Stephen Crane Essay

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    distant past, discrimination was very prominent in American society. For example, Stephen Crane’s widely read short story, “The Blue Hotel”, exhibits many situations where discrimination drives the plot forward. Within the first few paragraphs of “The Blue Hotel,” the reader is promptly introduced to a situation in which discrimination occurs, due to the description of the Palace Hotel. The author, Stephen Crane, describes the color scheme of the hotel, which points out how different the hotel

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    Critique of “The Open Boat” Identification Crane, Stephen. 1969 “The Open Boat.” In the Portable Stephen Crane: A World of Shipwreck, 360 86. New York, New York: Penguin Group Viking Penguin. Summary of Main Idea In the short story “The Open Boat” by Stephen Crane, the story is about four men a captain, a cook, an oiler, and a correspondent. They find themselves in a lifeboat after their ship sinks off the coast of Florida. A rough wave crashes into the small boat and all the men are spilled

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    Comparison of Jack London and Stephen Crane. Jack London and Stephen Crane were both well-known literary naturalists who died at relatively early ages. Despite having lived such a short life, Jack London lived a full life. He has achieved wide popularity abroad, with his work being translated into more than fifty languages, as well as having written fifty literary works in eighteen years. His stories in the naturalistic mode still continue to influence writers today. Stephen Crane was also an accomplished

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    you are at starts to sink. How do you think people in the ship would react to this scenario? Stephen Crane, an American author, wrote the story “The Open Boat”. The story is about a boat sinking in the middle of the ocean with four men. The characters presented by Crane in the story are a cook, an oiler, a correspondent, and the captain. Although the story is narrated from the view of the correspondent; Crane gives the reader some particular characteristics of the captain. The goal of this paper is

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    Stephan Crane within The Red Badge of Courage once said: “The men dropped here and there like bundles. The captain of the youth's company had been killed in an early part of the action. His body lay stretched out in the position of a tired man resting, but upon his face there was an astonished and sorrowful look, as if he thought some friend had done him an ill turn.” (Source <insert correct citation in final draft…from http://www.shmoop.com/red-badge-of-courage/warfare-quotes-3.html>). The quote

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    Stephen Crane is considered to be one of the most influential and talented writers of the late 1800s because of his innovative writing style, vivid sense of irony and disturbing psychological realism. In his most popular work, The Red Badge of Courage, Crane exposes the human side of warfare; his book also serves as a testimony to the horrors of battle on any front. Crane’s works are studied in American Literature classes all throughout the world, his ability to make his stories believable coupled

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    A Walk Through Reality With Stephen Crane          Seeking and expressing the bare truth is often more difficult than writing stories of fiction.  This truth can be harsher to the reader than works of fiction;  it can make an author's desire to reveal the essence of society through characters the reader relates to risky and unpopular.  Stephen Crane wrote of ordinary people who face difficult circumstances that his readers could relate to (Seaman 148).  Crane sought to debunk the ideas that

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    Stephen Crane and The Civil War One year after the publication of The Red Badge of Courage Crane released a continuation to the narrative in the form of a short story.  “The Veteran” characterizes an elderly Henry Fleming who recalls his first exposure to the experience of war.  Of the battle he remembers, “That was at Chancellorsville” (Crane 529-531).  While Crane never explicitly states the name of the battle in The Red Badge, the incidents mentioned in “The Veteran” indicate that the protagonist

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    In the thought-provoking poem “War Is Kind,” poet Stephen Crane challenges romanticized ideas of war through devastating portrayals of the horrific results of cyclic violence and battle. While Crane’s sorrowful imagery describing the thousands of senseless deaths and the heartbreak of those left behind sufficiently expresses his anti-war views on its own, Crane also skillfully utilizes several other poetic techniques and devices to demonstrate his purpose on a deeper level. Specifically, Crane’s

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    survival. Stephen Crane’s The Open Boat is an exemplar of naturalist writing, as it shows most, if not all, of these characteristics. 1. Determinism According to

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