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374 Essays on Kafka Portrayal Characters. Documents 301 - 325

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Last update: September 13, 2014
  • The Chrysalids Joseph Strorm Character Sketch

    The Chrysalids Joseph Strorm Character Sketch

    Written by John Wyndham, The Chrysalids tells the reader about Joseph and his life, which revolves around religion. Joseph, as the reader learns, is an extremely religious, authoritative , and temper mental man. As the story progresses, Joseph’s character traits begin to show more and more. Joseph’s character traits become more prominent, and Joseph begins to choose his religion over his family. Towards the end of the novel we learn that Joseph is out

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    Essay Length: 728 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 4, 2010 By: Wendy
  • Discuss the Use of the Narrative Voice in the Extracts. How Successful Are They at Introducing the Character in the Openings to the Novel?

    Discuss the Use of the Narrative Voice in the Extracts. How Successful Are They at Introducing the Character in the Openings to the Novel?

    The two extracts are taken from two books that differ in both style and language. The first is from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte, which was written in 1847 and the second is from the Colour Purple by Alice Walker, which was written in the 1970s and is set in the 1930s. Both are narrated in the first person but with very different writing styles. Wuthering Heights is written in high register, using a very

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    Essay Length: 999 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: May 4, 2010 By: Fonta
  • The Character of Michael Henchard in Mayor of Casterbridge

    The Character of Michael Henchard in Mayor of Casterbridge

    Michael Henchard possibly being the most mysterious character of the novel, “The Mayor of Casterbridge, has a complexity about him. In the beginning of the novel he is obviously an ungreatfull and ignorant young man as he believes that his wife will not actually leave him if he offers her for sale such as a horse would be. At this point in his life he is only the tender age of twenty-one which may account

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    Essay Length: 733 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 4, 2010 By: Kevin
  • Don Giovanni: The Characters and Their Music

    Don Giovanni: The Characters and Their Music

    Don Giovanni: The Characters and Their Music Giving Character’s character is one of the most interesting challenges in operatic composition; another is composing for all the specific characters. A composer has to distinguish between characters through his music. Jan can’t sound like Fran, and Dan can’t sound like Stan. Each character must have his/her own traits. Mozart’s opera, Don Giovanni, provides us with many different characters to compare and contrast. One scene in particular lends

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    Essay Length: 1,644 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: May 4, 2010 By: Jack
  • To What Extent Do the Characters Antony and Caesar Embody the Conflicting Worlds of Egypt and Rome in Antony and Cleopatra

    To What Extent Do the Characters Antony and Caesar Embody the Conflicting Worlds of Egypt and Rome in Antony and Cleopatra

    TO WHAT EXTENT DO THE CHARACTERS ANTONY AND CAESAR EMBODY THE CONFLICTING WORLDS OF EGYPT AND ROME The Shakespearian play ‘Antony and Cleopatra’ is a tragic love story between the two characters Antony a Triumvate Ruler of Rome and Cleopatra the Queen of Egypt. The play of Antony and Cleopatra is not just a tragic love story it also incorporates a storyline of international politics, therefore making it a public and also a private drama

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    Essay Length: 1,566 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: May 5, 2010 By: Jon
  • The Club - Character Differences

    The Club - Character Differences

    The differences between characters can often be shown using dialogue. David Williamson uses dialogue effectively in ‘The Club’, to show the different personalities and desires of the characters. Ali G is a great example of how dialogue can be used to show the differences between characters when he interviews English soccer star David Beckham. In many interviews, television shows, movies, novels, and performance scripts, dialogue is used to show the different personalities of characters. In

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    Essay Length: 611 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 7, 2010 By: Mikki
  • Exposing the Relationships Between the Various Characters

    Exposing the Relationships Between the Various Characters

    Exposing the relationships between the various characters Homesick is a novel that exposes many different relationships, the strength of relationships, and how they can endure tremendous pain. The various relationships between Alec and Vera, Alec and Daniel, and Vera and Daniel are considerably different because of the variation in generation represented by each character. Each relationship in this family has its strengths and weaknesses depending on the past of the relationships. The relationships in the

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    Essay Length: 2,007 Words / 9 Pages
    Submitted: May 8, 2010 By: Wendy
  • Sula Character Analysis

    Sula Character Analysis

    A symbiotic relationship is a cooperative, mutually beneficial relationship between two people or groups. All living beings, weather you are the president of the United States or a homeless person living in a shelter, depend on symbiotic relationships to live a healthy and productive life. However, sometimes these persons can become greedy and decide to take more of the relationship than what they are putting in it. When this occurs, the relationship takes on parasitic

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    Essay Length: 1,217 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: May 9, 2010 By: Fonta
  • Tom’s Character in the Great Gatsby

    Tom’s Character in the Great Gatsby

    Tom Buchanan’s moral character can be quesitoned due to his despicable and patheic nature when it comes to his actions throughout the novel. Even though he was born into a wealthy family and thus inherited the wealth he has in the novel, no signs of moral teachings by his family were evident. The actions he took in the book were due to him being a conceited and ignorant man. His ignorance was a result of

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    Essay Length: 401 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: May 10, 2010 By: Jessica
  • Discuss to What Extent the Monster in Frankenstein Is Portrayed as a Tragic Hero?

