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171 Essays on Hundred Secret Senses. Documents 1 - 25

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Last update: July 7, 2014
  • The Hundred Secret Senses and the Joy Luck Club - Amy Tan

    The Hundred Secret Senses and the Joy Luck Club - Amy Tan

    The Hundred Secret Senses and The Joy Luck Club Amy Tan A major part of the novel of Amy Tan’s novels has been devoted to the reflection of the role of ethnicity in the life and choices of the narrator. Tan tries to force her characters to face the question and make decision that take the Chinese and American heritages into account. More specifically, the author, who hands the novel over to the narrator, centers

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    Essay Length: 3,760 Words / 16 Pages
    Submitted: November 25, 2009 By: Fonta
  • The Secret Sharer: The Essay

    The Secret Sharer: The Essay

    The Secret Sharer: the essay In the long short story The Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad the narrator plays the captain of a merchant ship that is foreign to him. He is assigned to this foreign ship on a very short notice. He is expected to lead the crew to their destination, safely. This captain is lonely he has not one soul to speck to. He doesn't know these people who he somehow is suppose

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    Essay Length: 982 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 14, 2009 By: Jessica
  • The Secrets of the Lusitania

    The Secrets of the Lusitania

    The American owner of the ill-fated Lusitania is planning to explore and hopefully salvage the liner, sunk off the south-west coast of Ireland on May 7, 1915, killing 1,198 people. "The Lusitania is probably the most important shipwreck that hasn't been investigated in any detail so far," says Gregg Bemis. And although there are striking similarities between the Lusitania and the Titanic, recently the subject of a major movie, Bemis believes that the Lusitania is

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    Essay Length: 1,550 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: February 16, 2009 By: Stenly
  • Thomas Paine and Common Sense

    Thomas Paine and Common Sense

    Common Sense Published anonymously by Thomas Paine in January of 1776, Common Sense was an instant best-seller, both in the colonies and in Europe. It went through several editions in Philadelphia, and was republished in all parts of United America. Because of it, Paine became internationally famous. "A Covenanted People" called Common Sense "by far the most influential tract of the American Revolution....it remains one of the most brilliant pamphlets ever written in the English

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    Essay Length: 336 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: April 10, 2009 By: Janna
  • Murders Lies Secrets - Macbeth

    Murders Lies Secrets - Macbeth

    People can always find someone to point their finger at. When something bad happens someone has to be to blame. The hard part is figuring out who really is to blame and why. In Shakespeare’s Macbeth, King Duncan is brutally murdered by Macbeth. But are actions of brutality a reason to accuse Macbeth? What about the greedy persuasiveness of Lady Macbeth? Or the root of the whole idea that came from the witches? Someone has

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    Essay Length: 458 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 8, 2009 By: Mike
  • Secrets of the U. S. Postal System

    Secrets of the U. S. Postal System

    After working with the post office for 2 years I have realized that there are many secrets that happen to you mail behind closed doors. My speech today is to out some of the questions people have had about the post office. A few of them that I will expose today is the history of mail processing and how it works, employee salaries, mail volume, and some random fun facts. Did you know that the

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    Essay Length: 864 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 8, 2009 By: Kevin
  • Ib Tok Perception of Senses

    Ib Tok Perception of Senses

    Throughout the history of our world "man" has always tried to describe or define knowledge in regards to its knower. During the age of Greek dominance, a philosopher who went by the name of Plato decided that the knowledge that surrounds everything and ever person is a mysterious kind of union between a knower and his knowledge. At times he compares knowledge to a type of love that human beings should embrace in every mystical

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    Essay Length: 973 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 9, 2009 By: Fonta
  • The Chinese Intelligentsia During the Hundred Flowers and Anti-Rightist Movement

    The Chinese Intelligentsia During the Hundred Flowers and Anti-Rightist Movement

    The Chinese Intelligentsia during the Hundred Flowers and Anti-rightist Movement After the coming to power of the CCP and the formation of the People's Republic of China, thorough and drastic changes began to take place in China. A country which had been founded on a mixture of Confucianism and a very spiritual lifestyle, with ancestor worship and even praying to the god of a particular object, which had went through various revolutions and changings of

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    Essay Length: 498 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 9, 2009 By: Kevin
  • Common Sense

    Common Sense

    The objective of our government should be to safeguard its people and to guarantee the protection of what we have deemed “unalienable” rights. The success or failure of said government ought to be determined by how well it actually fulfills this responsibility. Government only exists because we allow it to exist. One person understood this. One person believed that the people of a democracy have the ultimate say in how they themselves are governed.

