...The French Revolution and the Rebalance of Power In Charles Dicken’s bloodthirsty A Tale of Two Cities, class divide between the French commoners and aristocracy results in rebellion generating a revolution. While the first and second estates of the Ancien Regime had absolute power, the third estate, 98 percent of France, had nothing due to abuse of taxes. The aristocracy treated the peasants disrespectfully, believing the commoners’ sole purpose was to pay taxes. This treatment enraged the poor causing acts in violence to restore justice. The cruel attitude of the first two estates towards the third estate justified the French commoners’ fury and brutality to remake social and political order. During the Ancien Regime the aristocracy's demeanor towards the commoners was inhumane. The idea that the poor meant nothing to the nobility is conveyed through Dickens's portrayal of Marquis Evrémonde, a French aristocrat, after he killed a child with his carriage, “... You people cannot take care of yourselves and your children… How do I know...
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...In Dicken’s novel, Tale of Two Cities, he used unique series of foreshadowing to portray the story. The setting in which the story takes place displays the many trials and frustrations that came along with the Revolution. The story, revolving around the Evremonde family, revealed how hatred and past relations can effect a person’s life. Due to this family, death and revenge led the characters to make unruly mistakes. The Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens, displays many examples of foreshadowing including the sacrifice Sydney made, the wine being spilled on the street, and Madame Defarge knitting the blanket. First off, Sydney love Lucie to the point that he would give up anything for anyone who it effected. In the story, Lucie’s love,...
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...As you see, the THEME of Turmoil is significant in A Tale of Two Cities because when Dickens introduces the reader with a summary of the book in the first chapter heads were being cut off and nobility doesn't care for the poor very much, when the Jacques and Defarge went to the war and fight with both women and men blood everywhere around them, and when the peasants called patriots are making weapon to murdering the prisoners, all involve in this theme. When England is mostly quiet and not so much trouble but in France nothing change. There's still war going on and name writing down for death list. All these three example is importance to the plot and the the characters in A Tale of Two Cities because it happened before during the French...
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...The novel, A Tale of Two Cities, gives insight on the differences between London and Paris during the French Revolution. The novel examines the lives of both the main characters and the general public, both suffering from the injustice of the nobility. Throughout the book, the atrocities that the peasants go through are described, which leads up to their eventual revolt. In the “Hunger” passage in The Wine Shop, one of the atrocities experienced, hunger, is described. This scene, which appears that the beginning of the book, provides insight of the situation of the peasants. Literally, the passage describes the horrific hunger that is felt by the masses. Throughout the passage, the extreme prevalence of starvation is clearly described. While this passage literally describes the hunger of the peasants, it also describe the figurative hunger that the people have. The people have a...
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...A scene that took place in chapter 5 did so much to set the mood of the entire book. It showed just how capable Charles Dickens is of foreshadowing, and created a theme that would last the entire book. In chapter 5 of Book one of the novel in named wineshop. In the scene a large cask of wine was dropped and broke, causing the wine to spill. All the peasants rushed to drink, and soak up the wine. This showed how much poverty there was in the city of St. Antoine Paris. The red wine was cleverly symbolized by Dickens as the blood that would soon be all over France. This set the eerie mood throughout the book. The mood of the scene starts as a joyful scene, but quickly takes a turn. The poverty is quickly shown. The second the wine is spilled, everyone within sight immediately stops there activities and starts drinking the wine. They also use handkerchiefs to soak up the wine and feed it to their kids. “ There was little roughness in the sport, and much playfulness. Their was a special companionship in it, an observable inclination on the part of everyone to join some other...
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...seven…“How many places have we lived?” I asked Lori. “That depends on what you mean by ‘lived,’” she said...We counted eleven places we had lived, then we lost track. (pg. 29) Situation: Jeannette and her older sister, Lori, talk about how many times they have moved in their life. At the time, Jeanette is four and Lori is seven when they have this conversation. Analysis: The passage shows how the parents kept moving their children around to so many different places that they never were able to get established in their community. In the book, it talks about how the family keeps moving and moving. When they move, they would find very remote or unusual places to stay that was not always the best living conditions for the children. The author chooses to add this to her...
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...Code Switching Assignment: “Charles Dickens’ relations to A Tale of Two Cities” Shaniyaz Chowdhury ENG 201-33 03. 14. 2014 A Tale of Two Cities and it's relation to the author Charles Dickens life It is to be believed that in “A Tale of Two Cities” Dickens reflects on his affair with eighteen year old actress Ellen Ternan. The relationship was maybe certainly romantic but also probably asexual. In his novel, Lucie Manette resembles Ellen Ternan physically. After starring in the play “The Frozen Deep” by Wilkie Collins, Dickens became inspired to write tales. In the play, he performed in a role who sacrifices his own life so his rival may have the woman they both loved. This love triangle became the main plot in his novel “A Tale of Two Cities” where Charles Darnay and Sydney Carton both loved Lucie Manette. The pair of Sydney Carton and Charles Darnay may also bear importance on Dickens' personal life. They look exactly alike that Carton saved him twice from being sentenced to death. It is implied that Carton and Darnay don’t only look alike, but also have the same genetic attributes. Though, many argued that the pair of Carton and Darnay is a doppelgänger; a pair that typically represents evil in which Darnay is worthy but dull and Carton is dishonorable but fascinating. Analysis The level of formality in writing should be suited by the expectations of the intended audience and the objective of the writer. Since I knew the type of people...
