Category: Character

  • Mark Antony’s Dualistic Character in Julius Caesar

    We meet the character of Mark Antony three times before Julius Caesar’s death, though he speaks little and we do not get much of an indication of his character. Antony fully enters the play exactly halfway through, when he makes a gripping speech, and his eloquence changes the course of Roman history. From this point…

  • The Issue of Technology and Children in “A Visit from The Goon Squad”

    In the digital era, children are exposed to digital devices and the internet practically at birth through iPods, iPads, and iMacs–an element of modern childhood completely foreign to the parents raising these children. In the chapter “Pure Language” from A Visit From the Goon Squad, Jennifer Egan’s character Alex, a new father, believes he has…

  • Family Bonds and Bloodlines Conflicts in “Kindred”

    Relationships between brothers and sisters can be complicated; relationships between parents and children can be even more so. Family often varies in definition from one person to the next. For the majority of the population, the idea of a “nuclear family” doesn’t exist. In the novel Kindred, Octavia Butler uses both science fiction and slave…

  • The Sea as Mirror in The Shadow Line and Lord Jim

    D’autres fois, calme plat, grand miroir de mon dsespoir -C. Baudelaire Those acquainted with the works of Joseph Conrad know well enough that the author had a grand affinity for the sea. Certainly, this should be expected from a man who had spent his formative years on various vessels, traversing the eastern waters in the…

  • Character’s Journey Through Madness to Maturity in King Lear

    As one of the most significant moments in Shakespeare’s King Lear, the scene described in Act 4, Scene 6, lines 131-146 provides insight into the parallels within the play and offers a definition of true meaning through irony. King Lear is the focus of this passage, and it is here where he hits the pinnacle…

  • A Collision of Cultures as Shown in The Identity of Leah

    Table of contents Collision Of Cultures Outline Introduction Use of Flashbacks Graphic Imagery Framework Structure Conclusion Collision Of Cultures Essay Example Collision Of Cultures Outline Introduction Introduction to the use of vivid flashbacks, graphic imagery, and framework structure in “The Poisonwood Bible” Thesis statement highlighting the impact of these literary devices on Leah’s character development…

  • A Kingdom’s Beast: The Adah Price’s Story

    Adah Price has been surviving from the moment she was born. Surviving, not living. In The Poisonwood Bible, Kingsolver shows how Adah leads a very cynical existence, outcast to mostly everyone she knows (including her family), and hindered by a debilitating medical condition, makes it so that she must try her hardest just to keep…

  • The Importance of Secondary Characters in Ancient Greek Drama

    In Aeschylus’s Oresteia, the Chorus of Agamemnon and Cassandra share several common traits. The chorus, a large group made up of miscellaneous elders, would, as individuals, all function as secondary characters. Cumulatively these individuals create one main character that offers supplementary information and commentary to the normal dialogue of Agamemnon. Cassandra, too, plays a secondary…

  • Stanhope’s Depiction of Conflict in ‘Journey’s End’

    Journey’s End’ by R.C, Sherriff was written in the late 1920s when attitudes towards the First World War began to change and people began to realise the horrors of the war and face them. This play offers different view than most about the commanding officers of the war compared to media seen now, where generally…

  • Character’s Development in King Lear and Pride and Prejudice

    Two English literary works, one a comedy and the other a tragedy, by two different authors of separate centuries, both have their fair share of characters who illustrate the admirable and the not-so-admirable of dispositions. Jane Austen’s socially Pride and Prejudice from 1813 and William Shakespeare’s poetic poem King Lear from 1606 match each other…