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    Essay Length: 492 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 11, 2009 By: Bred
  • Edward III and the Origins of the Hundred Years' War

    Edward III and the Origins of the Hundred Years' War

    Edward III and the Origins of the Hundred Years' War Edward III was perhaps the most popular king England has ever had. I think this is because he was not only a great soldier, but also a great knight. To his subjects at least he was not just the man who won victories that made them proud to be English. He was also personally admirable, a man of generosity, courage, and style. He symbolized the

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    Essay Length: 690 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 12, 2009 By: Fonta
  • Character Development in Sense and Sensibility

    Character Development in Sense and Sensibility

    Book Review 1 Development of Major Characters English Lit. Honors, Per 5 Quarter One Sense and Sensibility The first of Jane Austen’s published novels, Sense and Sensibility, portrays the life and loves of two very different sisters: Elinor and Marianne Dashwood. The contrast between the sister’s characters results in their attraction to vastly different men, sparking family and societal dramas that are played out around their contrasting romances. The younger sister, Marianne Dashwood, emerges as

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    Essay Length: 706 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 13, 2009 By: Mike
  • Comparison of the Novel Pride and Predjudice and the Movie Sense and Sensibility

    Comparison of the Novel Pride and Predjudice and the Movie Sense and Sensibility

    Pride and Prejudice, the novel by Jane Austen, and Sense and Sensibility, the movie based on the novel by Austen, share many striking similarities. These similarities lie in the characters, plots and subplots between these characters, the settings, and the overall style and themes used in creating the two works. Jane Austen uses extremely similar characters in almost the exact same situation in Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility. The clearest examples of this

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    Essay Length: 632 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 15, 2009 By: Artur
  • Making Sense of Hardships

    Making Sense of Hardships

    In both poems, “Facing It” by Yusef Komuhykaa and “My Papa’s Waltz by Theodore Roethke, there are two men looking back on hardships that they have made it through in their life. Although both hardships are completely different, the men in both poems had to work through them and in the long run their hardships made them stronger men. Through the grieving of two grown me in both poems, it is apparent how hard it

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    Essay Length: 986 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 16, 2009 By: Top
  • The Secret of Wal-Mart's Success

    The Secret of Wal-Mart's Success

    The Secret of Wal-Mart's Success What accounts for Wal-Mart's remarkable success? Most explanations focus on a few familiar and highly visible factors: the genius of founder Sam Walton, who inspires his employees and has molded a culture of service excellence; the "greeters" who welcome customers at the door; the motivational power of allowing employees to own part of the business; the strategy of "everyday low prices" that offers the customer a better deal and saves

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    Essay Length: 1,243 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: November 16, 2009 By: Anna
  • A Secret War Instills a Secret Behavior

    A Secret War Instills a Secret Behavior

    A Secret War Instills a Secret Behavior Head high, shoulders back, chests protruding and leading the way, these bodies strut confidently down the road. These people hold a face of high value. Others -- who carry an invisible rock on their shoulders and have eyes glued to the pavement -- either pace quickly to avoid anyone catching a glimpse, or saunter meticulously sluggish in hopes of going unnoticed. The blur of a fast-walker or the

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    Essay Length: 861 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 16, 2009 By: Victor
  • How Has Forster Created a Sense of Character and Society in "room with a View"

    How Has Forster Created a Sense of Character and Society in "room with a View"

    How has Forster Created a Sense of Character and Society in “Room with a View” ? Forster wastes no time in setting the scene and setting the class boundaries of his characters. We know even from the first statement that Miss Bartlett is towards the upper classes and is potentially a very highly strung woman, which is later proven to be true. “The Signora had no business to do it” is so telling because we

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    Essay Length: 1,181 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: November 18, 2009 By: Andrew
  • Many of Duffy's Poems Evoke a Sense of Loss and for Nostalgia. Discuss!

    Many of Duffy's Poems Evoke a Sense of Loss and for Nostalgia. Discuss!

