Is the women’s strategy effective? What might the women’s boycott in the name of peace reveal about what humans find to be important?

After reading Lysistrata, answer the following two questions:

Is the women’s strategy effective? What might the women’s boycott in the name of peace reveal about what humans find to be important?

Be sure to write at least 300 words and be sure to cite and then fully analyze a rich, juicy quote to support and complicate your ideas.

What metaphor did Lu Xun choose to depict Chinese society and why (novel)?

Answer the following. (150-200 words each)
1.What metaphor did Lu Xun choose to depict Chinese society and why (novel)?
2. What is the past, according to the “madman” and is there a path forward according to the Lu Xun (novel)?

Compare the styles of two different kinds of books. Refer to at least three of our course readings. What attributes are similar or different, why, and to what effect?

1. Compare the styles of two different kinds of books. Refer to at least three of our course readings. What attributes are similar or different, why, and to what effect? (I don't expect you to compare all their attributes, but choose several of the most interesting and/or most important.)

Compare the styles of two different kinds of books. Refer to at least three of our course readings. What attributes are similar or different, why, and to what effect?

Compare the styles of two different kinds of books. Refer to at least three of our course readings. What attributes are similar or different, why, and to what effect? (I don’t expect you to compare all their attributes, but choose several of the most interesting and/or most important.) *** Note:primarily the physical type or style of books, rather than their content (the “linguistic code”). (But you can talk about how the physical format of a book affects its content, of course.)
The two books are epic of Gilgamesh (1) and Canterbury tales (2)
Three-course readings
(1) https://blog.britishmuseum.org/a-library-fit-for-a-king/

(2) Michael Omert pdf
https://sites.fas.harvard.edu/~chaucer/teachslf/gp-par.htm
https://hdl.huntington.org/digital/collection/p15150coll7/id/2367
https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2021/01/over-4500-manuscripts-now-online.html

Many critics have argued that Wide Sargasso Sea upends patriarchal and colonial hierarchies in its revision of Bronte’s Bertha. Do you agree or disagree? Why or why not?

Use Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre and Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea to compose a 550-600 words paragraph that answers the following question: Many critics have argued that Wide Sargasso Sea upends patriarchal and colonial hierarchies in its revision of Bronte’s Bertha. Do you agree or disagree? Why or why not? The paragraph should make an arguable claim that is supported by strong interpretations (close readings) of 3 direct textual evidences. No need for an introductory hook nor a conclusion but make sure the quotes are well integrated and are followed by rich analysis that forms a compact logic chain that supports your claim.

Discuss the ways in which Woolf’s writing engages with questions of materiality and/or spirituality.

The essay should make substantial REFERENCE to TWO or more texts by Virginia Woolf [possibly chosen from this reading list: The Voyage Out (1915), Jacob’s Room (1922), Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), Orlando: A Biography (1928), Virginia Woolf: Selected Essays].

TOPICS LIST:

1. ‘Why, since life holds only so many hours, waste one of them on being lectured?’ (Woolf, ‘Why?’). How does Woolf’s writing respond to figures of authority and power?
2. Discuss the ways in which Woolf’s writing engages with questions of materiality and/or spirituality.
3. ‘Nature, who has played so many queer tricks upon us’ (Woolf, Orlando). What significance does the natural world have in Woolf’s writing?
4. ‘The terms ‘public’ and ‘private’ were useful to Woolf and are useful in reading her, as they speak to so many concerns which were foremost in her mind’ (Anna Snaith, Virginia Woolf: Public and Private Negotiations). Consider the ways in which Woolf’s writing engages with the public and private spheres. Was one more important than the other to her?
5. To what extent, and in what ways, does Woolf’s writing challenge conventions of genre?
6. ‘It is precisely in her insistence on the sexual inflection of all questions of historical understanding and literary representation that Woolf is a feminist writer’ (Rachel Bowlby, Feminist Destinations). To what extent do you agree or disagree with this statement?
7. Discuss how Woolf’s writing relates to an important development in either the philosophical, political or scientific debates of her time.
8(Woolf, The Waves). With reference to narrative style, discuss how Woolf explores the relationship between stasis and movement.
9. ‘One of the important connections between Woolf’s fictional and nonfictional writing is her persistent interest in how people – real and imagined – have negotiated the conflict between what they want and what is expected of them’ (Alex Zwerdling, Virginia Woolf and the Real World). In what ways does Woolf’s writing explore the relationship between individual desires and societal conventions.
10. ‘Though they must part in the end, painting and writing have much to tell each other’ (Woolf, ‘Walter Sickert: A Conversation’). Discuss how Woolf’s writing influences and/or is influenced by visual art.
11. Discuss how any two of the following issues intersect in Woolf’s writing: race, class, sexuality, animality.

