How is society portrayed in both the kite runner and 1984?

How is society portrayed in both the kite runner and 1984? Firstly I'll introduce the two novels as I know that some of you haven't read both of them, 1984 was written in 1948 so it is meant to be a dystopian future, a dystopia being the opposite of a utopia. It focuses on the life of Winston who is trying to rebel against the totalitarian society he lives in. He thinks that there must be a better way to live as he thinks for himself, unlike most of the party. The Kite runner is about Amir and his life journey as he tries to right the wrongs of his past, but it also about Afghanistan and its culture and some of its history, this gives us, the western world a great insight into a country that we would normally immediately think of badly. What is a society? Well there are several definitions of a society, one definition that I found is "mankind considered as a whole", whilst another definition was "the rich, privileged and fashionable social class" I think that a society is a mix of these things, it's the world we live in and the ideas and culture we have as a country. The kite runner and 1984 are both about society, it is a pivotal theme in the books, helping to set the scene for us and give us an inside view on an alien world as it were. Well in 1984 you could say that the society is defined as my second definition, the fashionable elite, these being the party and big

  • Word count: 1666
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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binh giai doan trich cua so

Bình giai doan trích Cua sô cua Pham Thi Hoài Bài làm: Pham Thi Hoài là mot trong nhung cây bút rât thành công cua nên van hoc hien dai. Bà thuong viêt vê thê gioi noi tâm thâm kín cua con nguoi. Thiên su (1990) là tác phâm cung khai thác dê tài này. Ðoan trích ngan Cua sô nói vê nhung suy tu, tình cam cua mot cô gái dôi voi thê gioi bên ngoài can phong mình qua ô cua sô. Nó cung nói lên su không hoa dông và nôi cô don mà nguoi con gái này dang phai chiu. Nhiêu ý tuong trong truyen rât truu tuong, nhung bang nhiêu tu ngu goi hình và lôi diên ta sac sao, nhung suy nghi dó dã hien lên mot cách rõ ràng. Có thê nói cô gái trong doan trích là mot nguoi la doi. Cô còn tre, nhung lai dành hâu hêt thoi gian ranh giam mình trong can phòng chat hep, chi có muoi sáu mét vuông cua mình. Cô tu nhan mình là mot nguoi nhàm chán. Cô ghét lãng man và cung không có trí tò mò. Nêu là mot nguoi con gái khác trac tuôi cô mà phai sông nhu thê này thì chac se không chiu duoc. Còn dôi voi cô thì dây là viec rât bình thuong. Có le cung dã có thoi cô có nhung cam giác nhu nhung nguoi khác nhung chac vì cô dã quá quen voi cuoc sông này nên cô dã không còn thây nó khác thuong. Cô có thê tìm thây su thích thú o nhung thu rât tâm thuong. Ô cua sô là

  • Word count: 811
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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Outsider Story

My name is Pablo i come from Mexico and my dad Works on some Multinational company so each 3 years i need to move to another country. This time i am moving to Brazil because my father got promoted again. Its the worst thing that can happen to you in your life,You get adapted to some kind of place and when you just feel comfortable in the place you are, you move again to another place, its horrible! I only know how to speak Spanish and English but not Portuguese, it is going to be really hard for me to adapt in Brasilia. I have gone to Canada, Chile, panama and Mexico and with only 11 years old. When i got to Brasilia I thought it was a tough modern city, that had all the last technology in the world it had big buildings about 2 times the biggest in Cancun. The people there were really nice well that was what i was thinking because i couldn't understand what they were saying to me but i supposed they were nice to me. When i got to my first day of school it was awful, i was wearing a uniform from another school and my dad had bought it from the school that is the main rival in soccer so obviously i got bothered by almost everyone, until one of my classmates explained me why they were bothering me. The next day was much better well almost nobody bothered me because of the uniform they only welcomed me to the class and they all promised that they where going to bring a

  • Word count: 603
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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Passage of Time in HOS and OHYS