    Discuss to What Extent the Monster in Frankenstein Is Portrayed as a Tragic Hero?

    Discuss to what extent the monster in Frankenstein is portrayed as a tragic hero? Aristotelian defined tragedy as “the imitation of an action that is serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in itself.” It incorporates “incidents arousing pity and fear, wherewith to accomplish the catharsis of such emotions.” The tragic hero will most effectively evoke both our pity and terror if he is neither thoroughly good nor evil but indeed a combination of both.

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    Essay Length: 3,183 Words / 13 Pages
    Submitted: May 11, 2010 By: regina
  • Portrayal of Gothic Images

    Portrayal of Gothic Images

    Portrayal of Gothic Images When the topic of Gothic literature is discussed most readers immediately think of vampire stories, tales of horror, terror and supernatural tales, but the use of Gothic in poetry also has enhanced the images within works of poetry such as “The Poor Singing Dame” and “The Lady of Shallot”. While the longer stories can elaborate upon the defining characteristics of the genre, the poet can create the same chilling fantasies with

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    Essay Length: 533 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 11, 2010 By: Kevin
  • Character Analysis: Bess

    Character Analysis: Bess

    "Sacrificing your life for the happiness of the one you love is by far, the truest type of love." is the quote that best describes the hunting emotions the narrative poem The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes leaves carved into the reader's mind. These emotions are transmitted through the actions of the poem's main character and the highwayman's love, Bess. But what makes her one of the most unforgettably romantic characters in English literature? Although not

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    Essay Length: 455 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: May 13, 2010 By: Angelica
  • Development of Meaning in "hills like White Elephants" by Contrast of Characters

    Development of Meaning in "hills like White Elephants" by Contrast of Characters

    The way Ernest Hemingway introduces the main characters is quite remarkable. First, he does not give us any physical description of them. By this, the writer creates an effect of a distance between the couple and us. This also makes us pay extra attention to their dialogue, since it is the only information we get about them. And even their conversation sounds very mysterious, because they never name the subject of it. We know neither

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    Essay Length: 685 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 15, 2010 By: James
  • Character Analsys

    Character Analsys

    Zachary Morris Professor Calendar English 113 20 January 2008 Character Analysis Katherine Mansfield's "Miss Brill" is one of her final short stories published. Mansfield was an early 20th Century short story writer, with this story coming from her final compilation of short stories, The Garden Party and Other Stories, published a year before her untimely death in 1923 at the age of thirty-five. "Miss Brill" looks at a specific day of the isolated, lonely, and

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    Essay Length: 485 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: May 15, 2010 By: Jon
  • Character Plot - Death of a Sales Men

    Character Plot - Death of a Sales Men

    Willy Loman is the main character and protagonist of the play. He has been a traveling salesman, the lowest of positions, for the Wagner Company for thirty-four years. Never very successful in sales, Willy has earned a meager income and owns little. His refrigerator, his car, and his house are all old - used up and falling apart, much like Willy. Willy, however, is unable to face the truth about himself. He kids himself into

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    Essay Length: 837 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: May 15, 2010 By: Steve
  • Beckett's Absurd Characters

    Beckett's Absurd Characters

    Beckett's Absurd Characters Beckett did not view and express the problem of Absurdity in any form of philosophical theory (he never wrote any philosophical essays, as Camus or Sartre did), his expression is exclusively the artistic language of theatre. In this chapter, I analyse the life situation of Beckett's characters finding and pointing at the parallels between the philosophical background of the Absurdity and Beckett's artistic view. As I have already mentioned in the biography

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    Essay Length: 3,259 Words / 14 Pages
    Submitted: May 16, 2010 By: Victor
  • Soka’s Character in Children of the River

    Soka’s Character in Children of the River

    In stories of any genre, characters may change dramatically. This holds true for many characters in Children of the River, a story that tells the true nature of change. The most prominent change is evident in the character of Soka. Her character begins as very stubborn and strict and changes to that of a caring person. This essay will explore the true nature of Soka’s behavior. At the beginning of Children of the River, the

