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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
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Search results on "CONSCIOUS LOVERS SIR RICHARD STEELE":

Term Paper # 19112 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Conscious Lovers" by Sir Richard Steele, 1991.
An analyaia of the sentimental comedy portraying 18th century post-Restoration England.
2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 6 sources, $ 71.95
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From the Paper
"The purpose of this research is to examine in detail The Conscious Lovers by Sir Richard Steele. The plan of the research will be to set forth the social milieu in which The Conscious Lovers first appeared, and then, with reference to the pattern of ideas and events emerging in the work, to discuss the importance and standing of The Conscious Lovers as a representative drama of its type (sentimental comedy). As appropriate, reference will be made to the role that prevailing or emerging social mores played in positioning the play in the post-Restoration period.


A useful way of appreciating the social milieu of The Conscious Lovers is to refer, first to the milieu of the play, then to evidence of the societal environment in which it appeared, and then to judgments of both play and society. Steele's preface to the published play is framed by a deliberate..."
Term Paper # 45663 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Leadership of Sir Richard Greenbury, 2002.
A look at the leadership style of Sir Richard Greenbury, ex-CEO of Marks and Spencer.
1,654 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 53.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the type of leadership skills that Sir Richard Greenbury possessed and examines how he implemented them while controlling Marks and Spencer. It further asks whether his leadership style was instrumental in the successes and failures of Marks and Spencer.

From the Paper
"Sir Richard Greenbury, the former CEO of Marks & Spencer spent a major part of his life in directing and leading the company. During his tenure with the company, M & S performed exceptionally well. The company posted remarkable profits. In 1998, M & S was the United Kingdom?s most profitable retailer. (BBC, 2001b) Since his retiring as CEO, Marks & Spencer however, has not performed very well. Today, the company struggles to even stay afloat. Many in the press blame the misfortune of the company on the former CEO, Sir Richard Greenbury."
Term Paper # 71080 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Town Lovers" and "Country Lovers", 2004.
An analysis of the two short stories "Town Lovers" and "Country Lovers" by Nadine Gordimer.
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the impact of apartheid in two stories by South African writer Nadine Gordimer: "Town Lovers" and "Country Lovers." It looks at the similar theme of both stories relating to the nature of love and the nature of crime and how in each story, a crime is committed by two people who have a relationship with each other that, solely because it crosses racial lines, is a crime.

From the Paper
"In her twinned short stories Town Lovers and Country Lovers South African writer Nadine Gordimer asks her readers to consider the nature of love and the nature of crime the two of which can in fact be the same under the apartheid regime of South Africa."
Term Paper # 43994 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sons & Lovers, 2002.
An analysis of D.H.Lawrence's book "Sons & Lovers".
2,400 words (approx. 9.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 89.95
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Abstract
This ten-page undergraduate paper is about D.H.Lawrence's book "Sons & Lovers" one of the landmark novels of the twentieth century. The paper discusses various aspects of the book but focuses mainly on the theme of sexuality in the book.
Term Paper # 42620 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Sons and Lovers" and "Wuthering Heights", 2002.
A comparative literary analysis of of "Sons and Lovers" by D. H. Lawrence and "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Bronte.
2,650 words (approx. 10.6 pages), 2 sources, $ 97.95
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Abstract
This paper will examine an analysis of "Sons and Lovers" by D. H. Lawrence and "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Bronte. By showing character, thematic, and stylistic approaches to novel writing in these works, we can compare and contrast the methods used.
Term Paper # 53086 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Lawrence?s ?Sons and Lovers? and Joyce?s ?Dubliners?, 2004.
This paper compares D.H. Lawrence?s "Sons and Lovers" and James Joyce?s ?Dubliners?, both published about 1913.
3,085 words (approx. 12.3 pages), 0 sources, $ 90.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that both ?Sons and Lovers? and ?Dubliners?, significant literary works in their own right, challenged social mores by including discussions of sexuality in their stories. The author points out that these books, which are among the early accounts of the social effects of industrialization, presented a realistic depiction of the social conditions of the poor and working class. This paper argues that these literary works broke from romantic and often contrived fiction, which was popular in the 19th century, ushering in the dawn of a more realistic writing style.

Table of Content
Sexuality and Love
Loneliness, Isolation and Decay
Modern Style
Conclusion

From the Paper
"To deal with this unspoken and incestuous tension, Paul Morel employs another Freudian concept -- transference. The recipients of Paul?s romantic and sexual attentions are Miriam the chaste neighbor and Clara, the sensual older woman. Even in these relationships, the presence of his mother looms large. Paul wants a woman to forcefully claim him, a task that the wallflower-like Miriam fails to fulfill. Clara, the older woman, is clearly a maternal substitute for Gertrude Morel. However, Clara?s husband cuts short any progress this relationship could make."
Term Paper # 58539 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Tristan and Iseult: The Greatest Lovers of All Time?, 2005.
Focuses on "The Romance of Tristan," a well-known English medieval romance.
1,754 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 56.95
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Abstract
The passion between Tristan and Iseult is the central topic of "Tristan". This paper argues that Tristan and Iseult's relationship induces the greatest passion that lovers can feel, but it is so focused and intense that it could not occur naturally, and it leads to misery, madness, and finally, death. The story shows how an overmastering love that radically oversteps social boundaries is not an ideal love at all; Tristan and Iseult are too miserable to warrant being among "the greatest lovers of all time". The paper begins by outlining the nature of the affair, and how, contrary to romantic convention, the lovers had little interest in one another when they first met. The paper discusses the almost unending pain the lovers feel, and the way they describe their love as though it is an illness. It describes how this pain leads to madness and a preoccupation with death and how the lovers ignore the outside world. The paper briefly compares Tristan and Iseult to Lancelot and Guinevere and concludes that, in "Tristan", Tristan and Iseult do not live up to the title of "one of the greatest pairs of lovers of all time."

From the Paper
"The pain and grief of Tristan and Iseut's love leads both of them to madness. When Tristan thinks Iseut has been unfaithful, "he almost went mad with fury." He then flees to the forest, where he "so lost his reason and his memory that he did not know what he was doing. Like a madman he began to tear the clothes he wore, so that he went around the forest of Morroiz more or less naked, crying and howling, leaping and running as though he were a mad beast." He becomes "mad and deranged." He behaves incourteously when Giglain speaks to him. Finally he becomes a fool at Tintagel. In the prose Tristan, Queen Iseut is often "almost demented" or "out of her mind." When the Queen hears of Iseut of the White Hands, she is "so distressed that she nearly went mad with grief. She wailed and lamented and cursed the hour that she was born more than a thousand times each day.""
Term Paper # 5200 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Sons and Lovers", 2001.
This paper discusses the character of the mother in D.H. Lawrence's "Sons and Lovers".
1,000 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 0 sources, $ 35.95
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Abstract
This paper is an analysis of the book "Sons and Lovers" by D.H. Lawrence. It focuses on the character of the mother, Mrs. Morel and discusses whether she was a good mother or not.

From the Paper
"In Sons and Lovers, D.H. Lawrence presents the compelling image of a woman who has physically given birth to her sons, but never released their souls from her womb. Mrs. Morel has failed in her own life, and become hopelessly trapped in a mundane working class existence. Yet when her children are born, it is a kind of second birth for her as well. She spends the remainder of her life teaching them to live and guiding their lives, because through them she can finally experience the creative and upwardly mobile existence she has always longed for. Even after her death, Paul will say that ?his soul could not leave her, wherever she was.?"
Term Paper # 59284 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Ten Thousand Lovers", 2005.
A critical review of "Ten Thousand Lovers" by Edeet Ravel.
1,110 words (approx. 4.4 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 38.95
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Abstract
This paper is a critical essay of the politics of representation of the characters in Israel in the novel, "Ten Thousand Lovers," by Edeet Ravel. Quotes from the novel and external sources are included ,along with a list of works cited. An analysis of the Hebrew and Arab relationship is also discussed.

From the Paper
"This novel uses Israel as a focal point of hybridity. This is a nation where many different cultures, languages, and opinions come together. It is essential to the success of this country that all the parts cooperate together to operate as a whole. Ravel does a beautiful job of illustrating this importance through the stories and actions of her characters. The provided history of linguistics and integration of italicized Middle-eastern culture into the text solidify the efforts of Ravel to represent the diversity of Israel. Everyone can be thought of as a ten thousand-faced dice. Upon one roll, one face will be completely exposed to the naked eye, and will be used to reprsent the dice as a whole."
Term Paper # 102976 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Arguers as Lovers, 2008.
This paper discusses the various characteristics of the debater and argues the values of arguers as lovers.
1,341 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 45.95
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Abstract
The following paper argues that it is preferable to be a lover rather than a rapist in debate. The writer also maintains that it is unwise to be a seducer to the extent that seducer invariably means dissembling and obfuscation. As the writer sees it, one should be an empathetic and thoughtful debater and also willing to see the humanity in all people with whom one comes into contact - however disagreeable that person and his or her perspectives may be. In the end, while the writer feels that we may all, on occasion, argue unilaterally, and should all be well-versed in all forms of debate, the writer maintains that arguing as a lover is the most important thing of all.

From the Paper
"In my own life, I have occasionally been a "rapist" when debating a point - at least as Brockriede defines aggressive, argumentative debate. However, I bristle at the charge even as I make it against myself. For one thing, to be impassioned about a point of view does not necessarily make one a "rapist" in any sense. Further, if one overwhelms an adversary in debate through strong logic, sharp analysis, clever argumentation, and a shower of statistics, the idea that such constitutes "rape" seems absurd; simply put, to believe in something sufficiently that one is passionate about it in debate (to the point that one even calls into question the veracity and legitimacy of a differing perspective) is simply to be an arguer of conviction - not necessarily an arguer consumed with the thought of intellectually "raping" an opponent."
Term Paper # 102880 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
A Psychoanalytic Approach to "Sons and Lovers", 2008.
An analysis of Paul Morel - a character in D.H. Lawrence's "Sons and Lovers."
2,013 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 63.95
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Abstract
This paper provides an overview of D.H. Lawrence's "Sons and Lovers" citing different psychoanalytic theories. The author explains that although there is a likeness between the life of D. H .Lawrence and the experiences of Paul Morel, the main character in the story, this essay examines Paul without commenting on any psychoanalytic symptoms regarding the creator.

