YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling
Essays 31 - 60
This book review is on Amanda D. Tourville's My Friend Has Autism, which is illustrated by Kristin Sorra. An informative, sensit...
This book review is on the first three chapters of Five Dysfunctions of a Team by Patrick Lencioni. The writer evaluates the boo...
record of communication between Semmes and his superiors. Boykin, in his Preface, also thanks the Alderman library at the Universi...
altruistic claims, both of these theorists argued that greed was the fundamental motivation that propelled imperialism (The New Im...
process, Ho Chi Minh claims that more than two million Vietnamese died of starvation, a result not only of French preoccupation wi...
In four pages four brief essays regarding Europe since 1870 include issues of human rights, Fascism of Benito Mussolini, hypotheti...
In seven pages censorship is discussed with youth and children's book censorship emphasized with a discussion of banning books eit...
In five pages this paper presents an overview of the story and characters featured in Upton Sinclair's The Jungle. There are no o...
In five pages the US of the 1990s and the shooting of Haitian immigrant Amadou Diallo in New York City is examined within the cont...
Two works of literature are compared and contrasted. Don Quixote by Cervantes is examined in light of The Jungle, which was writte...
This 15 page paper analyzes Upton Sinclair's novel The Jungle, about the meat packing industry in Chicago in the early 1900s. The ...
dynamic. The couple was reunited after a period of ten years, but John is too preoccupied with what he perceives to be his ultima...
In 5 pages this paper examines the intolerable working conditions that Upton Sinclair chronicled in The Jungle with the primary fo...
leaned left. While it is true that the early part of the twentieth century provided an impetus on which authors could expound th...
This 5 page paper gives an overview of the central themes of The Jungle, Upton Sinclair's classic novel about life in the Chicago ...
still places on the planet where nature is more important than man and his machines, and where nature actually "knows best" and sh...
drinking, and want to get more for it" (Sinclair Chapter 2). In this the image of Jurgis is one that evokes thoughts of morality...
nature of the work, at one point in the novel the narrator states how, "That blizzard knocked many a man out, for the crowd outsid...
Cubas position in the Caribbean has made it attractive to non-natives for centuries. The Spanish gave it extra attention in the 1...
Hitler. Hitler, of course, committed suicide near the end of World War II. Steiner placing him in the Amazon several years after ...
meant to illustrate the dichotomy between and among all the interwoven traits attributed to a girl of her age. On the one hand, s...
who finds themself trapped with a, almost willingly, woman going insane. Twains "Huckleberry Finn" takes the reader with him along...
takes place between Stanley and Jungle Fever in New York The wealthy elite of Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanans world were the peo...
Indeed, Douglass (1960) book portrays a man living within himself in order to escape the atrocities of a nonliberal life; if not a...
would become incredibly active in the socialist movement and clearly a man who fought for the rights of many different people in r...
out of the rain and a meal in their childrens stomachs (a snack to us). The people never really paid any attention to what they w...
depicted in The Jungle, which based its premise upon the suffocating wage labor issue. The book painted a grim picture of the man...
the bosses, the police, the politicians, and a myriad of other players. Sinclair reveals a dream which is interlaced by theft, pr...
reality, however, although The Jungle certainly had a commendable socio-political impact on American society, it was not in the co...
the sentiments of the time very well when he said that political leaders had to use Hamiltonian means to ensure Jeffersonian ends ...