Literature Essays
Literature can be a lot of fun to write, but it can also be a lot of work. To make the process easier, you can get information online. Literature essays are more common in college, but you may be assigned to write one for high school as well. There are several sites where you can get examples of essays on literature from these websites.
Writing literature essays involves three steps. The first step is to decide what type of essay you want to write. There are five common types of essays: expository, descriptive, narrative, compare and contrast, and persuasive. You can find examples online for all types of literature essays. You can further refine the many subtypes within the five main literature essays. You may seek professional help if you feel unsure about writing your type of essay.
Writing the body takes a lot of time and effort, but you can find help by writing online. Many websites offer writing services for a fee. You only need to give the guidelines, and a professional will be assigned your task. You will receive a quality written essay in due time.
In Act 1 Scene 4, line 50, the witches hail Macbeth as the “thane of Cawdor!” This creates dramatic irony because Macbeth is not yet aware that the king has given him this title due to his bravery in battle. Instead, Macbeth believes that his success is due to the witches’ prophecy. However, the audience […]
Were you surprised by the ending of the story? If not, at what point did you know what was going to happen? How does Jackson start to foreshadow the ending in paragraphs 2 and 3? Conversely, how does Jackson lull us into thinking that this is just an ordinary story with an ordinary town? Where […]
Both The Whipping and My Papaās Waltz focus on child abuse, depicting the violence children endure from adults. In The Whipping, a young boy is battered by an elderly woman, likely his grandmother. Conversely, My Papaās Waltz portrays a boy being abused by his own father. However, these poems differ not only in terms of […]
Ironic by Alanis Morissette is nowhere near ironic. It’s more of a surprising serendipity or maybe a huge catastrophe, but definitely not ironic. Irony according to Merriam-Webster, is the incongruity between the actual result of a sequence of events and the normal or expected result; an event or result marked by such incongruity. The subtleness […]
Some stories are meant for entertainment, others to educate but Kath Walkerās, We Look After Our Own is written to draw change and develop an understanding of a darker side of life in Australia. Written in a time when change was dawing and aborignal rights was touchy subject, Kath Walker gave an insight into the […]
This might seem as being an unusual way of beginning an essay; but the best part about this is people are not perceiving it to be unusual at all. People here refer to 1,170,938,000 Indians, with few exceptions of children and the ones totally oblivious of English language. None the less, the numbers speak for […]
There are three types of irony: situational irony, verbal irony, and dramatic irony. Verbal irony is when a character or the narrator says something but doesnāt mean it or means something else; usually involves sarcasm. Dramatic irony is when the reader of the story has more knowledge on the plot than the characters. Situational irony […]
‘The locals will now tell you that when they visited the old man’s glasshouse, they discovered the most beautiful rose that anyone could ever dream of. It was twice the size of a man’s fist and was almost black in colour, with just the faintest hint of red in its velvety petals.’ Fragrance of Roses […]
Jerome Klapka Jerome was an English novelist and humorist. His books are loved by readers even nowadays, though Jeromeās contemporaries didnāt give high praise of his works and some literature critics thought that his novels and romances didnāt concern serious and actual problems of life being a little bit senselessness. But these suggestions were erroneous. […]
Deconstruction is a criticism theory based on the work of Jacques Derrida. He believes that language is uncertain. In the practice of literary criticism, deconstruction is used to find fallacy, contradiction of accepted values, thoughts, structure or meaning. The contradiction in language might be described in paradox and irony. According to Miriam Webster on line […]
The noblest efforts of a hero, ironically involves him in guilt and leads him to misery. Thomas Hardyās novel, The Mayor of Casterbridge concentrates mainly on the life and events of a certain Michael Henchard.. The primary element of irony embraces also the main theme of the story, that life is a sum product of […]
The Possibility of Evil is full of literary devices. The one that is mostly used throughout this short story is irony. A lot of things that appear to be one way, turn out to be another. This story leaves a feeling as if everyone can be evil⦠To portray this feeling the author uses three […]
Analysis of the short story āThe Escapeā by William Somerset Maugham. I`d like to reflect upon the short-story under the title Ā«The Escapeā, written by one of the best known English writers of 20th century ā William Somerset Maugham. He was not only a short-story writer, but also one of the most successful dramatists and […]
There are a variety of different techniques used in the play āThe Shoe Horn Sonataā that enable the text to be distinctively visual in conveying a point of view. Dramatic effects such as music, dialogue and flashbacks create the perspective of two women looking back on their memories and experiences of World War 2. Similarly, […]
In āMid-Term Breakā by Seamus Heaney and āThe Lessonā by Edward Lucie-Smith a similar impact is achieved through alternative means; Heaney uses language to set up a contrast whereas Lucie-Smith uses irony. Both techniques are striking and subtly interwoven throughout the poems, in order to describe the devastating theme of death from a childās perspective. […]
Without the prologue, the tale could in itself be seen as amusing and seems to “impregnate the mordant venom” (Bronson) of the prologue. The merchant is characterised as an intensely embittered bridegroom, telling an intensely bitter story. The juxtaposition of the “faire fresshe” May with the “olde” and unmistakably ugly Januarie disgusts many a reader. […]
In regards to the departure of the soldiers, Owen and Tynan offer contrasting presentations and s ignificantly different moods can be observed in their respective poems. The poem ‘Joining the Colours’ sets the tone from its title, as Tynan’s use of the verb ‘joining’ suggests that the soldiers believed they were merely becoming part of […]
The poems āAnthem for Doomed Youthā by Wilfred Owen and āReservistā by Boey Kim Cheng both explore the theme of war and destruction. Through the use of techniques such as structure, imagery, irony, and literary devices, the poets convey their views on dehumanisation and the devastating effects of war. In āAnthem for Doomed Youth,ā Owen […]
During the 19th century in Paris, people were trying to improve their status in order to gain more respect and superiority. Guy de Maupassant’s short story, The Necklace, follows the unfortunate life of a vain middle-class woman named Mathilde Loisel. Maupassant maintains the reader’s interest by applying irony, an engrossing theme and ordinary human characters […]
Alan Bennett’s characters (in Lady of Letters, Her Big Chance and Bed Among the Lentils) possess similar qualities of being ‘ordinary, uneventful and desperate’ as their lives can be viewed as being dull, mundane and monotonous. Using dramatic monologue, not only is Bennett able to explore the different aspects of life, but also make it […]
Alan Bennett’s ‘A Lady of letters’ is a dramatic monologue written for the BBC as a part of the ‘Talking Heads’ series. It focuses on an ordinary middle aged woman named Irene Ruddock. She expresses her views on society and the people she sees’s in her everyday life. There is only one point of view […]
The national figure for homelessness is a staggering 169000 people, 80000 of them in London alone. Tony Parsons and John Pilger are two men with different views on this crisis. Tony Parsons strictly believes that the beggars are worthless individuals who beg for no acceptable reason whereas John Pilger is far more sympathetic and believes […]