CHECK THESE SAMPLES OF The Roles of the lead Protagonists and Conflicts in the Novels
The Big Sleep, written by Raymond Chandler in 1939, was the first in a series of novels, featuring the detective Philip Marlowe as the main protagonist.... This paper will discuss this particular portrayal of the women characters in The Big Sleep and The Dharma Bums, comparing and contrasting how the female characters test the masculinity and celibacy of the male protagonists in different ways.... Although, various characters get ‘sucked' into it, ‘drive' forward the story and even gets murdered, the main ‘catalysts' who initiate the deception and lead to the murders are the two daughters of General Sternwood, Vivian and Carmen, who exhibit characteristics of femme-fatale....
5 Pages
(1250 words)
Essay
Canada is a land whose occupants could trace their origins to immigrants coming from different parts of the world most of which came from Europe.... Nowadays, the country is seeing a wave of immigrants from North America and Asia as well.... … Set in the immigrant community of Winnipeg's North End, Under the Ribs of Death follows the progress of young Sandor Hunyadi as he struggles to cast off his Hungarian background and become a "real Canadian....
7 Pages
(1750 words)
Book Report/Review
This paper highlights that the novels The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain, Emma, by Jane Austen, and My Name is Asher Lev, by Chaim Potok, each has moral conflicts.... Three very important literary elements that are used in these novels are characterization, theme, and conflict.... Also, a prevailing theme in all three of these novels is the influence on society on peoples' actions because of society's expectations.... Finally, each of these novels also has an internal conflict within the protagonist which greatly affects their actions....
6 Pages
(1500 words)
Essay
… This discussion talks that desperately struggling to break free from the current situations, the protagonists in the novels of Martin Amis' "Time's Arrow" and Sarah Waters' "Tipping the Velvet" are not made to stay put.... The paper describes Amis and Waters, that are two brilliant, young writers who have written the novels set in the past – "Time's Arrow" during World War II and "Tipping the Velvet", in the nineteenth century.... The readers are transformed to be staunch supporters of the protagonists as they have become heavily influenced or “brainwashed” into taking their side as the protagonist's fight....
9 Pages
(2250 words)
Essay
hellip; Despite the fact that the playwright has taken a very specific and limited subject as a matter of treatment in the drama, consequently, within such limited scope of interpretation he also has attempted to show different layers of human existence and how impulsive or biased judgments, blinded by pride or prejudice can lead to catastrophe.... also has attempted to show different layers of human existence and how impulsive or biased judgments, blinded by pride or prejudice can lead to catastrophe....
10 Pages
(2500 words)
Book Report/Review
the novels of Bronte sisters, George Eliot, Jane Austen throw the light of the contemporary status of women in society.... Marriage is the most important event in the life of a woman in almost all conservative cultures.... Simone De Beauvoir observes that “marriage is the destiny traditionally offers to woman by destiny....
12 Pages
(3000 words)
Essay
he function of male and female characters plays a large role in both of the novels and it is, therefore, necessary to establish the nature of the society and culture in which they live.... Finally, evolution will be considered, by examining how each author presents the different roles of genders, in order to establish what this representation says about gender roles within society....
17 Pages
(4250 words)
Research Paper
Authors of both these novels have not only raised their rebellious voice against convention form of social existence but women have emerged in their novels as entities that have provided a special focus on individualism, going beyond the realm of orthodox socio-cultural discourse.... t suggests shortcomings in the conduct of political affairs, often intensified by economic pressures or cultural conflicts” (Welch 1980, p.... It is evidently clear from the discussion that rebellion is regarded by political scientists, sociologists, and humanists as a spontaneous social process, which essentially helps in deconstructing certain social evils and lead to termination of a new social order, aimed at the welfare of the common people....
12 Pages
(3000 words)
Book Report/Review