I Heard the Owl Call My Name - summary.

I Heard the Owl Call My Name Justin Anderson Margaret Craven Rel. 110 Dell Publishing, New York, 1973 Oct. 27, 2003 I Heard the Owl Call My Name, is a book which describes the beliefs and lifestyle of a Pacific Northwest Indian tribe, Kingcome. The people of the Kingcome tribe have lived for centuries practicing the native traditions that have supported their longstanding existence. They live off of the land and river that their village sits on; Mother Nature meets their daily needs and nothing is wasted or taken for granted. However, the modern world is creeping into the tribe's lifestyle and slowly imposing changes which some of the elders are not pleased with. The main story line of the book revolves around a young vicar, Mark Brian, who is sent to the tribe to lead them spiritually through Christianity, which had been introduced to the tribe in years past. While living in the village, slowly learning about the people and gaining their trust Mark learns valuable lessons about life, death and the culture that he has been adopted into. By the end of the book Mark has been accepted by the tribe and in return has accepted the tribe into his life and understands their views regarding the changing world that is encroaching upon their history. While Mark Brian comes to Kingcome with the teachings and beliefs of Christianity, the tribe

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  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Attitudes to London in William Blakes 'London' and William Wordsworths 'Upon Westminster Bridge'.

Jessica Reynolds 10D Compare and Contrast the Poets Attitudes to London in William Blakes 'London' and William Wordsworths 'Upon Westminster Bridge'. William Blake was born in London in 1957 where he spent most of his life until his death in 1827. Blake belonged to the romantic poets and he believed in writing about the natural world as he saw it. He was a visionary poet, as he seemed to interpret what he saw around him and look at what it would lead to in the future. Everything that Blake wrote had his intense belief in God surrounding it. As a child he claimed that God, "Put his head to the window" and that he saw "a tree filled with angels". From a young age Blake was interested in poetry. At the age of fourteen he was an apprentice to an engraver so he learnt to engrave and illustrate his own work. Blake was a communist and many people thought he was mad as he criticised the church and the things that it stood by and let happen, like child labour. Blake's two most famous pieces of work were written in 1789 and 1794. These were titled 'songs of innocents' and 'Songs of experience'. 'Songs of innocents' is about joy and happiness and how Blake visions life should be lived. 'Songs of experience' is a much grimmer and bleaker look on life. It is about corruption and the social problems in today's world. It asks questions about God, brutal reality and how we equate God

  • Word count: 2717
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Nature itself is first and foremost a category of the human imagination, therefore best treated as a part of culture.' Discuss? This assignment is effectively based on the systematic branch of geography,

Essay Title: 'Nature itself is first and foremost a category of the human imagination, therefore best treated as a part of culture.' Discuss? Total Word Count: 1655 words 'Nature itself is first and foremost a category of the human imagination, therefore best treated as a part of culture.' Discuss? This assignment is effectively based on the systematic branch of geography, otherwise known to most as cultural geography. The earliest days of the increasingly popular topic of cultural geography can be fundamentally traced to the seminal work of Carl Sauer, and as a result of this numerous people worldwide believe that Sauer laid the foundations with which people built on, therefore we find ourselves in the situation we are today. In R.J. Johnson's dictionary of human geography a highly distinguished definition of cultural geography is outlined. It states; "Cultural geography deals with mans culturally determined activities and especially with the differential impact of cultural groups on the exploitation, form and personality of landscape." (Johnson 1981) From around the beginning of the nineteenth century Anthropology as a subject has grown significantly and became more and more complex as time has passed. Anthropology is of course the study of humankind, of ancient and modern people and their ways of living, and furthermore it is a subject which helps draw

  • Word count: 1756
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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The novel "As for me and my house" by Sinclair Ross.

