Miranda Richardson

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    What Is A Role Model

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    When you think of a role model, who comes to mind? Many would say an actor, singer, athlete, etc. My role model is my sister, Natasha Hobley. For those who don’t know Natasha personally, they probably wouldn’t understand why she is a role model to me. However, I find her to be a role model for many reasons. Not only is Natasha strong, fearless, and independent, but she is the most loving person I have ever met. Regardless of the trials that have been thrown at her, she always comes out on top, and

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    Persuasion is the last complete novel ever written by Jane Austen, it was originally published in 1818. At the initial sight, we feel that this book is a delightful story about Anne Elliot finding love with Captain Frederick Wentworth again. Accompanying her throughout this story is her arrogant father, dear friend Lady Russell, and her sisters. As we continue to read we see Jane Austen indirectly discourages the double standard women experience during this time period. I regard this novel is classical

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    Through history women have fought for equal rights and freedom. This tension is derived from men; society, in general; and within a woman herself. In the nineteenth century, women in literature were often portrayed as submissive to men. Literature of this period often characterized women as oppressed by society, as well as by the male influences in their lives. This era is especially interesting because it is a time in modern society when women were still treated as second-class citizens. Two interesting

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    Essay Joseph Andrews

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    Joseph Andrews In Fielding’s Joseph Andrews you see a variety of characters. They range from the shallow, vain and proud characters like Lady Booby and Mrs. Slipslop to the innocent, sincere, and virtuous like Joseph and Fanny. The presence of Lady Booby, and all of the people like her that are portrayed in the same selfish and dishonest way, bring out the importance of the clergy. Most of the clergy that we meet in the story don’t fit our vision of “holy people”. They didn’t fit Fielding’s

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    The epistolary novel, a novel that is written entirely in the form of letters, first gained traction in the early 18th century. Two epistolary novels that encapsulated this style very well were Dangerous Liaisons and Evelina. The similarities are also not solely in terms of writing style. Both of these authors use the letters that their characters write as a method of deception to obtain what they truly desire, even if it does not appear as such. Despite the divide that separates them in genre,

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    While reading A Moveable Feast, I felt immersed into Ernest Hemingway’s world and developed a better understanding of him with a human experience. This novel provides an inside look on both, Hemingway’s time in Paris in the 1920s and the time at the end of his life leading up to his premature death. If one is familiar with his life, and especially his later years, A Moveable Feast gives insight into his life at the time of writing his memoir. The text itself is about Paris, but the reflection comes

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    writing: the false chivalrous and neoclassical (and, by augmentation, privileged) methodology of Augustans, for example, Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift; and the famous, household exposition fiction of authors, for example, Daniel Defoe and Samuel Richardson. At this paper I will discuss points of view themes, characters, language, and significance for ten or eleven years, Joseph Andrews was in the administration of Sir Thomas Booby, the uncle of Squire Booby, who was hitched to the prudent Pamela

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    Dear Society: Unmasking the Narrative and Ideological Elements of Joseph Andrews After its publication in 1740, Samuel Richardson’s Pamela became wildly commercially successful and has been described as one of the earliest multi-media events, spawning translations, stage adaptations, merchandise, and literary responses (Turner 71). These literary responses largely imitated Richardson’s style, yet challenged the irreproachable virtue of his protagonist. They served to provide an alternate perspective

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    Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen, was written in perspective of the time era Jane Austen grew up in. At a young age, Austen was subjected to this very conformed society, where a suited woman was married into a family for money/estates. In an article written about Austen’s life, “Jane Austen and the Province of Womanhood,” by Alison Sulloway, a precise background of why Jane Austen wrote pride and prejudice is conveyed, and how it pertains to her life. In this article, she explains how Austen was

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    Arianne E. Maghirang 11- Dempsey Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice had drawn a clear picture of Georgian England. It is a story of love and marriage intersected by society and social ranks. She illustrates the convolutions of the past, when it was govern by strict etiquettes; divided by social ranks and moreover the significant roles of women in the society. I believed that Jane had beautifully sketch relatable characters, and showed me how they live by with these standards. She subtly points

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