In Absence of Real Love.

This paper compares the concept of love in the novels, Frankenstein and A Room With a View. Frankenstein and A Room with a View both give us a striking picture of love in its barest existence and even life without it. In each novel we see characters trying to measure up to something they are not; we see the strong desire for love and acceptance, the yearning for love in the eyes that these characters look up to, whether it's in a relationship or in a family. We see that the abdication of love has long-standing consequences no matter to what context in which it is found or lost.
  • Pages: 5
  • Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
  • Filename: 202 Absence Real Love.doc
  • Price: US$44.75

83. 363 An Analysis of The Metamorphosis.

This paper discusses the story of Gregor Samsa in The Metamorphosis. Gregor reacts to his metamorphosis not with horror or anger or self-pity, but rather with an almost numb practicality. And his greatest concern is not that he now found himself changed into a "monstrous vermin", but rather that he is late for work and will undoubtedly have to answer to everyone as to why. Indeed, such a physical change, he may have thought, did not necessarily afford him with the lifestyle change that he so desired. And in essence, the fact that he was now a big bug actually did very little to change anything. A cynical man might sum up the situation by saying, "He was miserable before, and he's miserable now. Where's the change in that?"
  • Pages: 4
  • Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
  • Filename: 363 Analysis The Metamorphosis.doc
  • Price: US$35.80

84. 407 The Wisdom of Fools in Mark Twain's Pudd'nhead Wilson.

This paper discusses Mark Twain's Pudd'nhead Wilson. It is the tragic tale of a mother's love for her son, the misguided actions of that love, and the ultimate disastrous results. Tragedy: A serious drama with a sorrowful or disastrous conclusion. With that definition as criteria, "Pudd'nhead Wilson" can only be considered part tragedy, because it's conclusion is not entirely sorrowful, and the drama of the tale, as serious as it's events may be, is also heavily imbued with the trademark wit, humor and sarcasm of it's author, Mark Twain.
  • Pages: 5
  • Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
  • Filename: 407 Wisdom Mark Twain.doc
  • Price: US$44.75

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