    Many of Duffy’s poems evoke a sense of loss and for nostalgia. Discuss! In most poems by Carol Ann Duffy the reader gets a sense of sadness and attachment to the past. Duffy uses the past as a connecting point to make the poem more effective in its message such as anecdotes to make the described situation funnier. An example for this is the poem “Litany” in which Carol Ann Duffy talks about her nostalgia

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    Essay Length: 937 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 19, 2009 By: Mike
  • Common Sense and Thomas Paine

    Common Sense and Thomas Paine

    Thomas Paine was born in England to a poor Quaker father and an Anglican mother and left school to work as a corset maker with his father. Later in 1774 he emigrated to the colonies and got a job editing the Pennsylvania Magazine. As tension aroused between England and the colonies, he concluded that the revolt should be aimed not against taxation but for independence. He wrote his comments in a fifty-page pamphlet called

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    Essay Length: 424 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: November 19, 2009 By: Mike
  • Our Secrets

    Our Secrets

    Identification by definition is the state of being identified, which means the characteristics and feature that set you aside from everyone else. Question is: What makes an identity? Is it the heritage of our parents? The people we interact with? Or how about the decisions we make on a daily basis? Each of these are components to our identities in different manners though they each have different levels of impact upon us. Depending on the

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    Essay Length: 1,833 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: November 20, 2009 By: Anna
  • Absence of Historical Sense in America

    Absence of Historical Sense in America

    Absence of Historical Sense in America American culture focuses on the future and ignores the past. We ask our youths, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” The technology of today attempts to advance towards the future. The popular phrase “the future is now” embodies the future-centric attitude of America. George Santayana stated, “Those who do not remember the past are doomed to repeat it.” While his words ring true, most Americans

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    Essay Length: 1,041 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: November 20, 2009 By: Fonta
  • Making Sense of Dance Music

    Making Sense of Dance Music

    Name: Helena Gerritsen Student ID: 04030453 Course: MA Mass Communication Module: Researching Communications Code: CMP014N Tutor: Dr Thomas Giagkoglou Date: 23th of January 2006 Words: +/- 3000 Abstract Dance is a cultural and musical phenomenon that has gained a significant meaning in this century. Dance has earned his relevance through clubs, dance events, hit parade, radio, TV, singles and most important in the hearts of millions of people who possess youth spirit. Obviously dance

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    Essay Length: 3,120 Words / 13 Pages
    Submitted: November 20, 2009 By: Mike
  • The Secret Sharer: The Essay

    The Secret Sharer: The Essay

    The Secret Sharer: the essay In the long short story The Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad the narrator plays the captain of a merchant ship that is foreign to him. He is assigned to this foreign ship on a very short notice. He is expected to lead the crew to their destination, safely. This captain is lonely he has not one soul to speck to. He doesn’t know these people who he somehow is suppose

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    Essay Length: 982 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 20, 2009 By: Tasha
  • Sense and Sensibility

    Sense and Sensibility

    Sense and Sensibility. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1992. 367. Below is a review of Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen. Austen incorporates many similarities throughout her other novels exemplifying themes such as: the role of women, ideal love, and social classes and hierarchies. I would not consider Sense and Sensibility to be Austen’s best novel as the conclusion is hasty and does not follow the same rate of progression like the other part

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    Essay Length: 871 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 21, 2009 By: Monika
  • Frost’s Sense

    Frost’s Sense

    Alden Anderson English 102 Summer ’05 2:15 Frost’s Sense Robert Frost has a certain theory. That a sentence has an overall sound and that word may be taken out and the sound analyzed. The theory is Frost’s “Sound of Sense.” Or I like to say, that you may sense the sound of a sentence, with a simple little trick. Put your hand over your mouth and speak the sentence, pay attention to the muffled sound

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    Essay Length: 745 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: November 21, 2009 By: July
  • Common Sense Fo Independence

    Common Sense Fo Independence

    There was a lot of tension building up during the 1760’s and 1770’s between Great Britain and America and something had to be done about it. Is it worth the risk declaring independence from the most powerful country in the world? The forefathers were in a confusing situation and had to come up with something to do to solve the problem. They needed something to come along and help them make a decision. The writing

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    Essay Length: 938 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: November 22, 2009 By: Victor

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