 

Compare and contrast the presentation of love in the following poems in the light of this comment.

It has been said that Rossetti’s poem offers a hopeful depiction of love, whereas Yeats’ poem presents an alternative view. Compare and contrast the presentation of love in the following poems in the light of this comment. (25 marks)

Discuss the contribution the scene makes to the meaning of the work as a whole.

Novels and plays often include scenes of weddings, funerals, parties, and other social occasions to reveal the values of the characters and the society in which they live. In a focused essay using Pride and Prejudice, discuss the contribution the scene makes to the meaning of the work as a whole. DO NOT MERELY GIVE PLOT SUMMARY.

Analyze the arguments they present, using a sentence or so to restate the argument and then discuss how the text(s) support them.

1. The speaker of Bruce Snider’s “The Certainty of Numbers” proposes that numbers alone fail to account for other factors, including things like emotions, distractions, and weather conditions. Choosing another assigned literary text, analyze how it gives readers access to other factors that enable a complex, enriched, complicated, or nuanced understanding of something (a situation, an experience, a cultural norm—whatever “something” fits your example and catches your interest). As part of your analysis, you should briefly set out the ideas from Snider’s poem to create a frame, and then use that frame to analyze the other text which will be your primary focus.2. In “You Foolish Men,” Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz’s speaker calls out certain men for their hypocrisy concerning what they say they value in women and what they really want. Choose another assigned literary text and analyze it to argue for what Sor Juana’s speaker would say to a character in that text and why, and how this allows us insight into that other character and/or their situation or culture. As part of your analysis, you should set out the ideas from Sor Juana’s poem to create a frame, and then use that frame to analyze the other text which will be your primary focus. If relevant, you might also consider what the other character would say to Sor Juana’s speaker.3. Some of the texts we’ve read together so far engage questions of what can (and can’t) be known, how knowledge is obtained, and what individuals do when confronted with something that is puzzling. Choosing one of the assigned literary texts, explore how a character wrestles with what is knowable and/or strange, and build an argument about how questions of truth and knowledge impact their actions, choices, and/or beliefs.4. Although literary works do not typically have traditional thesis statements, many times they do make arguments. For this option, explore the question of how literary works address a social issue. Analyze the arguments they present, using a sentence or so to restate the argument and then discuss how the text(s) support them. As part of your analysis, you might consider the kind of examples they use. You might consider the angle or focus the writer chooses, and how that angle or focus works to shape aspects of the text such as message, choices in characters, theme, emphasis, etc. How do they make use of the genre of fiction, poetry, or autobiography to convey their message? What is the effect of conveying their argument through literature instead of in an editorial or position paper, for instance? Build your argument by referring to and drawing on one or two of our assigned readings as your main illustration and support.
Materials Choose from among the assigned readings by Sor Juana(poem: You foolish man) Swift(poem: Lady’s dressing room) Haywood, the creator of The Song of Ch’un-Hyang, Defoe, Equiano, Pu, and Akinari. Some prompts ask you to write about two texts; you should not write about more than two regardless of the prompt you choose. When writing about two texts, make sure that you produce a unified argument, and that you haven’t written what feels like two separate essays put together. Choose readings that you have access to, and can reread before and as you work on your essay.
This is not meant to be a research paper. However, if you find it necessary to refer to outside sources in addition to the assigned course readings, be sure to cite them appropriately. As noted on the syllabus, plagiarism–representing another’s words or ideas as your own–is subject to academic sanction and failure of the assignment. When a writer includes words (even slightly modified), ideas, or other material from any outside source, including online sources, without indicating this is happening (via quotation marks, signal phrases, and citation), this makes the information look like the writer’s own ideas and as such is plagiarism.

Discuss the contribution the scene makes to the meaning of the work as a whole.

Novels and plays often include scenes of weddings, funerals, parties, and other social occasions to reveal the values of the characters and the society in which they live. In a focused essay using Pride and Prejudice, discuss the contribution the scene makes to the meaning of the work as a whole. DO NOT MERELY GIVE PLOT SUMMARY.