The Year of the Flood Essays

  • The Year Of The Flood Summary

    1764 Words  | 8 Pages

    The novel The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood is the second novel in the MaddAddam Trilogy. The novel was published in both Canada and United States of America on September 22, 2009, and in the United Kingdom on September 7, 2009. This novel was mostly anticipated patiently for a long time by the readers due to the success of the first novel, Oryx and Crake. The novel was mentioned in various newspaper review articles looking forward as the notable fiction of 2009. The novel, in general, was

  • Blood Brothers Play Analysis

    1043 Words  | 5 Pages

    There are lots of characters in blood brothers such as Mrs Lyons, Mr Lyons, Mrs Johnston, Sammy Johnston, Edward Lyons and Linda. All of these characters play a big role in the play for example mickey and Edward are set as eight year old kids and Sammy is set as a ten year old, Linda likes to tag along and hang around with the boys, we portrayed them by using good characterisation and by projecting our voices. During the play of blood brothers We had to use Drama strategies for example we used

  • Readers Of Pilgrim At Thoreau's Analysis

    913 Words  | 4 Pages

    Yet, Dillard in her dream-like observations uses unexpected language to convert the quotidian into the cataclysmic, therefore snapping herself alert to the sector and to her very own thought approaches. It is the verbalizing process, as she herself notes within the bankruptcy of Pilgrim referred to as “Seeing”, which makes her a more aware, meticulous observer of the commonplace, an observer able to appreciate the strangeness of the sector. Through her encounters with nature and her use of language

  • The Year Of The Flood Analysis

    904 Words  | 4 Pages

    workers and women make them vulnerable to exploitation and violence. However, the texts prove women to be very capable of survival. Toby and Ren are equipped with emotional fortitude, and practical know-how, which enables them to get through the “flood” and their sufferings. They both realize that there is a possibility for survival and that they have the abilities to fend for themselves. Yet fear still grapples them, in a sense that the main concern centers around the future of the society. The

  • The Ice Garden Character Analysis

    1001 Words  | 5 Pages

    Deceiving Looks and Humanity’s Obsession with Them Analysis of “Ice Garden” by Moira Crone The issue with the importance of the appearence have been around for a very long time. As soon as the human started civilizing a little by little, an obsession with perfection appeared. In the novel The Ice Garden by Moira Crone, beauty and its influence on the 1960s woman play major roles. In it, humanity´s obsession with looks, that often may be deceiving, is shown through the plot, the characters and

  • How Does Society Lead To The Destruction Of Society In Oryx And Crake

    1068 Words  | 5 Pages

    Imagine living in a world where people are not content with who they are, and as a result are always striving for perfection, which as learned through Oryx and Crake is unachievable without consequences. This world, portrayed in Margaret Atwood’s book, displays the different factors of how society has changed through time and displays the negative effects of people’s need to be flawless. This aspiration for unattainable perfection leads to the destruction of the society through unethical behavior

  • Hot And Cold Blood Fitzgerald Analysis

    791 Words  | 4 Pages

    Marriage Hot and Cold blood was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and The Story of an Hour was written by Kate Chopin. In Hot and Cold Blood, Fitzgerald tells the story of a married man name Jim Mathers and his wife Jaqueline. The couple is expecting their first child, so every penny they earned should go towards preparing for their child. Jim has a generous heart, which leads to never turn the blind eye on a person in need. He lends money to those in need without hesitation. This trait of Jim bothers

  • Alienation And Identity In Margaret Atwood's The Animals In That Country

    1788 Words  | 8 Pages

    Margaret Atwood, an internationally acclaimed novelist, poet and short story writer is widely considered as a major figure in Canadian litrature. In her works, she focuses on the themes of alienation and self-identity. As a poet, her works concentrate on the question of identity with as much pasion as Neruda and Walcott. There is a style and force in her writing.The major themes of Atwood’s poetry include the inconsistencies of self-perception, the Canadian identity and experience, the paradoxical

  • Informative Speech About Cartoons

    770 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cartoons have been dying a slow death in today’s generation. The kind of cartoons the kids from the 90’s watched had set massive examples for the upcoming creators today. But unfortunately, not many cartoons these days are able to meet the expectation of being unparalleled. Listed below are the cartoons that have been incomparable yet vanished from sight today: Scooby Doo: A number of series wherein the teenagers - Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley,  Norville Roger a.k.a Shaggy & their brown

  • Reasonably Insane In Margaret Atwood's Oryx And Crake

    792 Words  | 4 Pages

    The article “Reasonably Insane: Affects and Crake In Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake” by Ariel Koon, details how the characters of the novel are impacted the society that are a part of. The character of Crake is analyzed for his motives to wipeout the human race and how the society he is in pushed him to do it. The first part of the article focuses on the characterization of Crake. To readers, he seems to be neither good nor evil. He does not fit the typical identity of a “mad-scientist” even though

