The Pedestrian' (1951) By Ray Bradbury

The setting of The Pedestrian is on the streets, during one evening in November. The futuristic environment of 2053 is one in which technology has created realities in which people no longer interact with the outside world as freely as they used to do. The pedestrian walks as freely as he does because the world … Read more

Fan Fiction

Fan fiction is defined as amateur works based on the characters and settings from novels, movies, television shows, plays, videogames or pop chart toppers and their crossover cousins. These stories, which take place in fictional worlds created by published authors, have exploded online in the last decade. They attract millions of readers daily. Fan fiction … Read more

'The Attack' by Yasmina Khadra

The subject of being good and evil is developed through the behavior of different characters in the story. There are those who appear as good people because of their good attributes and actions. On the other hand, characters that are associated with bad traits are term as evil because they are harmful to the society. … Read more

Eugénie Grandet – Honoré de Balzac

The story of Eugenie Grandet is nothing, a mere narrative of every-day life, in which the self-abnegation of woman and the egotism of man are depicted in a series of interior,The lives of women, and especially of young women, are often strangely separated from the life of the principal personage of the house they live … Read more

Gulliver's Travels

Gulliver’s Travels was written during a period in literary history call the Reformation. Almost all of the different satirical devices can be observed quite frequently and easily through Swift’s hilarious exaggerations and thinly-veiled sarcasm. In every account mentioned in the book, every island, and every new civilization, Swift promotes his views of current political representatives … Read more

T. S. Eliot: The Man in the Mirror

“For I saw with own my eyes the Sibyl hanging in a jar at Cumae, and when acolytes said, ‘Sybil, what do you want’? she replied, ‘I want to die’” (Eliot 474). T.S. Eliot was an American poet living in England, forced to Oxford University because of the outbreak of World War I (Ramazani 460). … Read more

Booktest: The Book Thief

1. a. The Book Thief b. Markus Zusak c. 2005 2. a. The story starts in January 1939 and ends in October 1945. This story takes place in the Second World War. In the book the narrator says every now and then which month and year it is. For example at the beginning of the … Read more

Rhetorical Analysis of Jonathan Swift's 'A Modest Proposal'

A Modest Proposal is a satirical pamphlet that examines the attitude of the rich towards the poor starving children in their society. Jonathan Swift uses a number of rhetorical devices effectively as he highlights his proposal. He uses logical fallacies, metaphors, repetition and parallelism as well as humor, sarcasm and satire tone to highlight these … Read more

Richard Ford – The Sportswriter (1986)

Richard Ford is one of the most gifted novelists in the contemporary America. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his novel Independence Day. This novel is the first one in history to win together the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction in 1995. His works are being associated by … Read more

Bottlemania

Elizabeth Royte is the author of the book ‘Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought It’ published in 2008 by the Turner Broadcasting System. Royte argues that bottled water is not safer than tap water. Royte wrote this article to encourage people to be informed on whether to drink bottled water or … Read more

Othello

Othello is certainly an overlay of the features that define tragedy as explained by Aristotle, Hegel, Nietzsche and Eagleton. Hence, to say that the play is Hegelian does not necessarily mean it is not Aristotelian. While Aristotle focused on tragedy Hegel focused on the tragic. Both features of tragedy and the tragic are to a … Read more

How women are depicted in Macbeth and Frankenstein

Women can either make or break the world. They have the capability to run the world or completely destroy it, there are many different women in the world and each of them contributes individually. In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and in William Shakespeare’s Macbeth it is clear to see that the women in Frankenstein and Macbeth … Read more