Vincent DeMaria Professor Blunt REL 310 4 May 2023 Transformative Negation: Bruce Lincoln and Nancy Jay In his analysis of ancient Greek fantasies about the ritually violent lives of others, Bruce Lincoln challenges traditional theories of sacrifice that attempt to maintain its benevolent function. Lincoln contends that such theories oversimplify and overlook the violent nature of sacrifice in ancient Greek society. According to him, these fantasies are not just mere depictions of ritual violence
How and why is a social group represented in a particular way? In his play The Importance of Being Earnest (1895, London St. James’ theater), Oscar Wilde portrays the attitudes and society of Victorian upper class through character interactions within the ‘Bunburyist’ adventures of Algernon Moncrieff and Jack Worthing. The play’s comedic elements, in addition to the portrayal of power structures, are used as an effective medium to challenge the viewer to reflect upon Wilde’s criticism on institutions
Briefly Summarize the book. The Ghost of Graylock is about two kids, Bree and Neil Cady, who go and visit with their Aunt's Claire and Anna because they are having family problems with their parents. Along the way ,they meet two kids , Wesley and Eric , who become their friends. The four of them have heard about the rumors of Graylock and decide to go and explore the abandoned asylum. They thought it was going to be a normal investigation, but it turns out to be the scariest day of their lives.
It was a warm summer's day, yet the train's window felt like ice on Oliver's cheek. The methodical rumbling of the tracks combined with the insipid rural landscape didn’t help him pass the time. He was headed south to the city of Guthrie, Oklahoma, the epitome of small towns, where Oliver spent the first 17 years of his childhood. He and his three brothers were raised in a feeble excuse of a house just around the corner of the town's local elementary school. He remembered the afternoons spent on
The Performers and the Observers London, 1947 Oliver knocked on the door for the third time. An old friend had invited him over. Oliver didn’t ask for a reason; he didn’t need one. He had known this man for decades. The door creaked open. “Oh, um, hey there, Ollie.” “Hello, Arthur.” Arthur was a mess. His beard was half shaven, clothes stained, and hair left to grow like weeds. “Yeah, um, hi. I had to wait and make sure it wasn’t some government officer, you know, that it was really you
It was a dark and dreary night. Oliver, who was 11 years of age, and his family, including cousins, aunts, and uncles, were having a prodigious dinner on the 9th of April, 1932. Oliver’s family lived very close to the urban society and they possessed a couple horses, at the stables a mile outside of their home, due to the fact that there were laws preventing families to have non-domestic animals in the city. His family has been always close, however Oliver felt disparate from his family. Although
Oliver, our Rottweiler, was such a small thing when he was born. He grew up into a 45-kilogram dog and despite his size, he didn’t have a mean bone in his body. He looked strong and fierce to outsiders but was gentle, clumsy and lovable to us. When Oliver’s partner-in-crime, Tessa, passed away, he was downcast for a long time. So, we decided to buy another dog and got Albert, a little Maltese-cross-Bichon Frise. I was very protective of Albert. As Oliver was so big, I was worried he might sit on
During this scene of the chapter, the reader is introduced to a room in which Oliver is grateful to call his own. It is in this room where one would walk in to find Oliver sitting by a window, amidst piles of books, studying to further his knowledge about the world. The author uses this room as a symbolic image to represent Oliver’s starting point on his path to an education. The room happens to be on the “ground-floor” of the novel because his journey has only just begun. The books that pile themselves
“They need a place to stay,” I said to Arthur. Alright, on one condition. If you bring me Otto’s basket we will accept you into our clan.” Rudy replied, “Piece of cake!” What an arrogant piece of trash I thought to myself. A few weeks later they came back with his basket. They knocked on the door. “Hello anyone home,” Rudy said. I came to the door. “What do you want “saumensch” ” I replied. “We’ve brought the gold,” Liesel said. I opened the door and let them in. After a while I got a call from Arthur
Washington Irving’s “Rip Van Winkle” enjoys the reputation of being one of the first great American short stories written by a pioneer of American fiction, and of capturing a transtemporal portrait of American life. Yet because of the ambivalence with which Irving treats the new nation in this work, scholarship has debated whether this story is simply “the first truly American folk tale, or a derivative vehicle used to undermine the young republic” (Wyman 220). I argue that this short story cannot