  • Comparing Margaret Atwood's Oryx And Crake

    2446 Words  | 10 Pages

    Margaret Atwood is known for writing speculative fiction novels set in the future. Her 2003 novel, Oryx and Crake is no different. This story takes place in a world where corporations rule this dystopian world. The world’s population has been decimated, thanks to a virus that was spread under the guise of the health supplement BlyssPluss. Before that though, the future was looking bleak already, having the intellectuals living in corporate sponsored walled compounds, and the less fortunate living

  • Choosing A Name In Margaret Atwood's 'Crakers'

    1688 Words  | 7 Pages

    Jimmy and Snowman. Glenn and Jimmy. Crakers. Margaret Atwood had the choice to choose from so many names, so why choose a name which is of two characters that die and it is not even their real name. It is understandable that perhaps the name Crake is used because Crake is the reason for this catastrophic world in which Snowman exists. Another explanation for Crake’s name is he is a big character throughout the whole story and is present in Jimmy’s life from very early age. But why Oryx with it? She

  • The Year Of The Flood: The Maddaddam Trilogy

    448 Words  | 2 Pages

    and also a landmark work of speculative fiction. In this second book of the MaddAddam Trilogy, it is shown in the novel that the long-feared waterless flood has finally occurred. The novel, The Year of the Flood is the second novel of the Maddaddam Trilogy. The novel talks about the lives of two women named Toby and Ren who survive the waterless flood. The stories are narrated by these two characters. The novel also gives the details of the events that take place in the previous novel, Oryx and Crake

  • 1984 And Ray Bradbury's The Year Of The Flood

    644 Words  | 3 Pages

    coursework piece inspired by Margaret Atwood's "The Year of the Flood". The task required an in-depth analysis and justification of the techniques used within the creative piece. During this task, I familiarised myself with a range of dystopian literature including Orwell's "1984" and Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451"; this enabled me to approach the creative piece with a more nuanced understanding of the conventions of dystopian literature. "The Year of the Flood" expresses a future in which neoliberal capitalism

  • Comparing The Year Of The Flood And The Walking Dead

    1450 Words  | 6 Pages

    In the horrific and altered world of the novels called “The Year of the Flood” by Margaret Atwood and “The Walking Dead” by Robert Kirkman, authors show the many faces of femininity through different characters and distinctive overpowering atmospheres by males. Both novels are dealing with the end of the world crisis as in Margaret Atwood’s book the human race is dying off from the virus and power is going to the wrong hands and the laws are beginning to change which is effecting the norm. Atwood

  • Use Of Organizations In The Year Of The Flood By Margaret Atwood

    1042 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Misuse of Knowledge To what extent do organizations in The Year of the Flood use knowledge as a tool to indoctrinate people by taking advantage of their circumstances? Knowledge is a powerful tool that can be used to shape and manipulate individuals' beliefs and opinions. It can be used to inform and educate, but it can also be used to indoctrinate and control. In The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood, the author explores the extent to which possessing knowledge can be used as a tool to indoctrinate

  • Michael J. Oard's Setting The Stage For An Ice Age

    1089 Words  | 5 Pages

    find themselves doubting the happenings of a world-wide flood. There is a significant amount of data and analysis to support and prove the occurrences of the worldwide flood accounted for in Genesis 6 through 9 that Noah and his family experienced. There are many who believe that there was a flood as accounted in Genesis but that it was not the span of all the continents. An analysis of six major geological evidences reveals that the flood recorded in the Bible, involving Noah, actually did occur

  • Los Angeles Basin Analysis

    1594 Words  | 7 Pages

    which extends from 66 million years ago to the present. The River is directly tied to changes in the Los Angeles Basin over millions of years, therefore understanding changes in the basin is part of understanding how the river came to exist as we know it now. Geologically speaking, the Los Angeles Basin is a relatively young geographic lowland that formed due to geomorphic changes in the last 16 million years. In fact, during the Tortonian age, more than 10 million years ago, the Los Angeles Basin

  • The Johnstown Flood: A Natural Disaster

    1426 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Johnstown Flood was caused by a man made lake, it was constructed in 1881. The dam was 900 feet by 72 feet. The dam was one of the largest earth dams, which means it was made by things like rocks and dirt instead of cement or steel which bridges are mostly made of. Johnstown was built on the Appalachian Plateau. It was the center of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club. The lake had been used for fishing and sailing. Before the dam broke, there had been many warnings that it was possible that

  • Presupposition In Edgar Allan Poe's Rhetoric

    458 Words  | 2 Pages

    choice. Because his hidden presupposition was that the flood hadn’t occurred, Bill left out the time during the flood. As a result, he didn’t consider the fossils being deposited during the flood, and he eliminated the flood as a presupposition. In this, Bill secretly assumed the flood had not occurred. And that was the hidden presupposition. So he reasoned that, if the flood didn’t occur, the deposits couldn’t have occurred during the flood. And that’s circular reasoning. Not only that, but none