Microsoft Narrator

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    Stevenson says that the egg that the narrator sees is a symbol of new life. This egg is Aiken almost saying that he was new life, only ten years old, and he now had to start another new life, far away from everything that he knew. Also, the story has a focus on death because it focuses on the perception of an overwhelming amount of snow. The snow is a symbol of death because when snow falls, a lot of what is buried will end up dying. Another time that Aiken refers to death is when he talks about the darkness in The Room. "Of darkness against darkness. Within the room / It turned and turned, diving downward..."(Aiken, line 3-4) This diving of the darkness is almost put into a hellish tone. This sounds like someone has just died in front of Aiken…

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    Greasy Lake Analysis

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    refer to the location or time period of the story; it could also pertain to “climate and even the social, psychological, or spiritual state of the participants” (Literature, Glossary of Literary Terms, G26). The significance of setting is especially prevalent in the short story, Greasy Lake, by T.C. Boyle. Regarding the setting, though the time period is never outright mentioned it can be inferred form references used by the narrator that it is around the 1960’s when the story takes place, but…

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    Plague Of Doves Analysis

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    Before dissecting the larger cycle found within A Plague of Doves, establishing how the cycle functions within the novel on a smaller scale becomes necessary. This stems from Shamengwa’s violin story illustrating how a simple object can span generations and time. This particular violin Shamengwa “…treated [with] the reverence we accord our drums, which are considered living beings and require from us food, water, shelter, and love (197). It is this same violin that is stolen in the night, with…

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    He thinks about killing the dog for its warmth but is unable to do so with his frozen hands. Eventually, he gives up and accepts his death. However, the dog continues to travel to the camp, where it knows there is fire and food. In London 's famous short story "To Build A Fire", the man is unsuccessful in completing the journey to his desired destination because of the difficult situations nature brings to bear upon him. The extreme setting is obviously one of the most powerful and important…

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    allowing the reader to more readily follow his thoughts because they foreshadow the trajectory to McMurphy’s demise. When McMurphy knows why the nurse is so calm and collected with his brass attitude, he is forced to cowered in the face of truth (147). Bromden allows time and room for the reader to engage in why he speaks about his father. Thus when McMurphy experiences a setback in the fight against the nurse, the reader is prepared to think along the narrator 's reasoning, and the news does…

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    The literatures The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite and Like Water for Chocolate share similarities in the change of literature written in different versions. In the different versions of the literature, the change of words the authors use to narrate the literature changes the significance of the narration and the reader 's’ impressions of the narratives in which causes the reading to be misleading. The change of words in the different version of The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite and Like Water for…

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    narrative strategies such as the use of a third-person omniscient narrator with subjective first-person insight, a temporal perspective and spatial perspective work effectively to engage the reader with…

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    impact of Nick Carraway 's narration and its importance to the The Great Gatsby in more ways than one. (Background) The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, features the wealthy lifestyle of Long Island individuals during the 1920 's. Throughout the novel, inevitable deception is brought upon the characters due to chased dreams, lost love, and the standards of their society. However, the entire novel is told through the perspective of an outsider to the East and West Egg of Long Island,…

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    can only rely on everything the narrator is telling us. In the first couple of minutes of the film, the audience is transported into a frame narrative otherwise known as a story within a story. This entire film is based off of the memory of a man being told a story from our main character, Zero Moustafa. This is likely to be an unreliable source were many details may be left out or misconstrued. The Grand Budapest Hotel creates distinctions of memory, uses setting to emphasize this distinction,…

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    Many times the narrator of a story is trusted and the reader gets very crucial information from him or her. But when the narrator turns out to be unreliable and the reader can’t really tell what’s true and untrue, it can get very hard to find the ‘truth’. Though an unreliable narrator make it very difficult to follow the story, along the way they usually ends up revealing more about themselves than they mean to. In the stories “The Tell Tale Heart” and “Cathedral”, the unreliable narrator really…

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