In the novel "As for me and my house" by Sinclair Ross the nature, wilderness and weather are very present. Sinclair Ross gives more life to his characters by using the climate and weather. He emphasizes the way they feel on their inside and their different attitudes toward their lives. The climate and weather are always present whispering to the reader what the character's attitudes really are, the way they are really feeling. Climate and weather are used by Sinclair Ross to represent the dark and bad side of our society. The different characters in the novel, all have different attitudes towards nature and wilderness. Phillip Bentley, his wife, Paul, El Greco and Judith West all have a different perception of nature and wilderness and this perception really shows how they are in the inside. Those various attitudes really describe what they want and what their fundamentals characteristics are. Always in the house and sometimes roaming around in the garden. El Greco is the dog of the family. But he never goes too far towards the prairie. His masters would never let him: "He was a wolfhound; we should have let him live like one"(1) For El-Greco his life was comparable to a life in a prison with two guards always watching him and never letting him go far or escape. El-Greco is a wild animal. His original habitat is the wilderness. When he goes with Mrs. Bentley to see the moon

  • Word count: 1559
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Leading Australian Makes Colourful difference

Leading Australian Makes Colourful difference Oodgeroo, whose English name is Kath Walker, was born in 1920, grew up on North Stradbroke Island, once called Minjeriibah; she belonged to the Noonuccal Tribe. She grew up at a place called One Mile; she spent her time surrounded by sea and bushland she used to just wonder around for hours exploring Nature which inspired her poetry. Oodgeroo worked as a domestic servant in Brisbane, then when the war came joined the army as a member of the Australian Women's Army Service she was trained as a telephonist and was eventually promoted to corporal, given the responsibility of training new recruits. That ended when she was plagued with ear aches. Kath's Poetry started to become popular post war, she has been quoted saying "You could say a poet is born but you're not born a poet. You have to work on it I felt poetry would be the breakthrough for the Aboriginal people because they were storytellers and song-makers, and I thought poetry would appeal to them more than anything else. It was more of a book of their voices that I was trying to bring out, and I think I succeeded in doing this'." In Oodgeroo's Poems she talks of her aboriginal heritage a lot, also about reconciliation and a hope for unity between whites and blacks. In the poem No more Boomerang Is a simple poem by Oodgeroo comparing aboriginal culture to Australian White

  • Word count: 547
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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How does the writer reveal her attitude to the way in which people treat nature in the poem "The Fish are all sick"?

How does the writer reveal her attitude to the way in which people treat nature in the poem "The Fish are all sick"? In the poem "The fish are all sick", the title of the poem reveals that the subject would be something sad to do with the fish by adding in the word "sick". It is in present tense, which can communicate directly to the reader, suggesting her strong attitude to the way in which people treat nature. The poet communicate directly also introduces the writer's strong attitude that this is a serious problem that we are facing now. The problem is tremendous as all fish are suffered as a result of it. She uses figurative language to portray the image of human beings treating the nature with no respect. The writer begins the poem without any uncertainty, which reflects that the subject of the poem is going to be serious, true and very important, this is presented in this line, 'The fish are all sick.' "The fish are all sick, the great whales dead," this dramatize the sheer scale of the problem wanting to present that even the biggest animal on earth is at stake. Also since the earth is mainly water, a lot of animals would be living in the oceans. That would mean there are a lot of fish and sea creatures. The poet using "The fish are all sick" emphasizes the enormity of the pollution and shows her attitudes towards how the people treat nature. The start of the poem

  • Word count: 815
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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To what extent is Graham Swift’s Shuttlecock a study of power ?

LITERATURE ESSAY To what extent is Graham Swift's Shuttlecock a study of power ? If a reader considers the main plot of Shuttlecock from a very simple point of view, Prentis is an unhappy man untill he gets his boss's job. Therefore power must be an important theme of the novel. However, after Prentis's sudden change, his wife and his son appear not to be " satisfied by the power theory ". The great quality of Shuttlecock is the incredible suttlety used to portray human nature and the novel can not be resumed to a simple study of power. Without a doubt, power is an important theme. From his childhood, Prentis desires to control his surounding and this is ovious in the hamster episode. His " mixed feelings of love and pity " explode into an urge to have absolute power over Sammy when the poor animal tries to escape. He needs to master nature and even his own nature. Indeed, he tries to hide his admiration and respect for his father. He also has an unatural sex-life because of its pointless, artificial sophistication. Marian bends to her husband's will in this " preposterous, obsessive, pathetic affair " and is becoming a stranger to him. Physically controlling a living being is a recurrent obsession all through the novel. The symbol of vulnerability is nakedness. Marian in her bath reminds Prentis of the time when he used to bathe his two boys. He remembers how defensless

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  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Which is the most impressive and moving of John Clare's asylum poems?

