She goes on to describe her room as very white and serene, and within the walls is a temporary escape from all the cares of the world outside, all the baggage she carries in relation to her family. Then she receives the tulips, which contrast with the white so much that Plath says they hurt me in line 36. ... It is apparent that the very nature of the tulips in Sylia Plath poem Tulips is offensive to her, particularly in the way that the flowers red clashes with the serenity with the white walls around her. ... This is a reasonable comparison, especially in light of line 36, which shows how...
I was 11-years-old the first time I saw my brother's new electric guitar. It was black, white, silver, and brown. I vividly remember the amplifier, especially the bright blue light that lit up when it was on. Just the sight of the guitar against the amp was something that could light up a whole room...
In fact, this noise is so loud; it drives not only Sal crazy, but the three old African Americans sitting on the corner. ... They saw a black man fighting with a white man, and being white police officers, they assumed that the black man was at fault. ...
To add to this message during the shot the two are shown to be eating in silence, the only noise is the sound of their cutlery. ... In comparison with the few other settings we see within the movie, such as Amelia's place of work which is painted in all white, the house is much duller and clearly implies the depressing atmosphere within the characters own home, this also implies that when Amelia is at work she has escaped that atmosphere, an idea which is backed up when she is shown to be smiling and laughing when engaged in conversation with her potential love interest at work. Within th...
Even the door is made of massive iron and placed on great hinges that grind and make an awful noise as the narrator and Roderick open it. ... The house appears on a landscape of "a few rank sedges and upon a few white trunks of decayed trees" (205). ...
The Death in Marriage In Susan Glaspells" play Trifles although we never actually see Mrs. Wright we learn a lot about her self character. The play has a very underlying subplot of Mrs. Wrights" character change after marriage. We see how she acts and feels once life has stolen her true inhibitio...
William Golding's most popular novel The Lord of the Flies has become a must read for all students of English literature along with the likes of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and E.M. Forster's A passage to India. It is a crucial read for understanding the times of Imperialism, Colonialism, and most of all human nature. Human's cognition and manner of reaction under unique circumstances is also explored alongside literal, physical, psychological, darkness, savagery, significance of civilization, and individual welfare vs. common good. The Lord of the Flies tells a tale ...
Representation is a way of re-presenting certain events or stories to the audience. However real the representation seems, it can never really offer its audience a true presentation of ideas. In this way, the media uses representation to simplify a text allowing their audience to consume it in a clear and manageable way, allowing them to enjoy it more. Representation is a very important idea when looking at films that portray women in different societies, because they therefore have different ideologies to live up to. Stereotypes are also used in film; they are not real people, but widely ...
Summary Ralph hides in the jungle and thinks miserably about the chaos that has overrun the island. He thinks about the deaths of Simon and Piggy and realizes that all vestiges of civilization have been stripped from the island. He stumbles across the sow's head, the "Lord of the Flies," now merely ...