Abstract This paper is a biography on W.E.B. Du Bois. It deals with the Du Bois' importance and significance to American History. In this article, the writer focuses on Du Bois' public life. The writer also discusses Du Bois' idealogy and his ideas regarding civil rights.
From the Paper "According to David Levering Lewis in his book 'W.E.B. Du Bois The Fight for Equality and the American Century', William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was born in Massachusetts. Du Bois was graduated from Fisk University and Harvard University and studied two years at the University of Berlin. He was the first black American to receive the degree of doctor of philosophy from Harvard. Du Bois founded the Niagara Movement, a group of African-American leaders committed to an.. "
Tags: Biography, W.E.B Du Bois, racial activist, Crisis, Niagara Movement, founder NAACP, socialist, segregation, Booker T. Washington, Pan African movement, exile
Abstract This paper discusses Du Pont's organizational structure changes, which resulted in the company's lines, strategies and leadership changing. The author relates the efforts of Du Pont to balance centralization and decentralization.
From the Paper "In the case study on Du Pont, the growth of the company from an explosives manufacturer at the turn of the century to a company that now manufactures a diverse product line prompted executives to change the company's structure."
Abstract This paper discusses the influence of Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois on the American civil rights movement. The author argues that their outlooks are still alive today in debates concerning issues such as racial and class injustice and the role of leadership in the African- American community. The paper gives a brief biography of each man and his respective philosophical outlook. The author highlights where Washington and Du Bois' philosophies diverged, and their ultimate impact on racial equality in America.
From the Paper "The dispute between Washington and Du Bois polarized the leaders into two distinct sides, Washington's conservative supporters and Du Bois' radical philosophy (Two). Du Bois' strategy of agitation and protest led directly into the Civil Rights movement of the 1950's and 1960's. Washington's philosophy is often associated with conservative African Americans such as Justice Clarence Thomas and the Nation of Islam (Two). "
Abstract This paper focuses on characterization techniques used in "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner. The author uses narrator biases and symbolism to illustrate the character of Emily and to give us an insight into her decayed mind. William Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily" is not as much about murder and mystery as it is about a woman's struggle against time and future where the narrator is used as a tool for effective characterization.
From the Paper "The struggle between past and future was actually taking place in those days, people were rapidly leaving small Mississippi town to move to large cities to explore better job opportunities. While this change was taking place outside, it was the world within that required dramatic readjustments. Those who failed to make these adjustments suffered from numerous problems as past clashed with the future and their old values were threatened by the strong winds of change. Imagine what effect this must have had on people like Emily. Faulkner has first hand experience of this massive change and understood the emotional and psychological problems that were associated with change. In this story he has tried to highlight those problems and has made it clear that it is important to come to terms with reality as and when it changes because otherwise one might become a living corpse."
Comparative essay of each of the main characters in the stories "Shiloh", "A&P", and "A Rose for Emily". Looks at how the characters confront their freedoms and their limitations.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 3 sources, 2002, $ 35.95
Abstract Norma Jean confronts her mother directly as the story develops. Sammy in A&P confronts his limits as a young man. A Rose For Emily, is a tale of achieved freedom, but at a cost much different than that of Sammy or of Norma Jean. The stories build up to a gruesome revelation after Miss Emily's funeral.
Abstract The paper examines literary techniques of symbolism and foreshadowing in William Faulkner's short story "A Rose For Emily." The paper explains the role of the narrator and its themes. The paper also discusses the values of the Old South and reasons for Emily's perversity.
From the Paper "The literary techniques of foreshadowing and symbolism are employed by William Faulkner in "A Rose for Emily" to further the themes and action of his gothic short story. Symbolism joins the story's external action to the theme while foreshadowing prepares the reader as well as the townspeople of the tale for the climax of the multi-layered story of Miss Emily. Another special element is the function of the narrator within the story."
Abstract The paper explores the similarities and differences between William Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily" and Edgar Allan Poe's story, "The Cask of Amontillado." The paper compares the plot, the features of the two main characters, Miss Emily and Montresor, the
settings and the first-person narration in both stories.
Outline:
Plot
Character
Setting
Point of View
From the Paper "The most obvious plot similarity between William Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily," and Edgar Allan Poe's story, "The Cask of Amontillado," is that they are both, to some degree, about murder. "A Rose for Emily" culminates in the discovery of a man's dead body. Although not explicitly stated, Faulkner implies that Emily Grierson, the story's mysterious title character, has poisoned the man with arsenic. "The Cask of Amontillado" also ends in death, when the narrator seals his acquaintance, Fortunato, in the wall of the narrator's wine crypt. This similarity is multifaceted, and there are further similarities and differences within it."
Abstract This paper explores the themes integral to Emily Dickinson's works. The author examines the writer's use of imagery and abstraction that makes her poems so unique with emphasis on one poem "Safe in Their Alabaster Chambers".
