"Ian McEwan" Essays and Research Papers

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    attention are both very powerful feelings that can lead any young child or adult to act out in unusual and sometimes hurtful ways. But the feeling of guilt after committing these actions is what evokes the need to atone for the effects we have caused. Ian McEwan author of the novel Atonement and Khaled Hosseini author of the novel The Kite Runner‚ which have both been produced in to famous blockbuster movies‚ both use a vast range of techniques to explore the idea of Guilt. The plot in both novels run parallel

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    confirmed by the diagonally ripped poster on the easel. And just as she predicted‚ Briony had been outside somewhere‚ sulking and impossible to find. How like Hermione Lola was‚ to remain guiltless while others destroyed themselves at her prompting (McEwan 138). Like Briony‚ Emily completely misinterprets a situation‚ and as always‚ views Briony as completely innocent. This is not unlikely‚ as the household revolved around Briony‚ and she could do little wrong. Emily‚ her mother‚ adored her innocence

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    Compare how Atonement and Spies explore the journey from innocence to experience. Both Atonement and Spies are bildungsroman where the protagonists are reminiscing about events in their childhoods which impose on them in their adult lives. In Atonement‚ Briony is narrating throughout the text; however the reader only finds this out at the end and in Spies Stephen is narrating with his older and younger self through duel narration with slippage between the two. Both text were published within a year

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    Comparing and Contrasting the Novel “Atonement” to its Film In class‚ we have been reading the novel “Atonement”‚ by Ian McEwan. This novel was made into a film in 2007 and won many awards for its acting‚ music‚ and many other categories. In general‚ the film was extremely loyal to the plot and character development in the novel. The director made sure that many of the little details that were present in the novel were in the film. I think this is what made the film so notable; the filmmakers

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    crawled toward as we read Atonement‚ and what secrets and lies have we encountered along the way? In your answer‚ you should discuss the novel’s key ideas‚ narrative point of view‚ characterization‚ symbolism‚ structure and language. The beauty of Ian McEwan’s construction is his reconciliation of both fiction and the “bleakest realism”. The power of literature is the freedom it creates not only for the author to control and construct reality‚ but to offer freedom for the reader from the horrors

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    Atonement by Ian McEwan Part One: Introduction Atonement by Ian McEwan falls under the genre of fiction‚ mystery‚ and suspense. The word Atonement means reparation for a wrongdoing. The book is set time of pre‚ present‚ and post World War II. The book references many well know works including Grey’s Anatomy‚ Macbeth‚ and Hamlet. Briony Tallis plays the role of both the protagonist and the antagonist in this piece. She is the main character and the story is told primarily through her eyes. Briony

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    Compare and contrast the literary style‚ themes and characterisation from Jane Austen’s ‘Northanger Abbey’ and Ian McEwan’s ‘Atonement’. Atonement follows the story of Briony Tallis‚ who witnesses events between her older sister Cecilia and Robbie Turner the son of her father’s housemaid. Briony ’s innocence gives way to a misinterpretation of what she sees‚ triggering her imagination to run wild and leads to an unspeakable crime that changes all of their lives. Jane Austen’s first novel Northanger

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    Jett McAlister Narrative POV Seminar 2 March 2004 Atonement and the Failure of the General Point of View Atonement’s chief narrative feature is McEwan’s use of an embedded author—Briony Tallis—whose text is nearly coterminous with the novel itself. This technique is of course not a new one: Sterne’s Sentimental Journey and MacKenzie’s Man of Feeling are both framed as the written accounts of their protagonists. McEwan’s trick in Atonement‚ though‚ is presumably that we are to be ignorant

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    The use of production techniques in a film helps the audience understand the ideas. To what extent do you agree with this view? Respond to the question with close reference to one or more films you have studied. In Atonement‚ directed by Joe Wright‚ it is very true that production techniques play a key role in helping the audience understand the ideas. Wright focuses on various scenes‚ such as the fountain‚ preparation for dinner to make these techniques most effective. The efficiency of these

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    the novel self-reflexively suggests Joe’s unreliability as our narrator- despite the fact that he is striving for objectivity and truth? He is unreliable‚ simply through the fact of being our narrator. The beginning of Ian McEwan’s ‘Enduring Love’ is not simple to mark. When McEwan was drafting the novel‚ he originally tried to start with Chapter 21‚ the scene where Joe procures the gun. How does this fit with the self-reflexive nature of the narrative and the claim that the beginning is easy to mark

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