• A Comparison of “Barn Burning” and Light in August

    Veronica Flores “Barn Burning” (496), and Light in August were written between 1928 and 1936, considered “a period of extraordinarily sustained creative activity” (Millgate 1) in William Faulkner’s career. In Faulkner’s choice of setting, tone, character and writing […]

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  • Male Womb Envy in Frankenstein and Brave New World

    Samantha Moline Sigmund Freud contributed many ideas which have had a great impact on society and one of them was his famous Penis Envy hypothesis through which is said that women felt inferior to men because they […]

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  • The Good Soldier Svejk: The Way It Is And The Way It Should Be

    Paul Balsavich One of the most famous and widely read novels published after the First World War was The Good Soldier Svejk written by Jaroslav Hasek, a Czech in Bohemia under the old Austro-Hungarian Empire. It has […]

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  • Identity and Happiness

    Nichole Hermann Questions of identity are at the heart of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, and Arthur Miller’s, Death of a Salesman. Both authors created characters who were searching for the American dream with deeply flawed […]

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  • The Glimmer Twins: F. Scott Fitzgerald and Jay Gatsby

    Carrie Grachowski Many times character development comes from an author’s personal life and this can clearly be seen in the works of F. Scott Fitzgerald and, more specifically, in his novel The Great Gatsby. Scott Fitzgerald […]

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  • Evil in The Brothers Karamazov

    Angeline Tomcik Dostoyevksy in The Brothers Karamazov is obsessed with the question of why evil exists and what this fact tells about the nature of life and God. This is done through the kind-hearted Alyosha. Dostoyevsky’s […]

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  • A Dissenting View of the Great Dissenter

    Angela Bogat Voltaire is often credited with being an inspiration for the French Revolution and a writer who as much as anyone in history helped create a climate for social change to bring about a more […]

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  • Gulliver’s Travels: A Moral and Political Handbook

    Edwardo Hernandez Every society has an identity that is shaped by the moral behavior of its citizens and the rules and regulations imposed by its government. In Gulliver’s Travels Swift uses each part to form a basis […]

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  • Jonathan Swift’s Woman Problem

    Rita Hoffman Jonathan Swift has often been characterized as a misogynist in literary criticism. Indeed, he tends to categorize women, in his writings, as ladies, whores, servants or virgins, never presenting them as a whole person. Seldom […]

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  • The Individual and Society: Three Narratives in Frankenstein

    Professor Margo Gariepy “Alas!  why  does  man  boast  of  sensibilities  superior  to  the  brute; it  only  renders  them  more  necessary  beings.”  –Frankenstein Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is the story of three individuals and their search forplace in the […]

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