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    Allegory: Sequel

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    Allegory Melat Kiros Pd.7 1/15/2011 The American Revolution Allegory…Sequel! Yes‚ I’m sure you remember the 13 children from the original story but we’re now in the future and these kids are all grown up! They knew it would be extremely hectic if they had more than one child with their spouse so they all had just one. 13 only child’s with 12 other cousins. Pretty smart if you think about it. Anyway‚ these cousins all grew up with each other. No doubt about it they knew everything about

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    Allegory The Cave

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    In particular‚ Plato’s Allegory of the Cave can be interpreted to be talking about the educational system. In this allegory‚ three prisoners sit staring a wall‚ in which they see shadows from puppeteers in the background. One day‚ one* of the prisoners is freed and forced to go outside to the real world. At first everything

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    The Darkness Inside

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    The Darkness Inside Built inside every human being is the need to abide by law‚ and to act civilized. But hidden much deeper‚ is the temptation to resist acting lawfully and resort to savagery. Sometimes‚ these two impulses conflict with one another and people are confused as to which desire to follow through with. In William Golding’s Lord of the Flies‚ Jack acts no differently. In the beginning of the novel Jack never strays from the law‚ he is always civil and lawful. As the novel progresses

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    Allegory Criticism

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    Allegory Criticism: Essay #3 Da’Andrea Bell Allegory criticism is an extended metaphor in which a person‚ abstract idea or event stands for itself and for something else. Usually involves moral or spiritual concepts which are more significant than the actual narrative. In the fiction reading‚ “The man In the Black Suit” by Stephen King‚ the main character Gary a young boy at the age of nine has found himself coming face to face with someone he believes is the devil. While out for a day of

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    When Marlow talks of London being a dark place‚ the theme of civilization versus savagery comes into play. Marlow’s aunt believes he is an emissary of light‚ being sent into the darkness. Marlow sees this darkness through the placing of heads on poles‚ for a man named Kurtz. All of this makes Marlow change his inner feelings of himself‚ which relates to the theme of the journey of the inner self. Marlow talks of when the Romans first came to Britain‚ and how they had actually brought some light into

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    Allegory In Macbeth

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    In Macbeth‚ by William Shakespeare‚ hidden symbols and allegories can be found throughout the play. The playwright uses words and phrases to emphasize their meaning‚ and possibly suggest different ones. The Scottish Play is rich with repetition and underlying meanings‚ as seen with several examples. As Macbeth learns in the play‚ murder causes repercussions beyond the conscious mind‚ and the blood spilled is at his own expense. Shakespeare uses the word blood to symbolize the permanent guilt felt

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    Allegory Of The Cave

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    Upon reading the Allegory of the Cave‚ one can see that Plato is arguing the importance of defining the theory of what is really being seen versus illusions that we see and think are reality. In this play‚ prisoners are chained by their feet and necks so that they can not move their bodies or their heads‚ forcing them to look straight ahead at a stone wall. A fire is burning behind them and people are walking with sculptures across a platform in front of the fire‚ creating projected images onto

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    Heart of Darkness V Apocalypse Now The fictional novel Heart of Darkness by author Joseph Conrad is a book written in first person. The setting of the novel is in the Congo Jungle‚ with most of the book occurring on the Congo River. The novel describes Marlow’s story and his many strange encounters while traveling up the Congo River. Marlow is on a mission to retrieve the very successful ivory merchant Kurtz‚ who has been separated from his company. Heart of Darkness deals with themes of colonialism

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    The Allegory of the Cave

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    The Allegory of the Cave‚ written by Plato‚ was a very interesting read for me. It got me to think how alike we are to those prisoners in the cave. Just like them‚ we “see” or rather perceive shadows on a wall in our daily lives‚ but not in the sense of literal shadows‚ but in the form of events and desires that we may have. To the prisoners‚ the shadows were a “limitation” to their reality. For us today‚ I feel that our fears are our limitations; the things that stop us from seeing what is actual

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    Allegory Of The Cave

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    children are taught in a variety different styles. Some live within a singular uniform from the day they are born while others explore and connect all corners of the world in their lessons. Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed and Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave” discuss the influence that some of these various teaching methods have on an individual. Freire’s work names and describes two specific approaches which are referred to as the banking method and the problem-posing method. Similarly‚

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