In the novel The Watsons Go to Birmingham by Christopher Paul Curtis, Kenny wonders why his brother Byron is so mean to people. Kenny has treated an abundance of different people extremely better than Byron has been. When Byron got his lips stuck Kenny tried not to hurt Byron as much as he could even though Byron would have tortured Kenny. Also, Kenny was nice enough to share his lunch with his Rufus. He even feels bad sometimes for the kid that bullies him. First, according to Kenny, on page
Aware that Oliver is innocent, the audience become wrapped up in the dramatic sequence that follows due to the fast-paced advancement of the passage. The use of long and fractured sentences generates tension that contribute to Oliver’s need to escape capture. The longest sentence from the passage is sixty words in length, making it impossible to read comfortably. Instead the complex sentence creates confusion which echoes the confusion of the mob that is racing after Oliver. They have joined this
Chapter 22- As they entered the house, Toby greeted them, while a Barney woke up to come also. Oliver was made to drink alcohol, at the amusement of the others. Around half-past one, the group crossed the bridge seen previously and they arrived at a house surrounded by a wall. Toby climbed the wall, and helped Oliver up. Oliver then realized the true purpose of the mission- housebreaking. He started to yell. Sikes drew his pistol, but Toby covered Oliver’s mouth. Sikes used a crowbar to open a shutter
Edgar Rochester American low low Vagabond, restless Traveler; takes whatever jobs are short and available Whatever the job pays poker, billiard, plays the guitar, smooth talker Silla Mauser: his best friend and only bit of family left Caleb “Cal” Mauser: Silla’s older brother, also his fiance. Dead James “Jim” “Jimmy” “Jamie” Mauser: Silla’s younger brother. Dead Bobby Kripke: Foster father, the Mauser’s adoptive father. Dead 6’3” 168 lbs. Caucasian green long, dark brown No Left side of his
The birth of Oliver can be traced back to a workhouse, in which his unknown mother gave birth to him; at first the surgeon along with the nurse questioned whether he would “live to bear a name.”(Dickens) After erupting in a cacophonous cry, the surgeon delivers him to his mother, who shortly passes away after kissing him; this incidence is the first of many that draws pity from the reader towards Oliver and this emotion was stronger with the readers in Victorian England, which placed family as the
Oliver Twist, or The Parish Boy 's Progress is Charles Dickens’ second novel and was published between 1837–1839 as a serial. The novel describes the journey of young Oliver Twist an Orphan, who starts his life in a workhouse and eventually flees to London, in the hope of a better life, where he is recruited by Fagin, an elderly Jewish criminal, who is leading a gang of juvenile pickpockets. In Oliver Twist, Dickens broaches the issue of several contemporary topics of the Victorian era, such as the
A bloody revolution is the result of wrongs done in the name of the people .In A Tale of Two Cities, Dickens vividly captures the bad conditions that lead commoners to rise for their rights. The marquis represents the evil of the aristocracy put into one character. He has a perfect mask. He represents the cruelty of the French aristocracy. He shows absolutely no regard for human life and wishes that the peasants of the world would be exterminated. He’s also the only true version of the French aristocracy
unable ability to control his anger is shown multiple times including when Nancy found Oliver and they kidnapped him, the time Sikes used Oliver to rob a house, and at the end of the novel when he murdered Nancy. At the time the novel Oliver Twist was written animal abuse
In the novel, “The Watsons Go to Birmingham” by Christopher Paul Curtis, Kenny wonders why his brother, Byron, is so mean to him and to others. When comparing the way Byron treats others and by the way Kenny treats others, it can conclude Kenny definitely treats other more kindly than Byron. Byron partakes in fighting with a lot of aggression during or after school hours. When Kenny is supposed to be watching on the sidelines until the fight is over, he does not because he dislikes fighting, or
The novel Within the novel, Oliver, a chubby seventh-grader who pretends to be dimwitted, but is an evil genius and the third-richest person in the world. __Oliver wants to win the student council president election in an attempt to crush his father, whom he despises, pride. Oliver and his henchman, Lionel Sheldrake, do everything they can to win.__ To begin with, the novel is an example of the comedy element, situational, since Oliver continually abuses money to get whatever he wants. In fact