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    his novel Peter Pan. Their leader‚ the titular character‚ refuses to grow up‚ and spends his time on countless adventures. While often selfish‚ Peter shows strong decorum during his battles. One antagonist he battles is Captain James Hook; he got the name “Hook” after Peter inadvertently cutoff his hand‚ and James replaced it with a hook. Although often seen as a brash pirate‚ Hook is described as a refined person who strongly values rightness. In Peter Pan‚ J. M. Barrie portrays Peter as a spontaneous

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    Pans Labyrinth is set in 1944 fascist Spain. Ofelia‚ a young girl‚ who is fascinated with fairy-tales‚ is sent along with her pregnant mother to live with her new stepfather‚ a ruthless captain of the Spanish army. During the night‚ she meets a fairy who takes her to an old faun in the centre of the labyrinth. He tells her she’s a princess‚ but must prove her royalty by surviving three gruesome tasks. If she fails‚ she will never prove herself to be the true princess and will never see her real father

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    this with Walker‚ London‚ during the production of which he met his future wife--the actress--Mary Ansell. Barrie wrote Peter Pan as a tribute to the sons of his friends Sylvia and Arthur Llewelyn Davies. It was distinctly different from the previous‚ more mature material that Barrie had written and would write. Peter Pan was a fantasy‚ but not any mere fairy tale. Like Peter Pan himself‚ Barrie was a boy who refused to grow up. Barrie took such elements of life as his awkwardness with‚ yet dependence

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    Who doesn’t know the story by J.M. Barrie‚ Peter Pan? The lovely tale of a boy who never grew up‚ how magical. I trusted that man with my story‚ but so much was lost in translation I guess. Peter Pan he called it‚ why? Pan may have been the protagonist in his fairy tale‚ but in my tale‚ the true tale‚ he was a villain. He was the villain‚ he ruled over Neverland like a dictator rules over slaves. Yet‚ I still fell for him‚ I was young‚ my feelings were clouded‚ as well as my judgement. In my defense

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    Bibliography: Barrie‚ J. M. (2008 [1995]) Peter Pan and Other Plays. Oxford‚ Oxford University Press. Greenhalgh‚ S. (2009) ‘Drama’ in Maybin‚ J. and Watson‚ N. J. (eds) Children’s Literature: Approaches and Territories. Basingstoke‚ Palgrave Macmillan‚ pp. 267-280. McGough‚ R. (ed) (2002 [2001]) 100 Best Poems for Children. London‚ Puffin. Peter Pan‚ film‚ directed by P. J. Hogan‚ USA‚ Universal Pictures 2003. Rose. J. (2009) ‘Peter Pan and the Spectacle of the Child’ in Montgomery‚ H.

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    Pan-Africanism Essay Pan-Africanism was the idea that all Africans should be united in a common cause. Its aim was to liberate Africans from colonialism and racism. It promoted a growing sense in black identity and achievement. The Pan-Africanist movement had two main characters‚ namely W.E.B Du Bois and Marcus Garvey. Movements of Pan-Africanism were the Harlem Renaissance‚ Negritude and Rastafarianism. Pan-Africanism sparked Nationalist movements worldwide. W.E.B Du Bois wrote 20 books on Black

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    Who are the Pan-Africanists? No one can say with authority who was the first person to express ideas synonymous with pan-Africanism‚ but resistance to foreign domination has been a constant element of African history on and off the continent. It is generally accepted‚ however‚ that true pan-African thinking first appeared among Black people in the Diaspora. Africans who were outside of Africa and stripped of their tribal affiliation were quick to recognize that their subjugation was based on their

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    Peter Pan is the main protagonist of J.M. Barrie’s novel Peter & Wendy. He is introduced as a boy who refuses to grow up and therefore remains a child forever‚ roaming the mythical Neverland with his companions. One of his essential traits is his forgetfulness – he is never able to recall past actions or even his friends. Margaret Hourihan argues that‚ due to said forgetfulness‚ Peter can only ever live in the moment and thus never learns anything‚ which she considers the “necessary condition of

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    Pan Africanism

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    out of the oppressive mind state that slavery has left with us. One such ideology was Pan-Africanism. Pan-Africanism is a movement that seeks to unify African people or people living in Africa‚ into "one African community." This ideology did not pop out of thin air but had men that developed this idea to cause a movement. Marcus Garvey and W.E.B DuBois were the driving forces of this ideology. They are called Pan-Africanists. These two contributed their whole life to this movement and they accomplished

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    Peter and Wendy by J. M. Barrie is a classic novel that confronts the extreme ends of the bridge between childhood and adulthood. Despite the characters being either distinctly young or old in age‚ Peter and Wendy addresses the loss experienced in the transition between childhood and adulthood. There is a distinct loss of identity in the novel‚ as the lines between the reader as an observer and the reader as a participant are blurred. Wendy herself begins to lose her grasp on her own identity‚ slipping

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