PASSAGE OF TIME AND WINDS OF CHANGE Charles Darwin once said, 'It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.' This quotation fits in perfectly, as only in one line, it describes the cause that led to the downfall of the Buendias and the Truebas in the novels 'One hundred Years of Solitude' and 'The House of the Spirits' respectively. In both the novels, the winds of change blow throughout passages of time. However, since the characters fail to accept this change in the best spirit, time for them moves in a circle, as history repeats itself-again and again. One of the main themes in both these novels of magic realism is the role that fate plays in the progression of events and during the lifetimes of both the Buendias and the Truebas. And it is precisely this fate that interweaves the concepts of the passage of time and the winds of change in both the works. Although there are lots of opportunities for the characters in the novels to change and grow, these characters always show a strong resistance against this change, against science and technology and thus, they are all entangled in a web of relationships that remain severed and time that moves very slowly indeed. The march of progress is most often deemed as positive and inevitable. However, in these two novels, change and progress are depicted as

  • Word count: 1115
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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An imaginary life

An Imaginary Life - Essay Exam essay question: David Malouf's brilliant novel "an imaginary life" has been highly praised and studied widely. Analyse the reasons for this success and popularity. This novel demonstrates an intellectually stimulating and unique way of asking important questions regarding our existence and our relationship with the rest of creation. 'An imaginary life' raises many queries about universal valves, what it is to be human, what is language and why it is so powerful, what is death and the nature of reality. However, not only does this opulent novel ask these eternal enigmas, it also offers possible answers. Thus, these suggested answers are rendered so plausible because of Malouf's Midas touch with the five literary elements: historically authentic plot; believable and sympathetic characteristics; naturalistic but symbolic setting; universal themes; final and foremost it's refulgent style! Therefore, the novel's style is richly poetic, possibly due to the fact that Ovid himself is a poet. His story is told through the use of an elongated letter, an uninterrupted journal entry, where the readers are often addressed. The novel is written in first person but he constantly makes assumptions and that gives him a slightly omniscient role. This role is reinforced through his prophetic predictions, when he states that this letter will be "found and

  • Word count: 1670
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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Comparing the ending of Esquivels Like Water for Chocolate to Camus The Outsider

World Lit 1 Comparing the ending of Esquivel's Like Water for Chocolate to Camus' The Outsider In both Like Water for Chocolate and The Outsider, the main characters experience a blissful realization at the end of the book while facing imminent death. With the exception of the last few pages of each book, the two main characters, Tita and Meursault are largely static in their development; their interactions with people do not change, nor do their attitudes throughout the novel. In Tita's case, the years of abuse from her family (mostly mother,) physical and mental, coupled with the constant sense of oppression she felt, lead her to become so emotional that she had an often-destructive impact on the world around her. However in Meursault's case, he is passive his entire life to the point of absurdity. The final pages of Like Water for Chocolate and The Outsider provide both main characters with similar realizations, although through very different life circumstances, while facing death. Although the deaths of Tita and Meursault are very different in context, their revelations share the common theme of rebirth. Both characters experience what they had been pursuing throughout the course of the novel only at the end while accepting imminent death. When Tita dies, she finds a "figure of Pedro waiting for her" as she had been searching for love her entire life. And upon

  • Word count: 964
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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Streetcar Named Desire

Streetcar Named Desire A motif is a reoccurring structure that helps contribute to the major themes, characterization, and dramatic intensity of a narrative. In the play, "A Streetcar Named Desire" by Tennessee Williams, the character Blanche Dubois is a fragile and sensitive woman. She tries to avoid reality, preferring to live in her own little world. Throughout the play, light and Blanche's age are two important motifs that contribute to a major theme, reality versus illusion. Blanche avoids being seen in direct, bright light. She also constantly lies about her age. In the play, "A Streetcar named Desire," it is evident that Blanche refuses to be seen in the light and lies about her age in order to prevent anyone from seeing the reality of her fading beauty. In the play, light symbolizes the reality of Blanche's past. She has lost many things in her life - her husband, her dignity, and her family's plantation, Belle Reve. There are many times during the play where light reoccurs. First, Blanche covers a naked light bulb in the Kowalski's apartment with a Chinese paper lantern, "I can't stand a naked light bulb, any more than I can a rude remark or a vulgar action" (Page 55). Secondly, Blanche refuses to go out with Mitch during the daytime or in well-lit locations. In Scene 9, Mitch realizes Blanche's avoidance of light and confronts her with the stories

