Being Adult

BEING ADULT I'm staring at my reflection in the mirror seeing that I haven't been paying attention to my appearence lately. I think I should stop working that hard and have a vacation. Actually my tired looking face and some white hair ,which have started to appear among my untidy Brown hair, tell me to do so. I wear my jacket and head to the bus station but then I see the old Ortaköy Mosque and the dark blue sea next to it. I can't take my eyes off the beautiful Bosphourus view, which looks more beautiful in this April morning. The sea calls me and I can not stay indifferent anymore. I decide to start my vacation today and enjoy the marvelous sea view. I go and sit on a bank, next to the mosque just near the shore, not thinking about thw waves which might soak me. I watch the sea and listen to the song which the waves and the seagulls sing together until hearing those two boys talking; - I can't believe that the school didn't let us use the computers. - Tugcan, you innocent kid. What were you expecting? This is school, man. It is supposed to be boring. - Yes, you are completely right but they could have let us use them only in the lunch brake, so we wouldn't have to "escape" to finish our song. - Teachers and ,especially, the headmaster think those computers are souvenirs. Tugcan's voice was thinner than the other boy's who continued talking; - Another thing you

  • Word count: 1126
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Consider the Way the Writer Presents the Character of Hatsue in “Snow Falling on Cedars”

Consider the Way the Writer Presents the Character of Hatsue in "Snow Falling on Cedars" Hatsue is one of the main characters in this novel and many chapters are dedicated solely to her and her past, though within the first few chapters the reader is purposely only told certain details which can only amount to a certain judgement of character. In chapter one we are first introduced to Hatsue and even though it is a very small glimpse at Hatsue, it does describe a lot about her character. It could be said that this first introduction could be a summary of her character as a whole, but at the beginning of the book, which is an interesting device by Guterson. "Go away, repeated Hatsue Miyamoto. Then she turned her head away from his." This is a very wilful and bitter attitude and we later learn that it is not just because her husband is on trial. This helps the reader understand her perspective and frame of mind as the novel proceeds. As a character Hatsue is torn between two sets of social perspectives. As we later learn she drawn towards Ishmael because he represents one set of values. It could be likened to the fabled "American Dream" which is prominent in many novels. The American Dream signifies the freedom of choice without prejudice and that everyone has their individuality. On the other side of the divide is the traditional Japanese way of life. Hatsue's

  • Word count: 840
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone - review.

HARRY POTTER AND THE SORCERER'S STONE Book Review Many of the beloved heroes and heroines of children's literature -- from Cinderella and Snow White to Oliver Twist and the Little Princess to Matilda, Maniac Magee and the great Gilly Hopkins -- begin their lives being raised by monstrously wicked, clueless adults, too stupid to see what we the readers know practically from page 1: This is a terrific person we'd love to have for a best friend. And so it is with Harry Potter, the star of ''Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone,'' by J. K. Rowling, a wonderful first novel from England that won major literary awards and has been at the top of the adult best-seller lists there, and is having the same kind of success here too. Poor Harry Potter is orphaned as a baby and is sent to live with his odious aunt and uncle, Petunia and Vernon Dursley, and their fat son, Dudley. While Fat Dudley Dursley has two bedrooms (one just for his surplus toys, like the television set he put his foot through when his favorite show was canceled), Harry is forced to sleep in a crawl space under the stairs, has never had a birthday party in his 11 years and must wear his cousin's way baggy hand-me-down clothes. But Harry is destined for greatness, as we know from the lightning-shaped scar on his forehead, and one day he mysteriously receives a notice in the mail announcing that he has been chosen

  • Word count: 803
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Children's books

