Paul's Mother essay topics
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Paul's Relationship With Clara
1,829 wordsSONS AND LOVERS Relationships have, and always will contain many different levels. These levels can produce somewhat of a state of confusion in ones life, and have many different impacts. But when a change and a transformation takes place, one can reach a point of clarity and a new found direction. In the comparison of two novels, we see several relationships portrayed along these lines, and how the two main characters transform to find what is most sacred to them. Paul Morel is the main charact...
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Luck For His Mother
932 wordsControversy between Money and Loves shown in "The Rocking-Horse Winner" The Rocking-Horse Winner is couched in the symbols of the ancient myths. The mother is poor, unsatisfied fairy princess who yearns for happiness; Paul is the gallant knight on horse-back who rides to her rescue (Junkins 261). The mythical aspect of the story is evident in the style and symbols. In the opening lines, the first seven words have a fable-like quality reminiscent of any number of fairy princess tales, yet the wor...
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Emperor Fear Paul Atreides
1,996 wordsDune by Frank Herbert Feb. 22/97 This book all started with the family Atreides landing on plant Arrakis, commonly known as Dune. The planet Dune was the centre of the universe due to its immense amounts of spice. This spice is greatly needed for all planets as fuel and for raw materials. The family Atreides were asked by Emperor himself to go and mine the spice on the planet. Their greatest enemy the Harkonnen's, were also on Dune. These two families mining the precious spice on the same plant ...
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Paul's Mother
1,174 wordsANALYSIS OF A SHORT STORY The Rocking-Horse Winner by D. H Lawrence is a reflection of society's materialism, the search for material happiness leaving on the side the real matter of life. People are looking for happiness in the wrong place. This is the story of a family who pretends to have a life full of luxury while their income is low and their debts are high. Paul, the older son of the family, after seeing to the importance of money and luck in his mother's life, discovers that he is not as...
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Hester And Mathilde
1,471 wordsThe Necklace by Guy De Maupassant and The Rocking Horse Winner by D.H. Lawrence have two women in these stories that show no care or concern for anyone but themselves. Hester and Mathilde both had families that they truly did not love. And they were only involved with them for social reasons and to have their selfish needs provided. They finally righted the way they lived but only because they lost something or someone of importance to them. Mathilde always thought that she should be someone of ...
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Lawrence In The Novel Sons And Lovers
1,193 wordsD.H. Lawrence: Son and Lover " Bildungsroman, a form of fiction which allows the novelist to recreate through the maturing of his protagonist some of his own remembered intensity of experience" (Niv in, Alastair; pg. 34) D.H. Lawrence re-created his own life experience through the writing of Son's and Lovers, an intensely realistic novel set in a small English mining town, much akin to the town in which he was raised. The son of a miner, Lawrence grew up with a father much like the character of ...
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Technical Reason For Deborahs Affair
577 wordsThe Affair In this paper I will try to explain to you why Deborah Bronski had an affair with Christopher de Monti when she knew it was wrong. Deborah and Christopher are both characters in the book Mila 18 by Leon Uris. In Deborahs childhood there were some reasons that could have caused her to have an affair. Her childhood is outlined below with some of the things that may have caused her to have this affair. Deborah Androfski married Paul Bronski at the age of eighteen. Deborah stepped into th...
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Paul And Duval
1,572 wordsDecline of Morality The novel All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque shows that war destroys more than just the physical level; the decline of morality has taken place through various circumstances in the novel such as: then incident where Paul Baumer is forced to kill a soldier in a shell hole, when Paul lies to his mother and the mother of his dead friend Kemmerich and when Paul and Kat must beat a recruit unconscious to stop him from leaving the trench; these incidents can be ...
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Physical Pain Of War
1,077 words'One is left with the horrible feeling now that war settles nothing. That to win a war is as disastrous as to lose one. ' - Agatha Christie We as people never stop to think about war and its definition. Accroding to the dictionary, war is defined as a state of hostility, conflict, antagonism and death. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque tells the story about Paul Baumer, the narrator and protagonist of the book, a nineteen year old German soldier who fights in the front lines...
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Paul Bandages His Wounds
11,960 wordsAll Quiet on the Western Front Chapter Summary By: Jesse Cody All Quiet on the Western Front is an anti-war novel from the opening chapters. Many critics of the novel in the early days after the publication of the novel blamed Remarque for writing for shock value. They did not want to believe his novel represented the truth about World War I. In many ways, such people were like Paul's schoolmaster, Kantorek. They wanted to cling to classical, romantic notions of war. However, Remarque wrote his ...
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Annie's Dark Goddess Figure
860 wordsWhat does it take to frighten an author of best-selling horror novels In Misery, Stephen King embodies a writer's fears about himself as a writer and about the continuation of his creativity in a richly elaborated and horrific-cally psychotic woman, Annie Wilkes. In the novel, Annie represents a mother figure, a goddess, and a "constant reader". In reality, however, An-nie merely represents a creative part of King's mind. Annie Wilkes is a proud mother of two children-a historical-romance noveli...
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Jean Paul Sartre
668 wordsJean Paul Sartre was born in Paris in 1905. He was the first child of a marriage between his parents of about over a year. His father, Jean-Baptiste, had died from an infection contracted while he served in the French navy when his son was still very young. Jean Paul grew up in the home of his grandfather, Karl Schweitzer along with his mother, Anne-Marie in Paris. Other circumstances, other than the death of his father also made Sartre's childhood difficult. He was noticeably small in stature a...
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Paul's Vigorous Riding Of The Horse
1,018 wordsD. H Lawrence and "The Rocking Horse Winner": Levels of Symbolism Symbolic themes are commonplace in literary art. Whether used directly or indirectly by the author, these themes have been analyzed by several prominent critics, all having many different ideas about what lies beneath the literal wording of the story. In D. H Lawrence's "The Rocking Horse Winner", many symbolic ideas are conveyed throughout the story. Every character has unique characteristics which portray different symbolic them...