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    Owen Marshall

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    agree with this view? Respond to this question with close reference to at least TWO short stories you have studied. All stories have some kind of setting. In short stories‚ the setting is often the vital element that clarifies the author’s purpose. Owen Marshall’s writing is no exception. Marshall says he has “always been interested in people who don’t conform” and many of his stories develop this idea. “Requiem in a Townhouse” and “Mr Van Gogh” are both good examples of his stories in which the setting

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    Wilfred Owen Techniques

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    Wilfred Owens war poetry Good morning/afternoon teacher and peers‚ Wilfred Owen was born in 1893 in Oswestry (United Kingdom). He wanted to be a poet from the age of nineteen although most of his famous work is that which he wrote in his years spent in the war where he died in 1918. The preface to Owens poetry read: “This book is not about heroes. English poetry is not yet fit to speak of them. Nor is it about deeds‚ or lands‚ nor anything about glory‚ honour‚ might‚ majesty‚ dominion

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    Owen Sheers

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    How does Sheers use nature to probe life’s wounds? In his collections Skirrid Hill‚ Owen Sheers sees nature as a support to the complexities of life‚ serving to comfort‚ explain‚ or simplify them as a cathartic force. As noted in the epigraph of the collection‚ ‘skirrid’ derives from the Welsh word ‘ysgyrid’‚ meaning divorce or separation. This motif is seen in various poems that are concerned with personal separation or separation as a result of a transitional state‚ such as the passage from

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    Wilfred Owen Poems

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    ENGLISH NOTES- WILFRED OWEN DISABLED Themes - effect of war on the individual - loss of identity and humanity - multiply this for all seriously injured soldiers Techniques 1. Imagery a) Soldiers present life “ satin a wheeled chair” “ legless‚ sewn short at the elbow” EFFECT- establishes the scene and situation - shocks the reader b) Previous life “ town used to swing so gay” “ carried shoulder-high”

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    Jesse Owens

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    Jesse Owens: The Silent Movement When America typically thinks about black athletes‚ they think of the great ones like Michael Jordan‚ Muhammad Ali‚ Jackie Robinson‚ and others in that category. One athlete that is over looked is the great Jesse Owens. It might be that he did not participate in a popular sport like basketball‚ football or baseball‚ but he was an exceptionally fast on the track and overcame racial adversity. Jesse Owens impacted athletic world in a positive way throughout his

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    Wilfred Owen - War

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    emotional and physical limitations. Wilfred Owens poetry is a passionate expression of outrage at the horrors of war and of the pity for the young soldiers scarified in it‚ this is shown though a variety of poetic techniques. Owen explores the physical horror that war represents in “Dulce et Decorum Est”‚ this poem condemns those who glorified the war and tempted men to join the army with heroic rhetoric and looks at the realistic physical outcome of war. In “Disabled” Wilfred conveys the physical and long

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    literary devices to help portray a theme. One of the most common used literary devices is Simile. A simile is comparing two things using like or as to describe or explain a setting or action to better understand the story. Ray Bradbury uses simile numerous times in his novel Fahrenheit 451‚ which displays a dystopian society set in the distant future All things considered‚ Ray Bradbury demonstrates the use of simile many times in his novel Fahrenheit 451. This example

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    Disabled Person

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    Extreme sports are some special sport disciplines that only a small number of people in the world participate in. The reason for this are the special conditions under which the sports are done. Extreme sports are much more dangerous than ordinary sports. They are done in extreme conditions‚ for example in places that are remote and inaccessible‚ or in bad weather. There is a big risk of injury for the sportspeople. They often risk their lives if something goes wrong. However‚ this is exactly why

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    wilfred owen

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    Wilfred owen Wilfred Edward Salter Owen MC (18 March 1893 – 4 November 1918) was an English poet and soldier‚ one of the leading poets of the First World War. His shocking‚ realistic war poetry on the horrors of trenches and gas warfare was heavily influenced by his friend Siegfried Sassoon‚ and stood in contrast both to the public perception of war at the time and to the patriotic verse. On 21 October 1915‚ he enlisted in the Artists’ Rifles Officers’ Training Corps. For the next seven months‚

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    Wilfred Owen

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    Owen is more famous for his angry and emotional poems such as Dulce‚ though his quieter poems can pack just a strong a punch. Futility has a barely controlled emotion to it‚ we are used to Owen questioning war and people but here he questions life itself. His desperation and hollow lack of hope‚ so resigned against life‚ is intensely emotional‚ beyond anger and beyond help. His use of sounds and assonance give the poem a quiet tone‚ almost as if the speaker is whispering. There is no

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