|
Papers On English / Creative Writing & Example Essays
Page 30 of 116
|
|
Commemorative Speech on Charles M. Schulz
[ send me this paper ]
This 5 page paper provides a first person speech commemorating this artist who passed away in 2000. The characters who appear in the comic strip are discussed in detail. No sources.
Filename: SA229CMS.rtf
Commodore International & Harvard Style
[ send me this paper ]
This 5 page paper has two distinct parts. The first part discusses the products offered by Commodore International in 1992 and the challenges facing the company at that time. The second part outlines the Harvard Style of Citation. Only a few of the rules are exemplified due to space limitations. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: PGcmhv.rtf
Communities Define Our Lives
[ send me this paper ]
This 3 page paper discusses the concept of communities and how they define our lives. The essay concentrates on the college community.
Filename: HVCommty.rtf
Compare and Contrast: The US and Great Britain
[ send me this paper ]
This 5 page paper compares and contrasts the United States and Great Britain, using the book Countries and Concepts: Politics, Geography, Culture by Michael Roskin as its primary reference. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: HVUSBrit.rtf
Comparing Living in Chicago to New Orleans
[ send me this paper ]
A 4 page paper which compares living in “the windy city” to living in the birthplace of jazz. No sources are used.
Filename: TGchicno.rtf
Comparison and Contrast: Alice Walker and James Baldwin
[ send me this paper ]
A 4 page comparison and contrast between Alice Walker’s Everyday Use and James Baldwin’s Sonny’s Blues. No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAuseson.rtf
Comparison of Language and Style in Passages from Verne’s “Around the World in Eighty Days” (1873) and Theroux’s “The Great Railway Bazaar” (1977)
[ send me this paper ]
This is a 4 page paper discussing language and style used in passages from Jules Verne’s “Around the World in Eighty Days” (1873) and Paul Theroux’s “The Great Railway Bazaar: By Train Through Asia” (1977). A comparison of travel logs while in the city of Bombay as described in Jules Verne’s “Around the World in Eighty Days” (1873) and Paul Theroux’s “The Great Railway Bazaar: By Train Through Asia” (1977) shows two different accounts in language, style and impressions. Verne’s central character Phileas Fogg is a formal 19th century English gentleman and his account reflects this. The language of the passage and the style show the rigidity of Fogg’s character through the use of effective similes and the fact that he passed through Bombay with indifference. Theroux’s account is vastly different in that he presents a somewhat more informal language and style in first person narrative and at times addresses the reader directly. However, his account of Bombay is so filled with emotions, impressions and comparisons that the reader is also left without an adequate travel description of the city. Each account is enjoyable for readers despite the vast difference in language and style and readers also learn a great deal about the writer’s intention and background.
Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: TJpassg1.rtf
|