  • Word count: 784
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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Comparing and Contrasting Nadine Gordimer's Narrative Situations

Comparing and Contrasting Nadine Gordimer's Narrative Situations "Thought is not merely expressed in words; it comes into existence through them" (Vygotsky, 1896-1934). Words so completely surround humans that we rarely are fully aware of the extent to which they are used. Language is used to describe, express, and speculate. It is also, however, used to persuade and manipulate. Authors know this, and because they cannot play with their audience's mind using speech, they use writing, and, more specifically, narrative situation. A good example of this is short story writer Nadine Gordimer who includes bizarrely alternating combinations of narration, perspective, and narrative level in nearly every one of her stories. Out of these, there are two that have been shaped by narrative situation in such an intellectually frightening manner that they would be a meaningless mass of words without it: "Some Are Born to Sweet Delight" and "A Journey". "Some Are Born to Sweet Delight" is a haunting tale about an innocent small-town girl who falls into a relationship with an ominously mysterious foreigner, and gets killed when he, without her knowledge, uses her to bomb the plane she boards. Less horrifying but just as captivating, "A Journey" focuses on the different members of a family who have undergone character changes in order to adjust to their social surroundings. Narrative

  • Word count: 3789
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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Cell phone usage has grown greatly over the past several years and has become an American way of life. The American, by nature, is optimistic.

Rachel Queen History 108-01 September 9, 2007 Cell phone usage has grown greatly over the past several years and has become an American way of life. "The American, by nature, is optimistic. He is experimental, an inventor and a builder who builds best when called upon to build greatly." John F. Kennedy. In reference to this quote cell phones have emerged into more than just talking to a person on the other end of the line. Today American's are using cell phones for text messaging and business SMS text messaging. In 1986 about 1 million Americans owned cellular devices; by 1994 16 million Americans were owners of cell phones. Cell phones began to emerge during this period mainly as devices that were meant for talking to a person on the other line. Today more people have cell phones rather than land lines. There are also more than one billion cell phone users worldwide. Americans also spend around seven hours a month talking on their cell phones. The cell phone frenzy has not only affected adults but also teenagers. Currently over 60 million teenagers are carrying cell phones with them. Eventually, Americans became experimental like Kennedy has stated. Various features were added to the cell phone such as text messaging, speed dial, and business SMS text messaging. During the first six months of 2005 there were approximately 32.5 billion text messages sent, which is up

  • Word count: 575
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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Chronicle of a Death Foretold

,373 words Tessa Browne 29/04/10 English A1 HL The murder scene in Chronicle of a Death Foretold is a very significant scene. In this scene, the Vicario brothers kill Santiago Nassar for allegedly taking Angela's virginity. Though the reader knows from the beginning that Santiago dies, they do not know how he dies. In this ending scene, it revealed to the reader exactly how he dies in great detail. This short extract not only provides the climax of the novel, but also the anti-climax. This reflects how the murder of Santiago did not take very long in the story. Gabriel Garcia Marquez's word choice in Chronicle of a Death Foretold enhances the effect of this scene on the reader as it heightens the imagination. Marquez also builds up the tension in this scene very effectively. He makes use of bathos in this last scene, which further enhances the effect on the reader. The murder scene answers all the questions the reader has had from the beginning of the novel. It is for this reason that the murder scene is so imperative. Marquez makes use of bathos in the murder/ending scene of his novel. Early on in the passage, the Vicario twins claim they were 'scared when [they] saw him face on' (p. 119). Because the reader views Santiago as the

  • Word count: 1415
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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