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What is Literature?

 

Even people who love reading can find the idea of a literary analysis to be challenging. This is unfortunate, because the whole goal of a literary analysis is for the reader to consider how and why a work was written. What message was the author trying to convey? Why did he or she want to convey that message? However, because there are quite a few elements expected in a literary analysis, many students find themselves overwhelmed by those expectations. While our library of study guides, which break down some of the world’s most famous works of literature by some of the world’s best authors, can be a tremendous help for students-in-need, we also want to make sure you understand all of the steps of a literature analysis.

The first step in a literature analysis is to understand the characters and the role that they play in the novel. Characterization is clear in some works of literature. For example, Shakespeare’s play Othello features Iago, who may be one of the most straightforward examples of a villain in all of literature. Other works of literature may be more challenging. While Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl became the modern standard for the unreliable narrator, the classics are actually full of equally unreliable narrators or characters. When a character’s true motivations and actions are not revealed until the end of a work, or possibly remain ambiguous even at the conclusion of the work, then characterization can be more of a challenge. It can help to break the analysis down into steps. Who is the protagonist? Many people mistakenly believe that the protagonist has to be a “good guy,” but it is more accurate to think of the protagonist as the main character. Who is the antagonist? What roles do they play in the book? How do they interact with the other characters? What tools has the author used to help bring the character to life? What does the character look like? What kind of language does the character use? How do the author’s choices impact how you feel about the character?

The second step in a literature analysis is to understand the plot. The plot is the storyline of the work. Many students find it difficult to condense a large work down and create a concise description of the plot, because they either want to include all of the little details that enhance the story or because they eliminate critical plot points in a desire to keep their plot overview concise. Most, but not all, plots follow a rising action up until the story’s main conflict, a crisis, and then a falling action as the story concludes. A description of the plot should contain all of the elements necessary to understand this rising and falling action.

In addition to plot and characterization, some other elements can be critical to understanding a story. Exposition and foreshadowing can provide critical information for the reader, not only letting them know about the background of the characters, but also providing a glimpse of what the characters will do later in the story. Another important concept is allegory; many great works of literature have survived the test of time because they talk about a larger lesson or meaning in life. The imagery that the author uses to create a vivid image is also critical; many works are as famous for their imagery as they are for their plots or characters. [ Show Less ]

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A Social Contradiction
Benjamin Franklin's autobiography and Herman Melville's Bartleby the Scrivener both offer important insights into the internal ideological function of American capitalism. The texts demonstrate (whether intentionally or unintentionally) how American capitalism attempts to paper over the contradiction between America's rhetorical focus on liberty, equality, and freedom, and its economic focus on profit at the expense of essentially everything else. Franklin embodies the myth of American meritocracy and reveals the appeal to divine right that underlines the legitimacy of the upper classes' economic dominance, while Melville's narrator demonstrates the strict blinders that must be maintained in order to deny the existence of the injustice and inequality that is inherent to capitalism. Taken together, these texts allow one to better understand how the seemingly obvious contradiction between America's ostensible political ideals and its economic realities has far not been able to diminish capitalism's hegemonic control of the country for over two hundred years.
Research Paper Doctorate
Booker T. Washington and his educational legacy
¶ … Atlanta Exposition Address (1895)" by Booker T. Washington
Research Paper Doctorate
Literature and sexuality: representation and analysis
Abbe Prevost's tale of Manon Lescaut performs several different functions at once. It is in part a cautionary story. It is in part a push to create a fully modern sensibility in French literature.
Paper Doctorate
French Literature? (Pick as Many as You
¶ … French literature? (Pick as many as you think are correct)
Paper Doctorate
The Panic of 1819
The "Panic of 1819", as it is commonly referred to in the literature, was considered the first financial crisis in the United States. To this day, many of the factors attributed to the cause of the crisis are hotly debated among scholars. The case is especially interesting however because of the contemporary financial crisis that originated in 2008 and is still plaguing the population today. Many, if not all, the factors associated with the financial crises seem remarkably similar. Therefore, it is prudent to study the history of such events in order to better understand the current events that are unfolding before our eyes. This paper will provide a brief analysis of some of the factors that were involved in the Panic of 1819 – America's very first financial crisis.
Paper Doctorate
Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group. (1992). Evidence-Based Medicine:
Three articles are summarized in bulleted format: Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group. (1992). Evidence-based medicine: A new approach to teaching the practice of medicine. JAMA, 268 (17), 2420-2425; Smith, C. G., Herzka, A. S., & Wenz, J. F. (2004). Searching the medical literature. Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research 421, 43-49; Waldman, M. H. (2006). Evidence-based medicine. How to translate research into patient care. Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association 96(4), 374-377; and an article by Laupacis, S. & Straus, A.
Essay Undergraduate
Walks in Beauty Perfection in Byron\'s She
An explication of George Gordon, Lord Byron's "She Walks in Beauty." The paper explores how imagery is used to describe the balance between light and dark in the woman described in the poem. The paper also ties this fixation with balance to a lack of balance in Byron's life. Furthermore, the poem shows restraint, which contrasts Byron's persona and history.
Essay Doctorate
International Business the Effect of National Culture
This is an article review about a scholarly article that deals with culture and international expansion.There has been work produced that covers the role of culture in different transaction or administrative costs that a firm can expect in overseas markets. For example, if the two firms or markets have significantly different cultures then one could expect to have more difficulties with administering the business. This work adds to understanding the entry methods and how they are influenced by culture.
Paper Doctorate
Problem statement and research purpose alignment in dissertation development
This part of a proposal talks about the stateThere is however a number of non-banking substitutes for the depositor using the bank that is helpful in bringing in the customers. Strategies such as share market, Post-office saving, UTI, company fixed deposit and mutual funds. Every one of these is investment avenues and a lot of other similar ones have flooded in to the Banking industry. Furthermore, it is an unavoidable process of rapid economic growth for the bank.
Essay Doctorate
Change Cycle in an Organization: As Literature
As literature (Anderson 2001, Gelinas 1998, Olson 2001, Smith 1997) refers that process of organizational change starts from establishing a committed leadership through the need for and vision of the change to taking…