being thankful essay

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    Heavy Versus Light Reading: The Decipherment of Literary and Non-Literary Texts In attempting to discriminate between the nature of a "literary" text and a "non-literary" text, a metaphor from Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being comes to mind. Especially in considering this same novel in contrast with a novel such as Danielle Steele's Vanished, the idea of lightness versus heaviness presents itself, and with it, a new way of approaching the decipherment of any high/low dichotomy

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    All the Wrong Reason to Marry      The work that will be discussed in this essay is the “The Importance of Being Ernest” and it was written by Oscar Wilde. The topic of marriage in this play involves the manipulative desires and dishonest values of marriage. The female characters in this story including Cecily, Gwendolen, and Lady Bracknell are all guilty of scheming and controlling marriage. The desires and mentalities of these women are identical to the women of the Victorian

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    Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest Webster’s dictionary defines earnest as “characterized by or proceeding from an intense and serious state of mind.” This definition is subject to total upheaval by Oscar Wilde in The Importance of Being Earnest. The title suggests a treatise on the value of solemnity in everyday life. However, Wilde presents us with an ironic play that leaves us with the opposite lesson. None of the characters benefit from propriety. The least serious characters

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    cheap as beast’s… ” (2, 4, 297-300) Moreover, it is also very unwise to do because if by any chance his daughters just wanted his power instead of being his daughter, he would eventually become an old, poor, childless man. All of these events noticeably happened in the play because of his lack of sight about the knowledge of “the Great Chain of Being”. When Goneril and Regan, Lear’s two evil daughters, kick him out into a storm, he has truly become a vulnerable old man with nothing left as he says

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    The Importance of Being Earnest is regarded as one of the most successful plays written by Oscar Wilde, a great 19th century playwright. Oscar Wilde deals with something unique about his contemporary age in this drama. It addresses Victorian social issues, French theatre, farce, social drama and melodrama. All these factors influenced the structure of the play in a large scale. This play is basically a Victorian satirical drama showcasing the social, political, economic and religious structural changes

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    powerful and highly hypocritical, appearances were everything. As stated by Gwendolyn Fairfax in the play The Importance of Being Earnest, “Style, not sincerity, is the vital thing” (783). And it is this play, written by Irish playwright Oscar Wilde, which mocks and exposes the carefully constructed façade of British high society. As with any play, though, The Importance of Being Earnest has two settings: then and now. The challenge for the production team at Ball State University

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    Being John Malkovich

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    The movie Being John Malkovich, revolves around the dysfunctional life of an unhappy married couple and the absurd changes that take place in their lives, upon the discovery of a portal leading into John Malkovich’s subconscious mind. It follows an unemployed puppeteer, Craig Schwartz, on his quest to gain the recognition he desires. Craig Schwartz acquires a job as a file clerk for Lester Corp, located on the 7-1/2th floor. It is there that he discovers a secret door with a portal behind a filing

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    challenges he faces lead him into a heroic ending and saving a damsel in distress. Similarly, in The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, the characters face a journey of self discovery through varying archetypes. Jack Worthing is a dreamer, Cecily and Gwendolen struggle to play the innocent child role, and Ernest is prince charming. The archetypes portrayed in The Importance of Being Earnest epitomize a journey with self discovery and a resolution worth defending. Jack Worthing lived a double

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    “The Importance of being Earnest”, screenwriter Oscar Wilde explores the theme of wordplay and dramatic irony. Mr. Wilde is a talent poet with multiple written works under his belt, as stated on the site WWW.wilde-online.com. He was a Victorian writer that did poke fun at his own culture with his satirical writing style. From his writing, he is using humor to critique the attitude of the standards of the socialites around him. This is especially true with “The importance of being Earnest” due to its

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    and wonder. Discovery can be emotional, creative, intellectual, physical and spiritual. These discoveries ultimately result in new worlds and perspectives, new ideas and future possibilities and new understandings. My related text is the Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky. Through becoming friends with Sam and Patrick, Charlie the protagonist in this novel, is introduced to an entirely different world from what he is used to. Charlie goes from having almost no friends, to have a whole

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