35 Results for creative writing

Midterm Assignment : Women and writing Since the beginning of times, human beings have found various ways to express themselves and more specifically how to declare their feelings and emotions. We all know that art (in a general term) is supposed to be the tool used for expression. People fro...
Virginia Woolf\'s Vision Almost sixty-five years have lapsed since Virginia Woolf spoke at Newnham and Girton colleges on the subject of women and fiction. Her remarkable words are preserved for future generations of women in A Room of One\'s Own. This essay is the \" first manifesto of the modern f...
In the early 1800s women were given a subservient role in society. In marriage, the husband could be viewed as the warden and the wife as the inmate. This left the woman to become dependent and therefore inferior. In \"The Yellow Wall-Paper\" the author Charlotte Gilman vividly writes the effects...
Free At Last When a reader first reads The Yellow Wallpaper it appears to be a story of a young woman suffering from post pardum depression that slowly ends in the total loss of reality. However, understanding that Charlotte Perkins Gilman was an early feminist, and her writings share a common th...
Feminism at its WorstIn her social commentary, A Room of One's Own, Virginia Woolf, one of the most prolific feminist authors of the modern day, writes an exhortation of women and their stifled intellectual and creative abilities. Through fictionalized examples and specific facts, Woolf encouraging...
Sylvia Plath is an immense flagrant writer, for her recognition of her feministic perceptions expressed in her well-crafted poetry, during the critical feminism era of the 1960s. Feminism is the belief that women realise their less powerful status towards men, therefore women believe they can reach ...
The Morphing Metaphysical Man Every literary work has an idea or reason for its existence. Authors try to incorporate what is going on in their life or the world when they write. One particular author from the sixteenth century is a superb example of this method. A man named John Donne passed t...
The Yellow Wallpaper illustrates the narrator's plight in the Victorian era. The main character, the narrator, is a woman suffering from depression in a time when women were totally dependent on men, and often dismissed as being nervous and hysterical females. The inability of women to become act...
Critic Michelle Kinsey-Clinton makes claims and offers opinion that Sylvia Plath was not, in fact, a feminist as many heralded her, but that instead she was content with her domestic role as mother and wife as long as she was able to continue her writing and her companion was no less than equal to h...
For centuries, women have sought out to endow oneself and society; to implode fiction; to create clearinghouses of ideas without the interference of man. Alas, the glass ceiling is broke; the door unlocked. In A Room of One's Own, Virginia Woolf skillfully, using the technique of stream of ...
A Room of One's Own Virginia Woolf's "A Room of One's Own" broke new territory in suggesting that the reason there were very few acknowledged women's writers at this time was because women lead hard lives in comparison to men and that the conditions needed to produc...
Elizabeth WhittemoreTommy B. McDonellAdrienne Rich Final There are many cultural phantoms that we must face as we write and read in today's society. Adrienne Rich, author of an article titled "When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-Vision", tells us of a gender phantom who prevented the development ...
Charlotte Perkins Gilman's story, "The Yellow Wallpaper," explores the restricted societal roles of both Jane and John. Gilman, a strong supporter of women's rights, focuses on her account with depression through this story (Hill 150). Traditionally, the man must take care of the...
Comparison and Contrast "The Yellow Wallpaper" and "A Rose for Emily" In "The Yellow Wallpaper," by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the relationship between an oppressive husband and his submissive wife pushes the protagonist from depression into insanity. "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner is the...
Poetry, like any other form of creative work, is there to express the author\'s thoughts, opinions, and feelings. There are vast strategies that can be applied to help readers make sense of it. Which method you use relies heavily on the poem you are reading. Different poems call on different aspects...
Free At LastWhen a reader first reads The Yellow Wallpaper it appears to be a story of a young woman suffering from post pardum depression that slowly ends in the total loss of reality. However, understanding that Charlotte Perkins Gilman was an early feminist, and her writings share a common theme...
Rudyard Kipling and Virginia Woolf, although both English writers, write from completely different perspectives and with completely different intentions. Kipling's book Kim does not tackle any specific social issues, but instead uses fiction to promote general themes of tolerance and the importance...
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...
What will live be?In the essay "Professions for Women," Virginia Woolf writes that gender profiling can destroy a woman's success in their career. In the essay, she discusses the role of discrimination that was played in her role. She discusses how things are so men oriented. She has a sense of conf...
Sadeq Hedayat's The Blind Owl is one of the most important literary works in Persian language. The central theme of the story is an attempt toward the resolution of the writer/narrator's dualistic experiences of the real versus unreal, the sensual against the spiritual and death as opposed to life. ...
English 101When We Dead AwakenRich uses many poems in her essay as examples of change in her writing. Some of which include: "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers," "Snapshots of a Daughter-in-Law," and "Planetarium." There are also many examples used in his "Sources" page. All of these poems add up toward the...
Artemisia Gentilschi: Feminism in Italian Society Throughout the Fifteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Painting in the Baroque period evoked emotion by appealing to the senses in very dramatic ways. Artists often used religion or personal experiences and effectively translated these aspects into ...
Caged In: Breaking Through the Walls of OppressionHeld back, caged, strangled, deprived, and hurt. These words begin to describe the feelings that are stressed in Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper". Women have made incredible progress since 1892 when Gilman's short story was written. Charlotte Perki...
Virginia Woolf, in her novels, set out to portray the self and the limits associated with it. She wanted the reader to understand time and how the characters could be caught within it. She felt that time could be transcended, even if it was momentarily, by one becoming involved with their work, art...
\"It\'s not as easy as it looks!\" Well, that much was certainly true. I was sitting at a metal wheel. I had a pedal under my right foot. If you\'ve ever used a sewing machine you know the kind of pedal I mean. There was a lump of clay on the wheel. It spun round and round, but it wasn\'t round...