"The Black Cat" Essays and Research Papers

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    black cat essay

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    Leo Dalesandro Period: G Black Cat Essay 11/13/14 In the story “The Black Cat” by Edgar Allen Poe‚ the narrator of the story contradicts himself throughout the whole story. He said that he was especially fond of animals however he ends up torturing and killing them‚ he says he feels very guilty after killing his wife but then right away thinks about where he can hide her‚ and He also says in the last line of the first paragraph that he is to "excitable" to make the murder of his wife

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    POV in the Black Cat

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    the narrator is clear and precise so that their audience can understand them. This is not the case in “The Black Cat” by Edgar Allan Poe. Edgar Allan Poe uses an unreliable narrator in this short story which makes it kind of difficult for us to know what to trust and what not to. By only reading what the narrator has written we only see his point of view. This is a huge part of why “The Black Cat” is so prolific. The readers of this short story get to hear it in first person point of view from the main

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    Superstition and Black Cat

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    Definition: 1. Excessively credulous belief in and reverence for supernatural beings. 2. A widely held but unjustified belief in supernatural causation leading to certain consequences of an action or event‚ or a practice... Superstition is a belief in supernatural causality: that one event leads to the cause of another without any physical process linking the two events‚ such as astrology‚ omens‚ witchcraft‚ etc.‚ that contradicts natural science. Population: 1. All the inhabitants

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    In the short story "The Black Cat"‚ Edgar Allan Poe uses gruesome detail and diction to establish his rule of one effect and the death of one major character. One of Poe’s rules for 19th Century Poetry is that writing should exhibit one effect or one purpose‚ which is to scare the reader. Poe uses diction and detail to put disturbing images into people’s head. In "The Black Cat" the narrator declines from sanity to madness. Poe uses detail to set up the situation where the narrator goes insane.

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    Literary Analysis of “The Black Cat” and “The Masque of the Red Death” "No pestilence had ever been so fatal‚ or so hideous. Blood was its avatar and its seal- the redness and the horror of blood" (1). Edgar Allan Poe was a master of the macabre; his very stories injecting fear into the hearts of his readers. Poe’s life was filled with tragedy‚ as several of the important women in his life‚ including his wife and daughter died at a young age. He utilized poems and books to express that tragedy.

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    The short story “The Black Cat‚” by Edgar Allen Poe‚ plays off the fear and trepidation of readers by sharing the details of a horrific murder through the killer’s point of view. However‚ several details in the story‚ such as the decay of the body‚ the police’s presence‚ and the appearance of a second cat‚ allude to the idea that the tale may in fact not be true‚ and cause the reader to doubt the reliability of the narrator. By implying that the narrator is indeed lying‚ Poe puts into question the

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    Pamela Anderson 02-09-13 3th period The black cat & a rose for Emily “The black cat” was written by Edgar Allan Poe‚ and it was a twisted‚ sick story about how a man that since his childhood was picked on by his classmates. Instead of having human friends‚ he owned pets that he took as his only friends. “From my infancy I was noted for the docility and humanity of my disposition. My tenderness of heart was even so conspicuous as to make me the best of my companions.” At first he had

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    than you? In “The Black Cat” Edgar Allan Poe writes a story to teach people a lesson. Poe begins the story by introducing the nameless character in his prison cell who retells his story with all the horrible sins he had committed. The nameless narrator makes horrible decisions by giving into his perverseness. Perverseness is when a person does something they know that they should not do but still do. He first gives into his perverse self and cuts Pluto’s eye out‚ his black cat. Later in the story

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    The character traits‚ fears‚ and personal experiences of Edgar Allan Poe can be seen in the narrator of “The Black Cat”. Within the first page of the passage‚ the narrator describes his wife‚ whom he married early‚ as “not uncongenial” or friendly. Poe is most likely referring to his wife Sarah Elmira Royster‚ who is both his cousin and bride when she was 13 years old. Like Poe’s wife‚ the narrator’s spouse is described as friendly‚ faithful‚ and loving. Moreover‚ Poe’s apparent problems with alcoholism

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    certain events in his lifetime that reflect the events that occurred in his short stories. The connection between Poe’s life and events in “The Black Cat” are strongly evident throughout the story. Poe’s burdens that he suffered through are relative to the suffering of the characters in the short story. Edgar Allen Poe’s short story “The Black Cat” is not only gothic; it also reflects events from his life. To begin‚ according to M. H Abrams‚ a gothic novel must‚ “...evoke chilling terror

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