Categories: High School Essays, 4. 12th grade, 1005 wordsSend feedback •Robert Albertini
AP English block A
2/18/04
Wuthering Heights EssayEmily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights presents significant observations of social life in England during the first half of the nineteenth century. The novel is set during the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in Europe. The revolution brought about the development of the middle class and reshaped the roles of the upper and lower classes. The author provides much social commentary about class and roles as they were developing at the time. The novel focuses heavily on the limitations imposed upon individuals based on their social status. Bronte’s novel illustrates the negative consequences of restricting a person’s actions to the expectations of their class. The author presents immense contrast between the impulsive, naturalistic character, Heathcliff, and the rest of the characters, who are more bound to social class, to portray the absurdity of the developing mechanical society.
Permalink
Categories: High School Essays, 4. 12th grade, 1205 wordsSend feedback •Robert Albertini
AP English A block
Ms. Poole
12/9/03
Battling EntropyWilliam Shakespeare’s Hamlet is a play in which the central conflict results from a disruption in social order. The Elizabethan philosophy of divinely established social order is referred to as the Great Chain of Being. It is evident that Shakespeare adhered to this prevalent philosophy of the English Renaissance, since a great number of his works revolve around the theme of social disorganization. Hamlet portrays how alterations and inversions at any level of the Great Chain of Being yields a definite formula for chaos.
Permalink
Categories: High School Essays, 4. 12th grade, 1097 wordsSend feedback •Robert Albertini
AP English A block
Ms. Poole.
11/18/03
A Microscopic Social HistoryJoy Kogawa’s Obasan tells the story of a former Japanese internee’s quest to discover herself and her voice by examining her past. The novel compiles several symbolic scenarios and images which emphasize the dramatic, consequential results of the internment. However, these symbols and metaphors go simply colorizing the simple plotline of this work of realistic fiction. Kogawa’s description of Naomi’s childhood experiences during the internment functions as a microcosmic, metaphoric exemplification of the entire Japanese community’s internment ordeal.
Permalink
Categories: High School Essays, 4. 12th grade, 962 wordsSend feedback •Robert Albertini
AP English
3/25/04How to Be Human
Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis explores the characteristics of human beings that set them apart from the rest of the animal kingdom. Kafka subscribed to the existentialist worldview, which explains his motive in analyzing the uniqueness and significance of human existence in this novel. The story’s main character undergoes a transformation into an insect and then struggles to regain his personal, human identity. Through the ordeal of the main character, Kafka shows that it is possible for one to lose their unique human qualities by ignoring personal convictions and sacrificing free will.
Permalink