Cubital tunnel

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    Through The Tunnel

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    “Through the Tunnel”, written in the early 50’s by Doris Lessing, is a short story filled with literary devices that create a coming of age story. On the surface, the story is about a boy named Jerry, an eleven-year-old boy, who is being raised by his widowed mother. They are on vacation on a beach at their usual annual spot. Jerry is faced with a challenge he desperately wants to overcome, by any means necessary. Doris Lessing uses symbolism and bildungsroman to portray the theme of coming of age

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    Through The Tunnel

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    Through the Tunnel by Dorris Lessing is a short story about a boy named Jerry, who vacations with his widow mother to a beach and on his own, faces an obstacle of passing through a tunnel as an act of proving himself worthy. Jerry overcomes this challenge by spending his vacation preparing himself through sheer determination, “On the day before they left, he would do it. He would do it if it killed him, he said defiantly to himself”(Lessing 206). Lessing’s choice of setting in the book, the tunnel, the

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    Through The Tunnel

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    This is what Jerry does. In “Through the Tunnel” by Doris Lessing, Jerry takes a dangerous risk by going through this tunnel underwater near the bay. He sees some boys going through it and decides he wants to try it as well. Once he goes through this tunnel, he comes out different. Jerry is a believable character because he takes a risk to feel acceptance, independence, and maturity. One of the things Jerry felt after he went through the underwater tunnel, is acceptance. At the beginning of the story

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    In Doris Lessing’s “Through the Tunnel”, Lessing uses imagery in order to show the audience that the transition from childhood to adulthood is a quest in itself. Lessing reveals that Jerry’s quest isn’t just to swim at the bay, but is to become a man by suggesting that swimming through the tunnel represents manhood and to become like the boys at the bay who Jerry idolizes as being men. It is evident that Lessing incorporates explicit overtones into her writing because in the text “It’s All About

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    “Experience which destroys innocence, Also leads one back to it.” From James Arthur baldwin “The Scarlet Ibis” by James Hurst and “The Tunnel” By Doris Lessing both present two characters that attempted to benefit themselves and as a result they experience a transformation from Innocence to awareness. The narrator in “The Scarlet Ibis” has a brother that goes by the name of Doodle. Doodle was not expected to live long and his dad even buys him a coffin because he was born very sickly but miraculously

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    TLS=10m); (2) CFD LES at location 7 (TI=30%, TLS=15m); (3) CFD LES at location 3 (TI=25%, TLS=10m). The results of mean and peak pressure distribution over the roof surface for each cases are compared with full-scale field measurements and wind tunnel data within the next sub-sections accordingly. Comparison of Mean and Peak Pressure Coefficients Figure 13 represents the counters of mean surface pressure coefficients for full-scale CFD

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    Through The Tunnel

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    In the story “Through the Tunnel” by Doris Lessing the main character Jerry is young and sees a group boys do something that he finds interesting, Going through the tunnel. The problem is he is too young and too weak to do it. The boys were Judging and excluding him and it made him sad. Jerry used the negative actions of the french boys as motivation to set a goal of swimming through the tunnel before he leaves. Although Jerry is not physically strong or mature he has a large amount of mental

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    Imagine waking up and not remembering a single thing. You’re digging in the past, but the past doesn’t want to be exposed. Daniel, also known as “Hank”, is a lost boy who woke up in Penn station knowing nothing. Not his name, where he’s from, why he’s where is is. Nothing. All he has is a “walden” book as his guide and the memory of a tragic accident that happened with him and his little sister Rosie. Along the way from running, he runs into these two other teenagers. Nessa and Jack. They work for

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    A coming-of-age story, Doris Lessing's "Through the Tunnel" employs three major symbols to connote Jerry's state of being and his rite of passage. In the exposition of the narrative, as Jerry is with his mother... Read the Rest of this Answer for Free Please view an ad from one of our sponsors to see the rest of this answer. Get Answer Then, when Jerry does swim out to the rocks and the wild bay, he leaves the protection of his mother--a "speck of yellow under an umbrella." When he sees the native

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    of strength and stability, but a small percentile of people would disagree. Doris Lessing would fit into the few, as the motif of rocks in her short story, “Through the Tunnel”, are associated with society inflicting modifications and instability upon individuals. The main character Jerry’s initial goal is to travel through a tunnel in order to fit in with the older and cooler kids. During his journey, he encounters or utilises rocks in three different instances, which each represents a way how an

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