When people talked about the children's books or readings, they always have certain stereotype images, such as big fonts with colorful pictures, fairy tales with all imaginations, or these books are not suitable for adults to read. People also think that all of children's stories have happy endings, and create a positive image on everything. But actually there was no such thing called "children's books "in the past. From my parent's generation or even my grandparents' era, they don't have too many choices on the children's literatures. All they had are some fairy tales or old stories which orally passed by generations through generations. There is no one confoundedly to write for children. Until the middle of the 20th century, people started to concentrate and focus to write the books for children. That's why we can have so many choices and so many varieties of books for the children. Some authors even categorized themselves as the "children's book writers" to separate with other writers. For the younger readers, such as kids are not even go to preschool. They don't know many words or any alphabets at all. Their readings must be accomplished with older adults. Reading is a kind of game or activity to these kids. They enjoy the time to spend with their parents. For them, their readings must attract their attention with multicolored images and even audio sounds. Winners never

  • Word count: 1543
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Gail Jones, Sixty Lights, set in Australia, India and England in the 19th Century, follows the multi-faceted life of the capricious Lucy Strange as she develops her modernistic view of light and the world,

Kane Solly ‘Memory is deceptive because it is coloured by today's events’- Albert Einstein Literature is a constantly contested and revised term coined to separate the literary world into works of superior or lasting artistic merit and the ‘other’. This elitist nature used by literary ‘scholars’ created the foundation for all the teachings and ideals of the social, cultural and political thoughts of their times. The worth of literature and the means of classification have stemmed from a culmination of varying critique, seen by the changes in phase of perspective from Modernism; valuing the ‘grand narratives of truth’; to New Criticism; the objective evaluation of the ‘text’; and Post-modernism; the movement away from the hierarchy of literature. Thematics, messages, tropes, contexts and the social, cultural and political hierarchy of the time all contribute to the literary ‘worth’ of a text. This agglomeration of features develops texts consisting of the utmost textual integrity; the flow and connection between all the facets of texts. Gail Jones, ‘Sixty Lights’, set in Australia, India and England in the 19th Century, follows the multi-faceted life of the capricious and palimpsest Lucy Strange as she develops and uncovers her modernistic view of light and the world, through the tragedies that befall her and the opportunities that arise. Jones

  • Word count: 3016
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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'Burmese Days' by George Orwell

Burmese Days by Gorge Orwell Based on Orwell’s experiences as a policeman in Burma, George Orwell's first novel presents a devastating picture of British colonial rule. It describes corruption and imperial bigotry in a society where, 'after all, natives were natives - interesting, no doubt, but finally ... an inferior people'. When Flory, a white timber merchant, befriends Indian Dr Veraswami, he defies this orthodoxy. The doctor is in danger: U Po Kyin, a corrupt magistrate, is plotting his downfall. The only thing that can save him is membership of the all-white Club, and Flory can help. Flory's life is changed further by the arrival of beautiful Elizabeth Lackersteen from Paris, who offers an escape from loneliness and the 'lie' of colonial life. For Said, controversy about the postcolonial discourse begins with the term of re-presentation which gives the Westerners upper-hand as a “genuine creator, whose life-giving power represents, animates, constitutes, the otherwise silent and dangerous space beyond familiar boundaries” .This representation is so powerful which brought the concept of the Orient, first of all in Western academics, “then Western consciousness, and later Western empire.” The effect of this representation is the creation of binary opposition of the self and other which posits the former in the privileged position that permits himself to

  • Word count: 3040
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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The prose style by the author of The Stranger, Albert Camus, is reflected in the description of the main character, Meursault

Guillermo Ortiz FORL 100W Essay #2 The creation of a criminal The prose style by the author of The Stranger, Albert Camus, is reflected in the description of the main character, Meurasault. Throughout the book, Meursault does not show any emotions. The sentences in this chapter are very concise and consist of simple action verbs. The past tense is primarily used and there are some lines of dialogue in the book. This makes the reader to pay a closer attention to this dialogue. An example of this dialogue is when the character Meursault makes the first statement in quotes. “It’s not my fault.” (Camus 3). Meursault makes this remark in response to the death of his moth. He is upset that the death makes him miss work and it is not his fault at all. This sentence also shows the lack of emotion Meursault has in response to his mother’s death. The first part of the book is about the day of Meursault’s mother’s funeral. “Maman died today. Or yesterday maybe, I don’t know. I got a telegram from the home. ‘Mother deceased. Funeral tomorrow. Faithfully yours.”’ That doesn’t mean anything. Maybe it was yesterday”(Camus 3). Meursault received bad news that his mother had died, however, his reaction to the news makes it sound like it does not matter much to him. Later on in the chapter Meursault makes the readers furious with his indifference as a son. Not

