hazy sheet of dark sky that always threatened rain. The Frenchman and the woman with him lounged inside, their winter coats watching from across the café. The train from Noyelle would arrive soon. It paused here briefly and carried on to Cayeux. The tracks ran along the edge of the village, overlooking the water. “I need a drink,” the man said, drained. “If it storms the train might be late.” “But last night…” the woman
society, and the evident repressed rights of a woman versus the active duties of a man. The story depicts the methods taken to cure a woman of her psychological state during Gilman’s time, and delineates the dominant cure of the time period, “the resting cure,” which encouraged the restraint of the imagination ("The Yellow Wallpaper: Looking Beyond the Boundaries") Gilman uses the unnamed narrator to represent the average repressed woman of her time and how her needs were neglected in an attempt
In Seneca Phaedra, Phaedra is portrayed as violent, wicked, emotionally unstable, lustful, and confuse woman. Phaedra In this story was caught in an act of forbidden love for Hippolytus, her stepson. Phaedra married to Theseus the king of Athens, where she explain that the reason she married Theseus because she was the victim of cupid arrows because she was the curse by Venus state that her ancestor throws Venus lover to Mars. Theseus, Phaedra husband went on a journey with Pirithous to the underworld
“The Yellow Wallpaper” was a great piece because of its meaning and message. The messages that Charlotte Perkin Gilman portrays in the story are very powerful and, given the biographical background, are clearly derived from her own experiences as a woman during the 19th century. I felt empathy for the main character as her depression worsened and her mental state progressively declined. I felt like the main character felt very isolated and unheard. No one seemed to be able to understand her issues
key and unlocked the door. She had spoken with some of the other handmaids in the castle to ready a bath for her in the closest room possible. Opening the door, Elizabeth came to the sight in front of her. She had only seen the princess a handful of times. Pocketing the key in her apron, Elizabeth entered the darkened room. Closing the door, she looked at the princess, her body dirtied with grime and seed from previous men who had taken her. Her hair was a matted and tangled mess, showing none of it's
didn 't have to go hunting or travelling, which could also be dangerous; packs were paranoid, and most would attack on sight. On the downside, she was expected to be productive all day, every day, whereas other pack members would only help out a few times a month to keep everything in the bunker working right. She was ashamed to think about it, but she wasn 't always treated as well as other pack members, either. Most people were very nice to her, but others thought she didn 't pull her weight. She
contrasting representations of women are shown through the influential Congolese woman, who is a personification of the jungle, and the Intended, who represents the Western women who are oblivious to the true horrors in modern day society. As we near the end of the novel, we meet a striking Congolese woman that is described as the jungle’s “tenebrous and passionate soul” (pg 168). During the first encounter with the wild woman, Marlot describes her glare at the crew as “like the wilderness itself, with
killed the lizardmen... but those questions could wait. It's time I learned the truth about this place. "Lead the way." Looking down at my body, I cast a spell again. "Grow." Once I was back to my normal height, the old woman didn't look so big anymore. "Oh my, that ability of yours is really quite convenient, hmm? You're quite the looker too, young man. Come along now." We walked past the bodies towards a room in the distance. It's time for
into society. This is a young woman cutting her hair in preparation for participating in war. It shows her giving up her traditional view of a woman to take on the appearance of a man to do something she desires. It shows that one cannot be accepted unless he or she is of a certain gender. Some sociological themes and concepts illustrated in this photograph
Shakespeare wrote many different works of literature during his time. One of which was Macbeth. Macbeth is a play that “dramatises the damaging physical and psychological effects of political ambition on those who seek power for its own sake,” (Barnes and Noble). Shakespeare often used symbolism in his works as he did in Macbeth. He used dead children to symbolize the end of a family being heir to the throne and as a symbol of the end of a family's lineage, and what lengths Macbeth will go to to