From the Paper "Emily Dickinson asserts and establishes her poetic individuality and identity in her poetry; her poems delve deep into her personality and expose her thoughts about religion, life, and society. Her consistent themes of metaphor, ambiguity, and identity persevere and triumph in her poetic expressions of herself. Dickinson was a reclusive individual who separated herself from society; her personality is exhibited and revealed within her poetry, most of which was published after her death about a century ago. She was a profound mystery when she was alive and continues to remain an enigma today. Dickinson has been deemed a "Queen Recluse" (Lindberg-Seyersted 17) by Samuel Bowles and even the "madwoman in the attic" by Sandra Gilbert. The imagery and abstraction in her poetry hint at the hidden genius concealed within this woman, who continues to be one of the most influential poets of the 19th century. She precluded her time by challenging and redefining the standard structure and model of poetry established by lesser poets before her."
Tags: dickinson, emily, poetry, imagery, symbolism, style, language
Abstract This essay analyzes three of Emily Dickinson's poems. The poems reveal contradictory struggles with ideals of heaven, eternity, and Dickinson's own struggles for proof, and how to trust in faith. The poems are also compared to Psalms 63 and 139, to locate a biblical reference for the struggle to not be deceived in true faith.
Abstract This paper examines the techniques employed by Emily Dickinson in the poems "I Dwell in Possibility" and "They Shut me up in Prose." The paper examines the author's background as an orthodox Calvinist and examines the effect that her childhood religious influences had on her poetry. The essay makes the point that Dickinson's poetry was often a vehicle for her criticisms about organized religion and the role of the church. Both poems are cited within the essay.
From the Paper "The limitlessness of the imagination is symbolized in both poems by metaphors that represent the power of creativity and how it can be spiritually enlightening. By relating the ordinary to the extraordinary, Dickinson shows the power of the mind to see beyond the mundane and find deeper meaning within it. The house in "I dwell in Possibility-" is portrayed as ethereal and divine. The roof is "Everlasting" and it has "Gambrels of the Sky" (7 - 8). The roof is described as being impossibly tall, reaching up towards the sky, symbolic of the imagination's ability to find spirituality within everyday existence. In the poem, she also is figuratively able to hold Heaven in her hands: "The spreading wide my narrow Hands/ to gather Paradise - "(11 - 12)."
Abstract In this article the writer discusses Emily Dickinson's poems and letters and explores the issue of desire and sexuality. The writer contends that the images and metaphors in the letters suggests a writer vulnerable to strong emotions and sexuality.
Abstract The paper discusses how the various stages of Emily Dickinson's life tell a story about her ability to write great poetry. The paper explains that by being a young girl with a good religious education, she was able to take that learning into her early adult writings. Although she was not published a lot, she was able to gather a collection of poems that reflected her idea of the Puritan soul. The paper relates that by her old age, she was able to realize her best poetry by taking her life experiences and writing them down.
From the Paper "Her life in Massachusetts will help give an idea to how she suffered depression and isolation, but also how she was able to realize her soul through her writings. In this paper, the biography of Emily Dickinson will help the reader understand how important her story is to American poetry and to our national identity. Emily Dickinson was born in 1830 and resided in Amherst, Massachusetts for all of her life. She was considered talented in her studies at Amherst Academy and Holyoke Female Seminary, forging an education that gave her the writing skills that would eventually become poetry masterpieces in American literature."
Abstract This paper examines and analyzes William Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily". The paper looks at how Faulkner used modernist elements such as third-person narration, symbolism and other modernist literary devices to portray the characters in the story.
From the Paper "Upon examining William Faulkner's portrayal of changing conditions in the South in his short story, "A Rose for Emily" it is evident that Faulkner reveals these conditions primarily through the modernist elements in the story. The literary approach Faulkner incorporated to describe the reaction of the townspeople to the death of Miss Emily Grierson is typical of modernist approaches to literature, for he utilized third-person narration, relied upon symbolism to develop his theme, and created characters who reflected the cultural isolation of Southern life. These distinctive formal characteristics of modernist literature were incorporated by Faulkner into "A Rose for Emily" because he considered that modernist literary devices were necessary in order to portray his characters exactly the same way as he..."
Abstract In this article the writer reviews William Faulkner's short story 'A Rose for Emily' and discusses how Faulkner uses plot. The writer explains that this concerns specifically a plot that is slowly unraveled through the eyes of inquisitive local citizens to build a story that develops a dynamism and momentum that few other short stories possess. In particular the paper also notes the constant re-emergence of certain themes and how Faulkner's plot is compelling in large part because death bookends the story and serves as a grim undercurrent throughout.
From the Paper "A great plot most often makes for a great story. This is especially true of William Faulkner's 'A Rose for Emily' in light of the fact that the story builds towards a grim surprise that gives the tale a power and resonance that stays with the reader long after he or she has turned the final page. In the pages that follow, this paper will examine what plot does for 'A Rose for Emily' and how Faulkner's masterful use of plot allows him to take a tale about personal conflict and turn it into an American classic. The story begins with Emily Grierson's funeral. This is eerily appropriate, for death is something that hangs over the story in much as the "smell" hangs over Ms. Grierson's house in the opening pages of the story."