  • Word count: 914
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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"A Good Man Is Hard To Find" by Flannery OConnor. A Literary Analysis

ENC 1102 - 151961 9 March 2012 A Good Man Is Hard To Find A Literary Analysis One of O'Connor's most widely read stories "A Good Man is Hard to Find" written in 1953, without a doubt is also her most shocking. Yet is it through the story's disturbing ending that O'Connor raises fundamental questions about good and evil, morality and immorality, faith and doubt, and the particularly Southern "binaries" of black and white and Southern history and progress (Link 126). Ever since the beginning of time, mankind has been searching for a higher power that will guide them through life, and show them the "true way". Christianity is the largest religion in Western Society, and it has functioned as a guiding rule, helping Christians for centuries to decide what is right or wrong (Bethea 246). In Flannery O'Connor's short story "A Good Man Is Hard To Find" this theme is brought up in a rather controversial way: how should you really act as a righteous Christian, and is everything as black or white as it first may seem? According to Bryant, this is being pushed to the extreme in O'Connor's work, where she makes it fully clear that everybody can change and eventually reach salvation, even though some people must encounter the most extreme situations, in this case death, to reach enlightenment. In the very beginning of the story, we get to see one of the grandmother's basic traits;

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  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Investigate the theme of power, as presented in The Handmaid’s Tale.

Investigate the theme of power, as presented in The Handmaid's Tale. Power. What do we think of when we talk about power? Perhaps we think of the power of a country armed to the teeth with weapons of mass destruction. Perhaps we think of a millionaire, able to buy his way through anything thanks to the power of money. We may even think that we have some form of power ourselves, such as the power of having lent someone money or of having done someone a favour. Nevertheless, while we can easily think of examples of powerful people, we may have great difficulty thinking of a case where someone has absolutely no power. Could it be, however, that Offred is one of these isolated cases? To understand Offred thoughts properly, it is first necessary to understand the situation she is in. As a Handmaid in the Republic of Gilead, her sole function is to bear her Commander children. She is regarded by the state as a thing, not a person - hence her name Of-Fred (Fred is the name of her Commander). The Commander and his Wife are both superior to Offred in Gilead's hierarchy. Below her come all the other members of society. Of course, this does not automatically mean that she has power over all the lower classes. They are responsible to the Commander and his Wife only. Offred herself, of course, is responsible to the Commander, although the Wife also has the power to get rid

  • Word count: 903
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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In J.K Rowling's Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, this world of torture and adventure is present.

One of the issues described by parents and other adults in most articles are centered on children's literature and the censorship debate. This is indicated clearly by views on children developing morals and values and the "tension between kid culture and adult marketing." There is two extreme point of views where by some parents portray children's literature as evil when it presents issues many parents don't want to know of or deal with. Tales of a young boy attending "Hogwarts School of witchcraft and wizardry travels back and forth between two worlds, the mystical world of magic and the mundane world of muggles." (Bewitched by Harry Potter, pg. 1) In J.K Rowling's Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, this world of torture and adventure is present. Some view Harry Potter as a combination of detective work of Harry Boys and Nancy Drew, a play world of Charles Dickens and Dr. Seuss. Another words J.K Rowling is viewed as an excellent imaginative author since Lewis Carroll in Alice in Wonderland. Potter books transcend fantasy. Others would strongly disagree, "some claim the Potter books lure children into witchcraft." (In defense of Harry Potter, pg. 2) Grownups are buying books to read to children, but they are also reading the books themselves, which in return leads to "the infantilization of adult culture, the loss of a sense of what a classic really is." (Besotted

  • Word count: 1105
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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