100 Results for Symbols and Symbolism

Freud on DraculaSigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, once referred to Bram Stoker's "Dracula" as an exploration into "the return of the repressed". The novel is about a man who comes to Count Dracula's house to conduct business matters. Dracula traps Jonathon, the man who conducted busines...
Symbolism is John Steinbeck's "The Chrysanthemums" "The Chrysanthemums", one of John Steinbeck's masterpieces, describes a lonely farmer's wife, Elisa Allen. Elisa Allen's physical appearance is very mannish yet still allows a hint of a feminine side to peek...
In both the play, Blue Beach by Victor Hugo Rascon Banda and the novel Like Water for Chocolate, by Laura Esquirel symbolism plays a vital role throughout the central ideas. In both of these pieces of literature the symbolic objects are a hotel with everything in it and the use of cooking respectiv...
Kristen Brentzel The Signs of an Author Symbols add so much to an authors work. To be able to play the game of figuring out those symbols is on reason most readers pick up certain author's writings. Hawthorne is one of those writers. In this book we are showered with wonderful symbols ...
Symbolism is John Steinbeck's "The Chrysanthemums" "The Chrysanthemums", one of John Steinbeck's masterpieces, describes a lonely farmer's wife, Elisa Allen. Elisa Allen's physical appearance is very mannish yet still allows a hint of a feminine side to peek...
Of all the early Flemish paintings, few are as famous as Jan Van Eyck\'s \"The Betrothal of Arnolfini.\" Its unsurpassed solemnity and painstaking details have epitomized the essence of the early traditions of Netherlandish art. Completed in 1434, the painting stands 85 cm x 63 cm and is painted o...
Anne Bradstreet and Adrienne Rich are two of the most important female poets in the American literature, their writing sharing some common features as well. Their poetry seems to be made according to Adrienne Rich's definition of poetry: " I believe that poems are made of words and the b...
Kate ChopinA Style of her OwnKate Chopin uses symbolism and realism to enhance her theme of social conflict in the lives of women during the nineteenth century. These conflicts seemed to travel from one woman to the next, unnoticed by the rest of society. Chopin used these conflicts as a basis for...
As we look at "The Story of an Hour", there many different views about Mrs. Mallard. Some people believe she was unwilling or unable to discuss what she wanted in everyday life with her husband. Other people believe she hated her husband and that is why she finally felt free when she he...
Women in MoviesWomen in Movies Since the 1940's, movies have predominately portrayed women as sex symbols. Beginning in the 1940's and continuing though the 1980's, women did not have major roles in movies. When they did have a leading role the women was either pretreated as unintelligent and beauti...
Chikamatsu Monzaemon and William Shakespeare were literary cornerstones of their time. Although separated by a continent of land and nearly a half-century in age, they both used their workings to bring their respective time period to life; Monzaemon gave insight into the pre-modern Edo Period of Jap...
According to The American Heritage Dictionary, the definition of awakening is "to become aware: awoke to reality". When you think of the word "awakening" the first thing that usually comes to your mind is a new train of thought, or a revelation. Kate Chopin's novella is e...
LIKE WATER FOR CHOCOLATE By Laura Esquirel I. BRIEF SUMMARY Like Water for Chocolate tells the story of Josefita or ¡§Tita¡, as she is popularly known. She is the youngest daughter of the de la Garza family of Mexico. She was born in a very odd situation. While her mother, Mama Elena is...
Cultural Anthropology Under the Kapok Tree The ethnography, "Under the Kapok Tree: Identity and Difference In Beng Thought", was in my opinion, a very excellent detailed description of the daily life, rituals, customs, and traditions, and religion of the Beng. The Beng are from a Wes...
100 Years of Solitude Theme: History is Repetitive This book begins with an isolated town of Macondo and the Buendias family. Jose Arcadio Buendia and Ursula Iquaran are cousins that got marry and had the town first born child. Ursula mother warns her many times about incest and it consequences....
Chris Willis Dr. M Newlin English 306 Monday, May 15, 2000 Nanny, a Mule, and a Pear Tree: Janie's Beginning Zora Neale Hurston's work provides the African-American community with a one of the first literary symbols of racial health - a sense of black people as complete, complex, u...
Real Success In the Bible the Pharisees were the Jewish upper class. They socialized with the Roman governors and Israel's finest citizens. The Pharisees were the richest and most educated men in the area; they were also the leaders in the Hebrew society. They appeared to be the most successf...
This book is a fiction, it's a memory story: a man in his sixties looks back on his boyhood of the middle class boy recalling the events that took place on a summer visit to an aristocratic family in Norfolk in the 1900's. The author uses double narrative, the young Leo's actions told b...
When we first meet Dido, she is busy leading her people to build a great city. She is a strong leader and is loved by her fellow citizens. Through the eyes of Aeneas, we see that she is beautiful, intelligent and not afraid of hard work. Last but not least, Dido is loyal, loyal to her people and t...
The novel Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, is written from a female point of view. The narrator of the story, Janie, is searching for her own identity in a world were she is made to believe that her individual character is not important. Her journey eventually takes her deep into ...
Introduction In almost all religions and cultures, the harmonious wedding ceremony signifies the beginning of a new life for a couple; a life dependent on commitment and independent from parents. The union of a couple is a highly celebrated event for both the family and the couple. The time of wedlo...
Steinbeck's "The Chrysanthemums" takes place during a time when women were expected to present themselves in certain, socially acceptable ways and to behave differently from men. Elisa struggles to fit into "the right kind of life for a woman" (691). She experiences difficu...
The Kalapalo Indians of Central Brazil are one of a few surviving indigenous cultures that is uniquely protected by a national reserve in lowland South America. Through no effort of there own, they have been isolated artificially from Brazilian social and economic influences that reach almost every ...
Grotesque characters in literature can hardly be considered lovable since they are strangers and freaks to ordinary society. Carson McCullers' novel "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" falls under the category of Southern grotesque style. However, McCullers succeeds in the difficult ta...
In Hamlet, taking a closer look at Ophelia's limited scenes with the help of feminist and deconstructionist interpretations give a better understanding of her character. Throughout Hamlet, Ophelia appears in only five scenes and is only one of two females present in the play. "Using fem...