Brutus and Antony’s Funeral Speeches: Who Was More Persuasive?

William Shakespeare is an amazing author who was able to write an amazing play called The Tragedy of Julius Caesar in which he wrote a scene that had Brutus and Antony make speeches at the funeral of Julius Caesar. In the funeral speech, both men had different points to achieve when talking to the audience; … Read more

Shakespeare’s sonnet 18/Spenser’s sonnet 75 (poetic techniques, form, theme)

In this essay the two poems that will be discussed; William Shakespeare’s sonnet 18 and Edmund Spenser’s sonnet 75 respectively will be compared with respect to their poetic techniques and form as well as the underlying thesis of Love which is prominent within both pieces. In order to show this comparison, both sonnets will be … Read more

The Dangers of Idealism and Cervantes’ Satire of Catholicism in Don Quixote

Prompt: The imitation of models (religion) in Don Quixote. In Miguel De Cervantes’ Don Quixote, Don Quixote is a hidalgo living in La Mancha during the end of the 16th century. He has a vivid imagination, and an obsession with reading books of chivalry. He decides to act as a knight errant, wandering and performing … Read more

Comparing ‘Porphyria’s Lover’ & ‘My Last Dutchess’ to Wuthering Heights

Robert Browning’s poems, Porphyria’s Lover, and My Last Dutchess, are comparable to Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights because they describe how women are pushed into submissive objectified roles by Victorian culture. The three texts are comparable because Browning and Brontë’s describe women as possessing less social power. Wuthering Heights is comparable to through descriptions of the … Read more

Idealisation of love: The Great Gatsby & Wuthering Heights

When something is idealised, it is seen as being ‘perfect’ and above reality. It is put on a pedestal above everything else, and is used as a means to achieve happiness. Both novels – The Great Gatsby, written by F.Scott Fitzgerald and Wuthering Heights, written by Emily Brontë explore the idealisation of love itself, a … Read more

Themes of power and fantasy: Doctor Faustus & Wuthering Heights

The themes of power and fantasy are interlinking and well-explored in both Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus and Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights. It seems a common trope, though, that fantasies are used for sources of optimism that never come to fruition. Fantasy itself, as defined by Rosemary Jackson, has two functions for characters in literature: “it … Read more

The Depiction of Childhood Experiences and its relation to Adult World

Childhood is a construct experienced differently in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights and Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. The characters in both novels are in a state of continuous flux, adapting and altering themselves to their changing environments as the novel evolves. Readers are expected to come to either texts with the knowledge of the … Read more

Post-romanticism & gothicism of suspense, mystery, gloom in Wuthering Heights

Promptly following the Romanticism era, and still with influences of the this era, came the rise of the age for Gothic literature. Gothic literature is defined by horror, mystery, with unexplainable dark forces. Found in gothic literature, dark tones are dramatized and expounded upon to further the forebode and malevolence. In the case of Emily … Read more

Examining themes of depression and loneliness in The Catcher in the Rye

The Catcher in the Rye is the ultimate depiction of teenage angst. Holden Caulfield is dealing with the transition from adolescence to adulthood and his mental state is fragile and not coping thus teenagers in the 21st century can and still relate to Holden Caulfield’s depressive mood and constant feeling of loneliness. The Catcher in … Read more

Youth in Post-war America: The Catcher in the Rye & Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar

Post-war America was a time of conformity in America and such rigid conventionality caused many young people to feel lost, isolated and unfulfilled. This uneasy and troubled youth is artfully represented in J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye and Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar. In The Bell Jar, Esther struggles the traditional female role … Read more

Comparing protagonists in Huckleberry Finn & A Room with a View

In the 35 year time period between 1885 and 1920 many significant events took place. Including many events that improved and made our society grow to what it is today. Everything from modern film photography to electric cars to the end of World War Ⅰ, this time period was very prosperous for American History. Authors … Read more

Huckleberry Finn. Nazis, and Frats: What a Bad Morality Takes

Jonathan Bennett’s 1974 essay “The Conscience of Huckleberry Finn” from Philosophy 49, employs examples from Mark Twain’s “Huckleberry Finn” and draws inspiration from the Nazi regime, specifically Heinrich Himmler, to explain his theory of sympathy as a tool to correct one’s own “bad morality” provided one is open to correction and listens to said sympathies. … Read more