Jotted Lines

A Collection Of Essays

Menu
  • Literature
  • Media Studies
  • History
  • Management
  • Philosophy
  • Economics
  • Gender Studies
  • Psychology
  • Law
Menu

Tag: Analysis

Redemption by John Gardner – Analysis

Posted on January 23, 2021January 23, 2021 by JL Admin

“Redemption” also belongs to this group of stories which describe and explore the vulnerary function of art. The theme of this story differs somewhat from that of the other three, but the subject matter is the same: the protagonist seeks consolation in the world of music after the death of his brother. Jack Hawthorne, the…

A New England Nun – Analysis

Posted on January 20, 2021January 20, 2021 by JL Admin

A number of critics have noted that the opening paragraph of Mary Wilkins Freeman’s “A New England Nun” very closely echoes the first stanza of English poet Thomas Gray’s famous “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”: The curfew lolls the knell of parting day, / The lowing herd wind slowly o’er the lea, / The…

Mrs. Bathurst by Rudyard Kipling – Analysis – Essay

Posted on January 15, 2021January 15, 2021 by JL Admin

If you have come away from “Mrs. Bathurst” more than a little confused and frustrated by its complexity, then rest assured that you are neither the first nor the last to do so. Since its growing popularity as one of Kipling’s most complex stories, “Mrs. Bathurst” has received a barrage of critical response, most of…

Mateo Falcone – Analysis

Posted on January 12, 2021January 12, 2021 by JL Admin

Prosper Merimee’s short story “Mateo Falcone” (1829) culminates in the killing of a ten-year-old boy by his father; the killing—the question needs to be posed whether it is a murder—takes place in a ravine in the rugged hills of Corsica, and its victim bears the ironic name of Fortunato. The father and killer, Mateo Falcone,…

The Masque of the Red Death – Analysis

Posted on January 5, 2021January 5, 2021 by JL Admin

Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Masque of the Red Death” may be interpreted variously as a parable for man’s fear of death, a moral tale with biblical implications, or the delusional vision of a madman waging an internal battle for his own sanity. Depending on each of these interpretations, the narrator may be identified…

The Man to Send Rain Clouds – Analysis

Posted on January 2, 2021January 2, 2021 by JL Admin

Her work widely anthologized, Leslie Marmon Silko is considered the preeminent Native American woman novelist, a legend in her achievements in the field of Native American literature. Her writings are included in the syllabus of various American literature courses in high schools and colleges. Raised on the Indian reservation in Laguna, New Mexico, she incorporates…

The Magic Barrel – Analysis

Posted on December 28, 2020December 28, 2020 by JL Admin

Publishing “The Magic Barrel” in 1954, Bernard Malamud was at the beginning of his career, and near the beginning of a brief and remarkable period in the history of Jewish-American writing. For perhaps a decade, from the mid-1950s to the mid1960s, the American literary imagination seemed to have been captured by a series of books…

The Lifted Veil – Analysis – Essay

Posted on December 26, 2020December 26, 2020 by JL Admin

The “Curse” of the Lifted Veil  The “veil” in George Eliot’s novella “The Lifted Veil” symbolizes the boundary between the natural world and the world of the supernatural, which in this story includes the realm of the spirit and of death. The words “shroud” or “curtain” also appear throughout the story as references to the…

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow – Analysis

Posted on December 22, 2020December 22, 2020 by JL Admin

Irving’s narrator opens “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” with a brief description of Sleepy Hollow itself, “one of the quietest places in the whole world,” a place of “uniform tranquillity.” Before moving on to introduce his characters he concludes, ”If ever I should wish for a retreat, whither I might steal from the world and…

In Another Country – Analysis – Essay

Posted on December 18, 2020December 18, 2020 by JL Admin

One of the most often-discussed aspects of Ernest Hemingway’s writing is his distinctive style. Whereas many writers of his day were still heavily influenced by the verbose, extremely descriptive style of English and American authors of the nineteenth century such as Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, and Herman Melville, Hemingway was not. His literature is free…

Posts navigation

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • …
  • 52
  • Next
©2025 Jotted Lines | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb