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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
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Search results on "METAMORPHOSIS BUTTERFLY":

Term Paper # 66978 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Metamorphosis of the Butterfly, 2006.
An overview of the four stages of a butterfly's metamorphosis.
1,609 words (approx. 6.4 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 52.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that there are four concrete stages of metamorphosis in the life of a butterfly, listing these stages as the egg stage, the caterpillar/larva stage, the pupa/chrysalis, and finally the butterfly stage in which the complete butterfly emerges. The paper describes the processes and changes that take place in each of these stages and points out how the final stage of the butterfly's metamorphosis has become the universal image for various transformations.

From the Paper
"The lifecycle of the butterfly, namely metamorphosis, is a symbol of transformation. The process of Metamorphosis has four stages; each stage can be used to symbolize the life process on a diacritical level. The essence of this change of form can clearly be seen when one observes an ungainly, crawling caterpillar morph into a delicate, brightly colored flying butterfly. It is crucial to note that not only is this process beautiful, it is complex as well. Metamorphosis is controlled by a blend of genetic messages and hormones residing inside the organism, though it can also be influenced by environmental factors such as diet and temperature (Metamorphosis, 2). Additionally, Metamorphosis is defined as a marked and more or less abrupt developmental change in the form or structure of an animal occurring subsequent to birth or hatching."
Term Paper # 7864 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Beauty of the Monarch Butterfly, 2002.
This paper is a detailed essay about the Monarch Butterfly and the problems of preventing its extinction.
2,745 words (approx. 11.0 pages), 11 sources, APA, $ 82.95
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Abstract
This paper describes the Monarch Butterfly in great detail, such as why does it have the bright colors and what do they mean? It states that the life of a Monarch Butterfly is quite complicated. The Monarch Butterfly is watched closely to prevent it from being extinct.

Table of Contents
Butterflies are Invertebrates
The Monarch?Danaus Plexippus
The Life Cycle of a Monarch
Lincoln Brower and the Monarch Butterfly
Brad Darrach and the Monarch Butterfly
The Monarch Butterfly Will It Be an Endangered Species?
The El Rosario Monarch Reserve
More Monarch Butterflies Killed and Solutions

From the Paper
"The butterfly comes from the Lepidoptera, which is a Greek word meaning that the wings are covered in scales. Butterflies have compound eyes on either side of the head. The eyes are and made up of thousands of lensed-eyes called ?ommatidia?. They are not able to see fine detail, but are able to detach if they have a predator."
Term Paper # 6122 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Metamorphosis", 2003.
The following paper examines Franz Kafka?s short story ?Metamorphosis? focusing on Kafka?s emphasis on the metamorphosis of relationships - familial and societal.
1,005 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 0 sources, APA, $ 35.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at Kafka?s ?Metamorphosis? , focusing on the protagonist Gregor Samsa and his metamorphosis into an insect. The author examines how Gregor?s family discover hidden abilities and motivations towards personal betterment and a financially secure lifestyle.

From the Paper
"Prior to the metamorphosis, Gregor was the center of attention of his family?he was the sole breadwinner. His business having gone under five years ago, his father was relegated to physical and emotional inactivity. His mother was an asthmatic, and his sister Grete was still young. He had great dreams: to rid his family of his father?s financial commitments, and have his sister, a fair violin player, admitted into the ?Conservatorium despite the great expenses that would entail.?
Term Paper # 7780 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Kafka's 'Metamorphosis', 2002.
A discussion on Kafka's 'Metamorphosis' focusing on his emphasis on the metamorphosis of relationships - familial and societal.
1,570 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 51.95
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Abstract
The following paper discusses the way in which Kafka through the character of Gregor Samsa, attempts to resolve his conflicts with a patriarchal and overbearing father, conflicts that plagued him all his life. The writer argues that Franz spent his whole life in his father?s shadow and 'Metamorphosis' thus is argued to be an expression of his relationship with his father.

From the Paper
"Franz?s father?s chronic cruelty is also evident in the guise of Gregor Samsa?s father. While his mother and sister demonstrate concern and despair, Gregor?s father?s interaction with his now metamorphosed son are acts that could potentially kill Gregor. The first instance is the initial reaction the father has: he grabs the nearby broom and sweeps Gregor who tumbles back into the room slamming into a wall; the second instance is even more murderous: the father flings apples with the intention of killing ?this bug? (Kafka, p. 122); Gregor manages to evade them all, except one. The apple lies lodged (rotting) in his back; and the resulting injuries may have been the cause of Gregor?s death.
One can imagine Franz?s sensitive being always plagued by guilt and conflict. The physical burden of being at the mercy of his father?s cruelty and ridicule, the burden of maintaining the integrity of being himself, and the burden of being like his father. While Franz does succeed in becoming alpha male in the story, it is possible that he did not particularly relish this role?he did not derive his identity from his malenes."
Term Paper # 65056 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis", 2006.
An analysis of the metamorphosis in the relationship between Gregor and his sister Grete in Franz Kafka's story, "The Metamorphosis".
1,861 words (approx. 7.4 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 59.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that while "The Metamorphosis" by Franz Kafka focuses mainly on the transformation of Gregor, the main character in the story, it is about the changes that occur within each character in the story as well as the changes that take place in the relationships between the characters. In particular, the paper focuses on the changed relationship of Gregor and his sister Grete.

From the Paper
"In chapter one we only hear Grete's voice and she is soft and nurturing. As the family yells at Gregor to get up and hurry to work, she gently implores "Gregor? Is something the matter with you? Do you want anything?" She cares for him very deeply and, while Mr. and Mrs. Samsa and Gregor's manager plead with him to come out of his room, "in the room on the right his sister began to sob." The love Grete feels for her brother is reciprocated by Gregor. This is learned as Gregor is facing his manager and feeling so hopeless as to how to communicate to him that despite his condition, he understands everything clearly. Gregor longs for his sister to help him but she has gone to fetch the doctor."
Term Paper # 4385 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Madame Butterfly, 2001.
Sight and blindness, reality and constructions in Hwang's "M. Butterfly".
2,255 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 1 source, $ 69.95
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Abstract
The paper discusses figures of sight and blindness used in the play "M Butterfly" examining Gallimard and Song's relationship in the greatest detail. A look at the Western depiction of Eastern women.

From the paper:

"David Henry Hwang uses figures of seeing and not-seeing to depict the relationship between the East and the West in his play M. Butterfly, an inversion of Puccini?s opera Madame Butterfly. Gallimard can turn a blind eye to the fact that Song is a man in disguise because of his deeply-ingrained, stereotypically Western fantasy of Eastern women as submissive, fragile ?Madame Butterflies.? Gallimard is so enamored of the Madame Butterfly fantasy that he cannot see past it, and he is blinded to the obvious fact that his ?Butterfly? is a far cry from the original."
Term Paper # 6368 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Franz Kafka's "Metamorphosis", 2002.
An analysis of Gregor Samsa?s struggles in "The Metamorphosis".
1,590 words (approx. 6.4 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 52.95
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Abstract
An exploration of how Gregor's metamorphosis into a giant insect in Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" parallels the process that the elderly go through when they lose their independence. It contains extensive and specific references to the text which are used throughout the paper, as well as quotes from outside sources which are used to back up the main points.

From the Paper
"Gregor Samsa?s life changes drastically one morning when he awakens to discover that he has been turned into a giant bug in Franz Kafka?s The Metamorphosis. The metamorphosis he goes through is not only physical, but also mental, emotional, and social as he takes on many of the characteristics of someone who has grown old and has become a burden to their family. All the characters in this story are transformed in one way or another throughout the course of the novella, but Gregor?s transformation is the most obvious and extensive in all aspects. When the roles of the family are reversed and Gregor is the one being taken care of, we get to see the true nature of the rest of his family and, one might argue, an aspect of human nature that may not be particularly pleasant."
Term Paper # 53322 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Metamorphosis", 2004.
The life of Franz Kafka as represented in his work, ?The Metamorphosis?.
1,805 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 58.95
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Abstract
This paper explains how the character of George Samsa in "The Metamorphosis" is an image of Kafka himself. In ?The Metamorphosis?, Kafka offers a view of his internal self through a story of a man who changes externally. The story told is about a young man named Gregor Samsa, who develops into a ?monstrous vermin.? Gregor?s experiences as an insect represent Kafka?s own experiences as a young man, especially showing how he feels about himself and how he views his family.

From the Paper
"Kafka describes how he is not like others in Letter to His Father. In that work, he describes his father as having strength, eloquence, endurance, and intelligence (Kafka, Letter to His Father). Before going any further, it is necessary to recognize the important role a father figure plays in a man?s life. Essentially, the father figure shows the son what a man should be, with the son then assessing themselves by comparison with the father. This is the psychological process of identity formation that occurs during the teenage years. Psychologist Erikson describes how individuals first develop a sense of who they are and then question who they are, with this especially involving comparing themselves to role models. In Kafka?s case, he develops a sense of who he is and realizes he has none of the traits that his father has. Kafka describes how he views himself, saying that he is ?fretful, melancholy, untalkative, dissatisfied and sickly? (ClassicReader.com). As can be seen, Kafka sees himself as almost a complete opposite to his father. With his father acting as a role model for what a man should be, Kafka is left feeling like he is a failure as a man. In this way, Kafka sees himself as being not like others, with this resulting in other people rejecting him."
Term Paper # 36801 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Metamorphosis", 2002.
A literary review of "Metamorphosis" by Frank Kafka.
1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 9 sources, $ 53.95
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Abstract
A paper about the story of "Metamorphosis" by Frank Kafka. The breadwinner of the family becomes the unwanted, the abominable, and the unforgivable member of the family through the process of metamorphosis into a bug, a cockroach, or insect.
Term Paper # 75382 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Metamorphosis" and "A Rose for Miss Emily", 2006.
This essay compares the similarities between the protagonists in Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" and Faulkner's "A Rose for Miss Emily."
1,168 words (approx. 4.7 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 40.95
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Abstract
In this paper, the author compares and contrasts the protagonists in Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" and Faulkner's "A Rose for Miss Emily." Although the stories are quite different, neither protagonist deals with real life particularly well. A major contrast, however, is the way these characters deal with their challenges. Miss Emily gets away with her crime by becoming more and more rigidly what the townspeople expect her to be. Gregor from "The Metamorphosis" copes with turning into a cockroach by accepting it and learning to live life as a bug. Both characters have to cope with unacceptable circumstances, but do it in markedly different ways.

From the Paper
""The Metamorphosis" is not only about a man's difficulty facing a bizarre reality. It tells a remarkable story of personal alienation from society. It also makes a political statement: Kafka's character is a salesman, but Kafka was a socialist. The story could be interpreted to suggest that it was the character's job, working for a man who treated him more like a cog in a machine than a human being, a job that caused his metamorphosis into something non-human. The fact that the character doesn't fully recognize how much he has changed suggests that the character is still an extension of humankind. This metamorphosis suggests that as a human or a bug, the main character was of no real importance except for what he could produce for the capitalist system in which he worked. He sold goods for his company and paid off his parents' debts with his earnings.

Miss Emily was in an opposite situation: she was viewed as such a significant person that laws were waived for her, with disastrous results. No one realized her dead suitor lay in bed in one of her upper rooms until Miss Emily herself died. Ironically, both person's circumstances allowed them to hold on to delusional beliefs. In Kafka, the character goes straight from turning into a cockroach to attempting to figure out how to live as a giant bug. In Faulkner's story, Miss Emily deludes herself that it was acceptable for her to murder her suitor. The implication is that Miss Emily sleeps in the same bed as the dead man. Society expectations in both stories have allowed both characters to think quite irrationally."
Term Paper # 93598 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"M. Butterfly", 2007.
A discussion on the exotic, feminine Orient in the Western imagination, as depicted in David Henry Hwang's drama "M. Butterfly".
1,228 words (approx. 4.9 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 41.95
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Abstract
The paper discusses how "M. Butterfly" is a play about the power of stereotypes to do harm, both to the person and the culture they are inflicted against, and also against the people who hold such stereotypes. The paper describes how, at the end of the play, Gallimard is destroyed because he realizes his life was based upon a lie, just as China was harmed by the lies and exploitation of Western colonialism. The paper examines how the conflict of gender, national, and identity issues are dramatically depicted in David Hwang's "M. Butterfly," when the French diplomat Rene Gallimard falls in love with a feminine image of the East, in the persona of the actress Song Liling.

