Glass Menagerie

In Tennessee Williams’ play, Glass Menagerie, William’s channels his family life through writing it about the Wingfield family. Tennessee Williams based his character, Tom Wingfield on himself. Both are considered “traveling dreamers” (Falk 47). The Wingfields are a normal family just trying to get by. Their problems, branch from their failure to adequately communicate with each … Read more

Christina Rossetti’s Works Through a Feminist Lens

Throughout her life as a poet, Christina Rossetti was not recognized as a feminist writer. However, her work continuously examined the many different relationships among women and the limitations that female writers dealt with. Even though most of her views were formed through her religious beliefs, some of Christina Rossetti’s works were critical of the … Read more

Stephen Dedalus

The growth of Stephen Dedalus’ artistic ability in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce is affected and mirrored by the language used around him, to describe him, and by him. Stephen’s development is hindered by the limitations of the English language, linking his development to the development of Irish … Read more

There is no happy ending

Whether I will be the hero of my own life or whether I will be the murderer of myself, these words should be acknowledged and known. She considered this while sitting in the bathtub holding two, 2 in 1 inches’ razor blades in her hands. The water was warm and it reflected the dim coffee-candles … Read more

Hamlet – William Shakespeare

The change in the fortune of the tragic hero in Oedipus the King results from the protagonist’s attempt to escape what the gods have ordained for him. Aristotle in his observation of Classical Greek tragedy observed that the tragic fall of a man like Oedipus resides through what he called a “frailty” in character rather … Read more

Pursuing Dentistry

Personal Statement What do you do when you realize you have become extremely successful at living a comfortable life, but not the life you were created for? When you are in a position of leadership, coveted by many, occupied by few, and sustained by even less, yet still unfulfilled. Each day you feel the growing … Read more

Fathers and Sons (1862 novel)

As the story unfolded, all forms of the ideologies were presented. Younger generations conflicted with the older generations as ideologies between the two are different. Differing views on political and social classes also collided. The issues that were presented in the novel were also likely to be applicable to the rest of Europe. I do … Read more

Eroding Masculinity and Work in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary Barton and Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the D’Urbervilles

“There are very few women’s lives that are not—tremulous,” Tess Durbeyfield tells Angel Clare at Talbothays Dairy (Hardy 203). Indeed, no two characters exemplify this statement as well as Elizabeth Gaskell’s eponymous Mary Barton and Tess herself. As Mary and Tess navigate their positions as working women in Gaskell’s urban Manchester and Hardy’s rural Wessex, … Read more

My dangerous town

It was a cold and distressing morning just like every other morning, The past 6 years have shown me several such days, it ended only in disappointment. With a sigh, he scanned the room. A mix of city grime and smoke, which gave the walls a greyish hue. Which led to the paint below the … Read more

The benefits of reading

You’re in a race against time trying to stop the world’s most twisted villain from taking over the world while also finding out more about yourself in the process. Perhaps you’re exploring the Stonehenge and other wonders of the Earth. Maybe you’re trying to solve a crime that seems to be stumping even the best … Read more

Obviously, there is a God.

[Aq] So, obviously, there is a God. At least, that’s how it seems to me. Everything requires a cause. You might say, you can’t have shoes without a shoemaker, or barrels without a cooper. It is so obvious to me that nothing in the natural world can be its own creator. Not even Jesus created … Read more

Red badge of courage

The protagonist in this story is Henry Fleming. Henry was also know as “the young soldier”, Henry fought for the Union army in the Civil war. While fighting in the war Henry gets a wound by a union soldier that hits him on the head, Henry was asking why the men were running away and … Read more

The Red Badge of Courage (Stephen Crane)

Protagonist Analysis The protagonist of Stephen Crane’s novel The Red Badge of Courage is Henry Fleming, often referred to as “the young soldier.” Henry fights for the Union Army during the Civil War, a period marked by immense turmoil and conflict. From the outset, Henry’s journey is defined by his quest for glory and personal … Read more

Strawberry and Chocolate (1993)

There is a strong representation of the intellectual homosexual and the new man that explores both the differences and similarities in the film. There are various themes present throughout the film such as sexuality, discrimination, love, religion and friendship. The discrimination of homosexuals in Cuba along with the limitation of artistic expression during this time … Read more

Cry, the Beloved Country – Alan Parton

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt spoke these words on the gloomy morning of his second inauguration, addressing a populous that was disillusioned with the global devastation of World War I and ravaged by the ongoing Great Depression. Something in his words rang true – they … Read more