From the Paper
"Critics like Alfred Kuttner have started a trend which study on the close relationship between Paul and his mother and interpret this within the Freudian Psychoanalysis as the Oedipal Complex. When examined trough the views of Freud, the mother-son relationship in "Sons and Lovers" is really the type of relationship which Freud names as "oedipal crisis" but it works differently in this novel. Naturally, the mother is the first love object for all boys. They want her attention and her love. Similarly, the two boys of Morels, Paul and his eldest brother William, see their mother as a divine creature and live as her worshippers. Paul imagines that he and his mother will live together when he is old enough to earn money by himself and when his father has died. Paul loves his mother so much that he wants to be with her and spend all of his time with her. To live with his mother by himself is his greatest desire. When Paul gets ill, he sleeps with his mother and for him this is more healing than the medicine.
"Paul loved to sleep with his mother. Sleep is still most perfect in spite of hygienists, when it is shared with a beloved. The warmth, the security and peace of soul, the utter comfort from the touch of the other, knits the sleep, so that it takes the body and soul completely in its healing.(Lawrence 67)
"The quotation above is important in that it shows how much Paul likes being with his mother. He feels secure and relaxed. Not only physically but also spiritually he feels himself healed.
"Of course, each of us loves our mothers too much and our mothers, less or more, are effective in our relationships with others, especially with women. In fact, loving mother too much or her dominance in the relations can not be assessed as an oedipal crisis. There should be a rival for the mother's affection; the father. The father is stronger and superior in many ways to the boy so at the beginning, they are jealous of their father and the father is seen as an enemy and is hated by the boys. Moreover, as Paul does, they sometimes wish him die."
Term Paper # 18675 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Sons and Lovers" by D. H. Lawrence, 1991.
This paper discusses the many autobiographical elements in the main character's relationships and novel's themes in the novel "Sons and Lovers" by D. H. Lawrence.
1,350 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 6 sources, $ 47.95
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From the Paper
"There are many autobiographical elements in the novel "Sons and Lovers" by D. H. Lawrence. Locations, people, and events which were part of Lawrence's actual life are clearly evident in the fictional account of character Paul Morel's relationships with his mother and his lovers. These elements also reflect major themes which are found in Lawrence's other works as well.

David Herbert Lawrence was born in Eastwood, England, on September 11, 1885. Eastwood is a mining town which is located near Nottingham Forest in central England. Like Paul Morel in Sons and Lovers, Lawrence's father was a coal miner and a drunkard. D. H. Lawrence was educated for a profession in teaching; however, his poor health forced him to become a writer instead. Lawrence's first novel, The White Peacock, was published in 1911. It was followed by numerous others, including ... "
Term Paper # 34461 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Sons and Lovers", 2002.
A discussion of the relationship between Paul's art and the industrial environment in D.H. Lawrence's "Sons and Lovers".
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 44.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between Paul's art and the industrial environment in which he lives. To do this, Paul must be viewed as an artist in terms of identity, not merely creation. He also represents Lawrence's view completely.
Term Paper # 86169 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Dog and Cat Lovers Compete, 2005.
A look at the differences between dog owners and cat owners.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 7 sources, $ 35.95
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Abstract
This paper reviews pets and their owners, with specific focus on the division between dog lovers and cat lovers. This paper goes on to define and analyze these differences.

From the Paper
"If a house has a furry pet, it is usually a dog or a cat, although some unusual homes boast more exotic creatures such as ferrets or even monkeys and others may contain a mouse or two. However, dogs and cats remain the favorite but have distinct differences that tend to divide people into two camps: the dog lovers or the cat lovers. I prefer dogs; they offer unconditional love and boisterous play to any home. Cats have some similar qualities, too. Despite this, the cat lovers and the dog lovers endlessly compete to determine which is the better furry friend. Let's take a look at some of their reasons. Cats are, for the most part, thought to be more independent and seem to require less care. For example, cats use a litter box, so the cat owner does not have to take her fuzzy kitty for cold winter strolls."
Term Paper # 5487 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
In Defense of Lucy Steele, 2001.
This paper is a look at the role of young, marriageable women in Jane Austen's novel "Sense and Sensibility".
1,615 words (approx. 6.5 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 52.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes the role of women in society, and the intense race for a proper marriage in "Sense and Sensibility" by Jane Austen. The author specifically uses the character of Lucy Steele as an example of the desperate measures taken by young women who must secure a good economic future for themselves. The paper pays close attention to the legal and economic roles of women under old English Law.

From the Paper
"While the character traits of Miss Steele seemingly leave much to be desired in the area of respectability by today?s standards, her actions can be clearly understood when the setting and time is examined during which Sense and Sensibility was written. In England during the early 1800s, the economic future of a young woman depended solely upon her entering into a marriage with a man of means. Life for women in the 1800s was completely dictated by male rule, and if a young woman was not successful in ?winning? a husband for herself, her future was bleak, indeed."
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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>