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The American Dream
by Mariana Garcia, Nov 19, 2008
Over the years, many American authors such as Frederick Douglass and William Apess have come to respond to inequality and dehumanization by writing passionately, and intelligently, about their American Dream in hopes of ensuring equality and freedom for all Americans.
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The Travels of Milkman Dead
by Gonzo13, Nov 14, 2008
A look at how the character Milkman Dead develops throughout Toni Morrison's novel Song of Solomon.
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The Upper Crust Has Grown Stale
by Gonzo13, Nov 14, 2008
A look at how Thomas Hardy portrays the elite of society in his novel Tess of the D'Urbervilles.
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Character: Moll Flanders
by Tony Downing, Nov 11, 2008
The age–old business of prostitution may have changed little from the early 18th century, as this tale depicts in great clarity. But this is not merely a classic story, it is historical too.
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History of African Literature
by Ikee, Oct 26, 2008
African Literature, although unrecorded, dates back to ancient history. This is a research on the history and related concepts of how their culture began through their writings.
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The Journey Back: Images of Africa, Africanism, and Motherhood in Toni Morrison and Alice Walker’s Literature
by Venusflytrap, Oct 21, 2008
In many literary works of African-American women writers, Africa functions at once as a point of origin for the reinscription of history and as a rich source of tropes and literary imagery. These women writers have consciously attempted to challenge and contradict the preconceptions and stereotypes about African societies that have existed throughout most parts of "represented" history.
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Finnish Literature Classics
by Joel G Valkila, Sep 24, 2008
A summary of the literature history of Finland.
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How to Develop a Better Understanding of French Literature (1100s to 1700s)
by Dawn Michel Ryan, Aug 7, 2008
It is important, especially when developing as a writer, that you learn to appreciate all forms of literature. Even if you do not aspire to eventual authorship, understanding various styles and cultural aspects of literature is an enjoyable pastime. This brings the history of French literature to light.
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Creative Flow in the 21st Century
by Sheridan Truth, May 30, 2008
The trends of American literature, and what is to come in the twenty-first century.
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A Modern Molly Bloom
by slimkit, May 29, 2008
In 2004 a British newspaper asked readers to come up with a new version of Molly Bloom's famous soliloquy; the soliloquy takes up the last 56 pages of the novel Ulysses by James Joyce; there is no punctuation apart from capital letters at the beginning of paragraphs and as there is no punctuation; some of the words look strange without apostrophes and you have to figure out when the end of a sentence happens; there are some colloquial words too which should add to the fun in this, my short, modern Molly.
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