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...The Knight's Tale The Knight’s Tale (I) The Knight begins his tale with the story of Theseus, a prince, who married Hippolyta, the queen of Scythia, and brought her and her sister, Emelye, back to Athens with him after conquering her kingdom of Amazons. When Theseus returned home victorious, he became aware of a company of women clad in black who knelt at the side of the highway, shrieking. The oldest of the women asked Theseus for pity. She told him that she was once the wife of King Cappaneus who was destroyed at Thebes, and that all of the other women lost their husbands. Creon, the lord of the town, had simply tossed the dead bodies of the soldiers in a single pile and refused to burn or bury them. Theseus swore vengeance upon Creon, and immediately ordered his armies toward Thebes. Theseus vanquished Creon, and when the soldiers were disposing of the bodies they found two young knights, Arcite and Palamon, two royal cousins, not quite dead. Theseus ordered that they be imprisoned in Athens for life. They passed their time imprisoned in a tower in Athens until they saw Emelye in a nearby garden. Both fell immediately in love with her. Palamon compared her to Venus, and prayed escape from the prison; similarly, Arcite claimed that he would rather be dead than not have Emelye. The two fight over her, each calling the other a traitor. This happened on a day in which Pirithous, a prince and childhood friend of Theseus, had come to Athens. Pirithous had known Arcite at Thebes...
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...Wordsworth, and Jean Jacques Rousseau embodied the greatest aspects of the Romanticism era focusing on solitude, nature, and feelings. In 1830 the Realism movement started, a movement strife with inclusiveness and determinism that was highlighted in the works of Gustave Flaubert and Fyodor Dostoevsky. The most recent period was Modernism in which William Butler Yeats and T.S. Eliot used rationalism and psychoanalysis when writing their poems. Each period uprooted the period before it and the writers values and views contradicted those of the writers who proceeded them. The major aspects of each period are very apparent when dissecting the writers who lived through them. The Age of Reason covered from 1660 to 1770 and focused on order, cities, and used satire as a tool to find reason. Voltaire’s Candide and Swift’s A Modest Proposal were both satire that questioned traditions and philosophical norms of the times. In Candide, Voltaire mocks the idea that eternal optimism of ones course in life by continuously throwing the worst case scenarios at his protagonist. In the end Candide finds solace in nature and focusing on the everyday tasks. Swift’s almost humorous A Modest Proposal questions the idea of lazily accepting the British rule over Ireland. The not so modest proposal from Swift drew questions against the social order and witty comedic attack against what was at that time the social norm....
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...American Dream Theme’s in Taxi Driver An Annotated Bibliography Dempsey, Michael. Rev. of Taxi Driver, by Martin Scorsese/Michael Phillips/Julia Phillips/Tony Bill. Film Quarterly Vol. 29, No. 4 (Summer, 1976). Pp. 37-41. Print. Dempsey’s review of Taxi Driver directed by Martin Scorsese is an analytical synopsis of the film given in comparison through other novels and films. Dempsey opens his criticism of Taxi Driver by stating that Taxi Driver’s inspiration came from Robert Bresson’s Four Nights of a Dreamer. Dempsey continues to recap the film and calls De Niro’s portrayal of the main character as bringing a brilliant conception alive with expert minimalism. Dempsey’s most surprising review comes in the form of the infamous climactic end to the film. Dempsey describes this as “only a revenge movie cliché; like the shark attacks in Jaws” further stating that is only provided a reflexive physical reaction. Ebert, Roger. Rev. of Taxi Driver, by Martin Scorsese/Michael Phillips/Julia Phillips/Tony Bill. 1 Jan. 2004. Web. 24 Nov. 2013. < http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-taxi-driver-1976>. Ebert’s review of Taxi Driver directed by Martin Scorsese was a post look of great American films that Ebert put on his acclaimed “top rated” listing. Ebert describes the lead character Travis Bickle as “ a character with a desperate need to make some sort of contact somehow—to share or mimic the effortless social interaction he sees all around him, but does not participate...
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...We began our project by deciding which tales we wanted to focus on. As a group we narrowed it down to Hansel and Gretel, Cinderella and Snow White. We really wanted Hansel and Gretel as we believed we had more ideas and could have a lot of fun with that tale. In the end, after turning in our three choices, you, Professor Cordova, informed us there was no overlap with choices and we were able to do Hansel and Gretel. While discussing in class what we were going to do was easy, talking outside of class was more difficult. Everyone in our group has a very busy and complicated schedule. I commute an hour and a half to campus, Lacie works as a 24-hour caregiver, Melanie has a little girl at home and Donielle and Caitlyn have very busy work and school...
