Going After Cacciato Essay

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    carnage and some are not yet authors, but will become authors later in history. It is well known many people change after witnessing or experiencing war, but if could this influence or change their writing style? Walt Whitman started journalism in 1841. He founded a weekly newspaper called the Long-Islander. In 1865, Whitman published his second edition of Leaves of Grass (poets.org). After the start of the Civil War had started, Whitman went to Washington because he read his brother’s name (George Whitman)

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    Every Trip Is a Quest(Except When It’s Not) Foster created a hypothetical story about sixteen year old Kip during the summer of 1968. While on his way to buy a loaf of Wonderbread, he encountered a German shepherd and saw his crush, Karen, playing around and laughing with the boy he hates, Tony Vauxhall. He goes on to share with readers that to the audience it may seem as an average teen running errands for his mother, while a true professor would have seen it as a quest where a knight had an unsuitable

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    How to Read Literature Like a Professor Notes “Introduction: How’d He Do That?” making a deal with the devil is a very common literary theme the devil usually represents the antagonist sometimes it may seem like a teacher is making to students and inventing interpretations, but the teacher actually learned a “Language of Reading” a big component of reading is knowing the conventions, recognizing them, and anticipating the results story and novel conventions: types of characters, plot rhythms, chapter

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    In the short story, “On the Rainy River” his book The Things They Carried, author Tim O’Brien shows the internal conflict he has with himself about entering the Vietnam War. He gets drafted into a war that he hates, and he battles himself on whether or not he wants to fight. He feels like a coward for deciding to fight, but then has to deal with putting his family through the pain and stress of possibly not making it through the war. While O’Brien struggles with his moral convictions against the

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    “History is the study of any past or present happening or events for which there is physical, written or oral evidence available to substantiate the happenings or events. Some students of history have difficulty with their motivation for the subject because they cannot identify with the personal value of history” (A Guide to Critical Thinking in the Social Studies 1). Clearly, there are many approaches to the study of an era or theme, but those most frequently relied upon in all levels of education

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    Colgate University said “no U.S. president wanted to lose a country to communism” so the war was prolong for 10 years increasing the public's discontent. Tim O’Brian wrote several novels and short story about the Vietnam War which include Going After Cacciato, If I Die in a Combat Zone and a short story collection called The Things They Carried. His writing give an insight of the Vietnam War and all the suffering soldiers when through in Vietnam. In his short story “The Thing They Carried” O’Brian

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    barbaric woman. And this was just after she became exposed to the war, getting the liberation she was deprived of, to begin with, back in her previous life. Then, in "The Man I killed", it is shown how the character, O’Brien, marvels at the deepening wounds of the Vietnamese man he killed out of self-defense, all while applying his own invented story onto him, illustrating his immeasurable shame. Another victim of the war, soldier Norman Bowker, is also afflicted after his experiences, which breaks

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    authors’ personal backgrounds relating to war, the effect of the technology of that time period, and their mentality of perceiving war. Wilfred Owen was born in Oswestry, Shropshire, England, on March 18, 1893. His family often moved around, but after being placed in Birkenhead Institute his intelligence attracted a teacher who encouraged Owen to indulge as much time as he had into literature. From then on he continued to write. In his early years, he wrote about politics and art, however, upon

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    Sander had told a different story than Rat had told. Rat and Lemon were at Listening-Post Operation (LP). When they would have to lay down on the floor they stayed quite so they can hear what is going on around so they can report back. That way they can hear what was going on around them so that they would tell Sander. Rat and Lemon would talk to each other very soft. According to Michael Kaufmann “like the soldiers’ stares at the “fatass colonel” in Kiley’s ghost music story” (339)

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    Comparing Mary Anne in Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong and Kurtz in Apocalypse Now       In 1979, Francis Coppola released a film that he said he hoped "would give its audience a sense of the horror, the madness, the sensuousness, and the moral dilemma of the Vietnam war" (as quoted in Hagen 230). His film, Apocalypse Now, based on Joseph Conrad's 1902 novel Heart of Darkness, is the story of Captain Benjamin Willard's (Martin Sheen) journey to the interior of the jungle of Southeastern Asia

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