A Paper AN ANALYSIS OF ELEMENTS OF “THE MAN IN A CASE” BY WENDY WASSERTEIN ARYA FRIZANDIKA 1005121046 ENGLISH STUDY PROGRAM LANGUAGE AND ART DEPARTMENT EDUCATION AND TEACHING TRAINING FACULTY RIAU UNIVERSITY 2013 I. Introduction “The Man in a Case” is a drama authorized by a well-known American playwright‚ Wendy Wasertein. Simply‚ this drama told about an optimism aproach of Byelinkov and Varinka. This is a love story which can tell the audience how human beings can find
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Purpose of Producing Suspense’. This essay demonstrates whether detective novels are composed backwards with progressive and digressive elements in order to produce suspense by looking at Agatha Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd and And Then There Were None‚ and Josephine Tey’s The Franchise Affair. Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd presents a murder at the beginning of the novel‚ and the story—through its narrator and detective‚ Poirot—attempts to retrace the steps that led to the murder; thereby
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: George Bernard Shaw‚ “Arms and the Man: A Pleasant Play.” Introduction by Rodelle Wientraub. Edited by Dan H. Laurence. Penguin Books‚ 2006. Text Summary of Act One The scene is set in Bulgaria in November of 1885‚ during the Serbo-Bulgarian war. In a small town near the Dragoman Pass‚ a young lady loiters on the balcony off her bedchamber‚ looking out at the romantic night in the Balkan Mountains. Raina Petkoff is dressed in a nightgown but covered by a costly fur mantle. Her mother‚ Catherine
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Ellison ’s Invisible Man yields one article by Caffilene Allen‚ of Georgia State University‚ in Literature and Psychology in 1995. Thus‚ further study of this subject seems warranted. As Allen points out‚ "Purely psychoanalytic interpretations of Invisible Man are rare‚ even though Ellison clearly threads the theories of at least Freud throughout his novel."(2) Because of the rarity of psychoanalytic critiques of Invisible Man‚ this paper will examine the character of the invisible man in the Prologue
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Invisible Man: Ralph Ellison. ‘Could he have meant- hell‚ he must have meant‚ the principle‚ that we were to affirm the principle on which the country was built and not the men‚ or at least not the men who did the violence. Did he mean say “yes” because he knew the principle was bigger than the men‚ greater than the numbers and the vicious power and all the methods used to corrupt its name?’ So asked the invisible man‚ the protagonist never named in the novel‚ in relation to the confunding
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Types of Shells Being unable to fully fit in a society where most of the people tend to behave and act in a similar way should be challenging and even distressful. Chekhov’s “The Man in the Shell” – told by a third person narrator- is a short story that from my standpoint talks about the idea above. Belikov‚ who is the character constantly struggling to live in mind-peace with his surrounding‚ is described as “temperamentally unsociable‚ who tries to withdraw into a shell like a hermit crab or a
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experienced a horrific and obscure scene. What Jane had seen left her traumatize so she began yelling and Mrs. Reed only punished her more by keeping her in that room for much longer. Jane was left so traumatised that when she was let out of there the maids were so worried about her that they persuaded Mrs. Reed to call an Apothecary. An Apothecary is a person who is a paid doctor but in this case he was the doctor for when the servants got sick. The Apothecary helped Jane with her mental breakdown. Mr. Lloyd
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The Invisible Man is told from the narrators present looking into his past. The protagonists suggests that light is an intellectual necessity for him since “ the ruth is the light and the light is the truth” as scripture tell is. From his underground living situation the narrator attempts to make sense out of his life experiences and position in American society. Ralph Ellison speaks of a man who is “invisible” to the world around him because people fail to recognize his presence. He lives
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Ideal Man Ideal is a word with several different definitions depending on one’s interpretation. Marriam Webster Dictionary says that ideal is “a standard of excellence.” The Random House College Dictionary gives a slightly different meaning with the definition of “regarded as perfect of its kind.” Hence‚ society can interpret the words standard‚ excellence‚ and perfect as they please. Each individual may have a different perspective on the ideal man because of the way they understand the definition
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Picky? I do not think I am picky. I just know what I want from what I don’t want. My Ideal Man is natural‚ plain‚ nothing dazzling about him. He is modish in his appearance and simple in his looks. He’ll have an amiable desposition and confidence to stand on his own. He is kind hearted‚ has good values is God fearing‚ hardworking‚ focused‚ strong but yet gentle. He’s goal driven‚ ambitious and thoughtful. A Gentlman. My Ideal Man is not someone spectacular. My Ideal Man is Everyday.
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