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...City of Glass Story by Paul Auster Essay by Vanessa Jagna Hoff Levinsen In this essay, we will be working with Paul Auster’s novel “City of Glass”. In the story, we follow the character Daniel Quinn, whose occupation is writing literature. This novel works with different themes that are related to mental health. The first theme we will be talking about is a question of identity; who am I, and who are you? We will follow this with describing human contact’s connection with the sanity of mankind. Social life and its influence on our mentality will lead us to the question of the masks of mankind; who is the real personality among the many faces of a single human. We will also discuss the theme of deciding. What crucial decisions have lead to the life we now live, and what could have been, if our stories had taken place just a tiny bit differently. Last but not least we will go into depth with Quinn’s mental disorder and how it is related to the other characters in the novel. Can a single, presumably random incident change the entire course of our lives? We all have one or more events that changed the entire direction of our own personal tales of existence. It can be a moment of clarity, where we realised we had lived our lives wrong the entire time. It could be the moment we bumped into that special someone, and fell in love. Or maybe it was that day when you received a rather odd phone call; let us say that perhaps you got a phone call from someone who looked for a detective...
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...HL309 Comparative Literature August 2011 semester Description The module will examine the binary categories ‘modern’/‘traditional’ (and/or the ‘primitive’) as they appear in modernising societies. First, we look at representative literature from (what was until recently known as) Great Britain. The question is: why did the world’s homeland of the Industrial Revolution have a fascination with adventure, feats of derring-do and the primitive? We look at a young reader’s Victorian adventure novel, the long-enduring The Coral Island, and the later short stories of Rudyard Kipling (the ‘Bard’ of Empire), and examine the (contradictory?) lure of the primitive, even as British modernity is taken for granted. Second, the module will proceed to examine some major Chinese and Japanese writers and intellectuals (and an Indian poet and critics, the Nobel Prize-winning Rabindranath Tagore) and see how northeast Asian culture was broadly affected by their sense of Western modern superiority in technology, political organisation and literary (and other forms of creative) culture. Both China and Japan, the major countries in East-Southeast Asia, were never colonised, but they were intimidated by the presence of the Great Western Powers (and their colonies) in the region. Japan after the Meiji Restoration (1868) became the first modern Asian nation-state, and their attempts at intensive (and disruptive) modernisation of their culture had a profound impact on the whole region – and this desire...
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...Canterbury Tales AUTHOR · Geoffrey Chaucer TYPE OF WORK · Poetry (two tales are in prose: the Tale of Melibee and the Parson’s Tale) GENRES · Narrative collection of poems; character portraits; parody; estates satire; romance; fabliau LANGUAGE · Middle English TIME AND PLACE WRITTEN · Around 1386–1395, England DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION · Sometime in the early fifteenth century PUBLISHER · Originally circulated in hand-copied manuscripts NARRATOR · The primary narrator is an anonymous, naïve member of the pilgrimage, who is not described. The other pilgrims narrate most of the tales. POINT OF VIEW · In the General Prologue, the narrator speaks in the first person, describing each of the pilgrims as they appeared to him. Though narrated by different pilgrims, each of the tales is told from an omniscient third-person point of view, providing the reader with the thoughts as well as actions of the characters. TONE · The Canterbury Tales incorporates an impressive range of attitudes toward life and literature. The tales are by turns satirical, elevated, pious, earthy, bawdy, and comical. The reader should not accept the naïve narrator’s point of view as Chaucer’s. TENSE · Past SETTING (TIME) · The late fourteenth century, after 1381 SETTING (PLACE) · The Tabard Inn; the road to Canterbury PROTAGONISTS · Each individual tale has protagonists, but Chaucer’s plan is to make none of his storytellers superior to others; it is an equal company. In the Knight’s Tale, the protagonists...
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...#1 History Founded in 2009 the company was launched in San Francisco, providing cars for hire. Initially, they had marketed themselves as a ride sharing company to make travelling around San Francisco streets easier. It was created by entrepreneurs Travis Kalanick and Garett Camp. In a span of a few years, their Uber smartphone application revolutionized travelling around cities for millions of people around the world (Telegraph). The idea came to light when Kalanick and Camp could not hail a cab on a snowy night in Paris in 2008. They decided to solve the problem by creating an application that would be as simple as pushing a button and getting a car (Vanity Fair). Service The mobile application which is compatible on Android, iOS and Windows Phone enables riders to connect with drivers using their phones GPS capabilities. Thus, allowing both parties to know their locations and eliminating the question of when the ride will actually arrive. Payments are made through the mobile application via credit card – all in the background and completely cashless. Uber operates in 45 countries and cities from Abu Dhabi to Zurich. Furthermore, Uber offers this particular service at different levels:- UberX - which runs daily with economical cars that can seat up to four passengers and costs relatively lower than a taxi UberXL - which runs daily as well with economical cars however, it can seat up to 7 passengers. Thus, resulting in a cost that almost matches what a taxi would...
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