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    Essay Length: 510 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 16, 2010 By: Mikki
  • More Significant Character in Great Gatsby: Nick Carraway

    More Significant Character in Great Gatsby: Nick Carraway

    Marielle Hartmann Lit. AP Per. 10 Gatsby essay F. Scott Fitzgerald held a mirror up to his readers in his highly symbolic novel on 1920s America, The Great Gatsby. He portrayed the 1920s as an era of decayed social and moral values, evidenced in its cynicism, greed, and empty pursuit of pleasure. On the surface, The Great Gatsby was a story of the thwarted love between a man and a woman, that of Jay Gatsby

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    Essay Length: 924 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: May 17, 2010 By: Tommy
  • The Eventual Devouring of a Character

    The Eventual Devouring of a Character

    efrave The eventual devouring of a character is foreshadowed throughout the passage. Pi tells the stranger "No wonder you're starved for customers." There is irony here as Pi is the stranger's customer. Later when they are together the stranger tells of how Pi's "heart, flesh and liver" are with him. This may have had a sinister undertone to it as with the stranger having an "overeager embrace" on Pi's throat. Pi suggests the two "feast

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    Essay Length: 510 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 18, 2010 By: Lee
  • The Character of James VI & I

    The Character of James VI & I

    THE CHARACTER OF JAMES VI & I King James VI of Scotland & I of England was handicapped from birth with weak limbs and therefore injured himself many times. This also caused him to have an unsteady walk. He later suffered crippling arthritis. To compensate for this King James VI & I often leaned on his most trusted councilors and friends which also happened to be members of his personal staff. As a result, he

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    Essay Length: 304 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: May 21, 2010 By: Steve
  • Indigenous Tragedy: A Conclusive Perception of Chinua Achebe’s Most Acclaimed Character

    Indigenous Tragedy: A Conclusive Perception of Chinua Achebe’s Most Acclaimed Character

    Indigenous Tragedy “Men acquire a particular quality by constantly acting a particular way. You become just by performing just actions, temperate by performing temperate actions, and brave by performing brave actions.” -Aristotle. In Chinua Achebe’s famous novel, Things Fall Apart, the protagonist, Okonkwo, is proof of Aristotle’s statement. Although he is conceivably the most dominant man in Umuofia, his personal faults, which are fear of failure and uncontrollable anger, do not allow him true greatness

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    Essay Length: 926 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: May 21, 2010 By: Jessica
  • The Character of Pearl

    The Character of Pearl

    In the Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne sets the scene in an old Puritan society where sin is looked down upon. However, the main characters in the novel are connected through the sin of adultery. Pearl is the daughter of the two sinners, Hester and Dimmesdale. In the novel, Hawthorne depicts Pearl as a sense of hope while using her as a device to magnify the image of the scarlet letter to Hester and serve as a

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    Essay Length: 483 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: May 21, 2010 By: Yan
  • How Effectively Does the Opening Chapter of Pride and Prejudice Introduce the Reader to the Central Characters and Concerns of the Novel?

    How Effectively Does the Opening Chapter of Pride and Prejudice Introduce the Reader to the Central Characters and Concerns of the Novel?

    The novel ‘Pride and Prejudice’ focuses mainly on the protagonists, Elizabeth and Jane. Most of the novel is centred around Elizabeth’s point of view. The arrival of Bingley in the neighbourhood is the starting point. In the opening chapter, the reader is introduced to Mr Bennet and Mrs Bennet. Through these characters, the reader learns about Mrs Bennet’s biggest concern; to marry off all her daughters. The themes of the novel are mostly related to

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    Essay Length: 1,264 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: May 23, 2010 By: Mike
  • Character Traits of Professor Higgins from Pygmalion

    Character Traits of Professor Higgins from Pygmalion

    Two Character Traits Of Henry Higgins George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion‘s main character, Henry Higgins is a person of his own class. The two traits that really make him who he is are his rudeness towards every social class, and his hypocritical beliefs of everyone. These traits have made him a confirmed bachelor, as well as making his social habits very unique. “And I treat a duchess as if she was a flower girl" basically

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    Essay Length: 451 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: May 23, 2010 By: Top
  • Character Analysis: Gene Forrester

    Character Analysis: Gene Forrester

    Gene Forrester is the narrator in the novel “A Separate Peace.” He began by looking back to his high school years, contemplating all the memories, the good and bad, he shared with his classmates and friends, especially his best friend, Finny. Gene shows many different sides in his personality through the dramatic situations he goes through. He shows through as a loyal, intelligent young man, struggling through adolescence, and then turns to a jealous, unconventional

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    Essay Length: 614 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: May 23, 2010 By: Stenly

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