From the Paper
"Gallimard has a psychological as well as a national and gender based need to see Song as feminine. Thus, the gender disguises of the play do not merely invert stereotypes of male and female, Asian and West. They also destroy the security of Gallimard's own identity as a strong, male Westerner with power. Song Liling is not only a man. Song uses Gallimard's own cultural stereotypes to exploit the Frenchman. Gallimard begins the play thinking he is the Western, White man taking advantage of the virginal 'Oriental' maiden. But like the opera's "Madam Butterfly," Gallimard ends the play abandoned, disgraced, cut off from his countrymen and finally suicidal. Thus Gallimard's own secure identity as a powerful man has been so undercut, he cannot live with himself, because he no longer knows who he is as a person."
Term Paper # 28848 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Metamorphosis", 2002.
An examination of the issues of family in Franz Kafka's "Metamorphosis?.
1,818 words (approx. 7.3 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 58.95
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Abstract
In his short story ?Metamorphosis,? Kafka goes beyond the morphing of the protagonist Gregor Samsa from human to insect-a huge dung beetle. While the story is an existential commentary on the family and society this essay concentrates on Gregor?s relationships with his family. It also explains how and why "Metamorphosis" is quasi-autobiographical - of all Kafka?s stories, this is the one that most mirrors his life-at least symbolically.

From the Paper
"In a nutshell, the story of Gregor Samsa a hard working salesperson finds that he has metamorphosed into a disgusting insect akin to a bug?complete with a carapace. (Yolen, 1978) Despite this fantastic misfortune, he continues to live and survive clinging to modicums of optimism and dignity. The physical metamorphosis also results in the gradual eroding of his standing in the family. His father always reacts with horror and wishes physical harm (even death if the father can help it). Gregor?s mother, forever subservient to the father cannot rid herself of her maternal feelings. She is protective of Gregor, but is ineffectual in what she might want for her son?or at least the creature that used to once be her son. In Grete, his sister, Gregor feels a protective kinship; he is successful in drawing out of Grete the most active sympathy. Grete cares for Gregor as much as she can until she cannot help herself. Her rejection of Gregor is the final blow. The injury (caused by the father) and the heart break of rejection results in Gregor?s death. In a final affront to his dignity, Gregor is not even given a decent burial. He is left to the cleaning lady to sweep his remains up with the rest of the trash."
Term Paper # 33206 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Metamorphosis", 2002.
This paper discusses Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis".
1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 8 sources, $ 53.95
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Abstract
Thispaper examines characterization, irony, and symbolism in Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis".
Term Paper # 32614 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
An Analysis of "The Metamorphosis" by Franz Kafka., 2002.
Literal and analytical interpretation of the psychological themes in "The Metamorphosis".
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 1 source, $ 44.95
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Abstract
The following paper is an analysis of the story "The Metamorphosis" written by Franz Kafka. It discusses the summary and the characters as well as the underlying psychological themes present in the book and presents an interpretation that is both literal and analytical.
Term Paper # 34821 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Metamorphosis", 2002.
A discussion of the concept of encountering the other in Franz Kafka's short novel "The Metamorphosis".
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 1 source, $ 44.95
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Abstract
This paper examines and analyzes the short novel "The Metamorphosis" by Franz Kafka and how it portrays encountering the other. The author considers who or what the other is, how the other is perceived and depicted, what aspects of the other are emphasized, what the nature of the encounter with the other is, and what results from the encounter.
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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>