[PBN1] Which is the most impressive and moving of John Clare's asylum poems? John Clare's life spanned one of the great ages of English poetry but, until about fifty years ago, few would have thought of putting his name with those of Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, Keats, Browning and Tennyson. Born in 1793, the son of humble and virtually illiterate parents, Clare grew up in the Northamptonshire village of Helpston and made the surrounding countryside his world. His education did not extend much beyond basic reading and writing, and he had to start work herding animals at the age of seven, however, this child of the "unwearying eye" had a thirst for knowledge and become a model example of the self taught man. In his early teens he discovered The Seasons, by poet James Thomson and began writing poems himself. His first love, Mary Joyce was the daughter of a wealthy farmer; their separation caused Clare great pain, and no doubt contributed to the sense of loss which pervades much of his poetry. In 1820, he married Martha Turner and from the moment his first publication appeared, 'Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery' it was clear that England had a new and very original poet. He was described as 'John Clare, a Northampton Peasant' on the title page, and the current fashion for 'rural poetry' brought him some celebrity in London. He formed friendships with Charles

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  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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At the Mountains of Madness by H.P Lovecraft - review.

AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS (Short history of Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy) H.P LOVECRAFT Curious to unearth the mysteries of Antarctica, a group from Arkham University forms a team. This expeditions goal is to find new species or old ones (already known) to classify them and bring them home. Sadly, when half the team sets off to explore a mountain region they find and come in contact with a new form of life. Pleased the second team calls the first to join them. When the first team arrives, before them is an orgy of mass murder and destruction. They soon discover an unnatural nature among the new frozen fossils. The main character (whose name remains unknown in the story) was from the geology department at Arkham University and represented that field on the expedition to Antarctica. He is also the narrator telling us what happened during his trip to the icecaps. Lake is a member of the biology department at Arkham University; Lake joined the expedition yet was soon after killed having made a vital discovery in an Antarctic cave, and finally Artwood who is a member of the physics department and also a meteorologist. On the other hand, The Old Ones are Aliens who arrived on earth long before primitive protozoa, who were then frozen in the Antarctic icecaps as the earth began to change. The settings of the story revolved around the Antarctic region, four planes, a

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  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Therefore it is necessary for me to explore the different techniques and meanings behind each poem. 'A London Fete' which was written in 1890 by Coventry Patmore

Pamela Austin Pre- Twentieth century poetry. Introduction: For this piece of coursework, I will be comparing two pre- twentieth century poems, both of which composed by familiar poets. The poems were written at different time periods; therefore it is necessary for me to explore the different techniques and meanings behind each poem. 'A London Fete' which was written in 1890 by Coventry Patmore, postdates the events at a public execution. In this poem, Patmore describes an execution and the effects it has on those watching. He chooses to focus on the surroundings and atmosphere rather than the pain felt by the condemned. The other poem, which I will be comparing, is a romantic sonnet written by William Wordsworth, 'Composed Upon Westminster Bridge.' He reflects upon the inspiration of urban London and the cultural symbols as he experiences it from Westminster Bridge. It's characteristic of his love for solitude that it is set in the early morning. Throughout the poem he is telling the reader that there is no scene better in the world than this one upon Westminster Bridge. The poem definitely captures the spirit of romanticism and reflects the ideology of William Wordsworth. The public at the execution in Patmores' poem appear to believe that justice has been served. "To windows, where, in freedom sweet, others enjoy the wicked treat." If they disagreed with the

  • Word count: 2421
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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