SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 77
Download to read offline
Stream Of Consciousness Examples
In regards to your story, it does a good job of achieving a stream of consciousness narrative through
the rapid flowing details of thoughts and what is happening in the now of the story in the first part of
the piece. I did get a clear sense of what was going on as you were explaining your story and why
you did what you did overall. You convey your sense of uncertainty and cynicism well. I feel as if
you were writing this as a reluctant catharsis to your psyche. Your portrayal of military life is bleak
and terrifying which in turn validates the reasons of why you began to tell your story. The strengths
of your piece is that you write with candor, and that in turn, gets the reader invested in what you
have to say. You also use your humor
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stream Of Consciousness Movie Vs Book
Stream of consciousness (different development between novel and film)
The personality of Christopher is described in a quite different way in the book and in the film, or at
least, the perspective of Krakauer is not the same than Penn's perspective. In the book, Christopher
is shown as a selfish, arrogant and irresponsible man, whereas in the film he's a friendly and
cheerful one, who just looks for freedom and independence.
The film skip some passages, such as a brief introduction to his infancy and childhood. On the
contrary, it adds some superficial and less reliable information as in the case of the romantic
encounter with Tracy (Kristen Stewart) at the camp.
The main difference between novel and film is the narrating. The book is narrated
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Locke Personal Identity
Locke's Theory of Personal Identity
In order to get clear Locke's theory of personal identity, first Locke gives us his view of person as
some kind of thinking thing that is not a substance. Locke's intuitions from changing the parts of a
unified life to identifying a unified body which persists over repair and replacement helps illustrate
personal identity to allow for the substance of the reasoning being to change over time provided the
reasoning beings share one continued life (ECHU 27). However, Locke's theory of personal identity
differs from unified life because it requires the unity of consciousness.
A consciousness is a unique consciousness when it accompanies a being that has reason, reflection,
and considers itself as the same self. The consciousness which accompanies some person is the same
just in case the person shares a stream of consciousness. Rational beings have the reflection capacity
to remember from a consciousness' stream that is their own. Rational beings which reflect upon
ideas from their own extended stream then must be either the same person or a rational being who
could not reflect upon ideas from that unique stream. Thus, at any point on a single stream the same
self as a consciousness on another point are in fact one and the same person.
Reid's Objection to Locke's Theory ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
We are given a case where the personal identity theory of Locke should be consistent with identity
between persons but is not. The case Reid's objection considers supposes if a stream of
consciousness extends only as far as the memory, then the memory is the extension of any unifiable
consciousness. And, the extension of memory is not the extension of personal identity. Then, the
stream of consciousness extends only as far as the memory which Locke does not want to accept, or
extension of personal identity is not any unifiable stream of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Personification In Virginia Woolf
Most of the figurative expressions that were used by her such as simile and metaphor in the
description of London as a place "where beauty goes unrewarded"(pg.9), where the end of the west
world is "a small golden tassel on the edge of a vast black coach"(pg.12). In addition, Virginia Woolf
demonstrates some metaphoric continuity: the first one, she depicts London as less than important
because it looks too small .The second one, she depicts it as lowly because it seems so shabby. As
Craig Hamilton (2004: 5)
Considering characters, Woolf used personification metaphor in order to represent cities in terms of
people, to Hamilton the use of the personification metaphor by Virginia Woolf follows from
conventional conceptualizations of cities in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Thought Mrs. Ramsay, taking her place at the head of the table and looking at all the plates making.
White circles on it. "William, sit by me", she said. "Lily", she said, wearily, "over there". They had
that –– Paul Rayley and Minta Doyle –– She, only this –– an infinitely long table and plates and
knives. At the far end, was her husband, sitting down, all in a heap, frowning. What at? She did not
know. She did not mind. She could not understand how she had ever felt any emotion or affection
for him. She had a sense of being past everything, as she helped the soup, as if there was an eddy ––
there –– and one could be in it, or one could. be out of it, and she was out of it. It's all come to an
end, she thought, while they came in one after another, Charles Tansley – "Sit there.please", she said
–– Augustus Carmicheal –– and sat down. And meanwhile she waited, passively, for someone to
answer her, for something. to happen. But this is not a thing, she thought, ladling out soup that one
says. Raising her eyebrows at the discrepancy –– that was what she was thinking, this was what she
was doing –– ladling out soup – she felt. more and more strongly, outside that eddy; or as if a shade
had fallen, and, robbed of colour, she saw things truly". (pg. 83 of ''To the Lighthouse'' by Virginia
Woolf, 1969).
So, the stream of consciousness is a narrative technique which has been developed by so many
writers, essayist, and novelists, but the most well known is that Virginia Woolf is considered as the
forerunner of this style of writing and that what was affirmed by Maria T(2005) when she said:
Influenced by the works of French writer Marcel Proust and Irish writer James Joyce, among others,
Woolf strove to create a literary form that would convey inner life. To this end, she elaborated a
technique known as Stream of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Great Gatsby Compare And Contrast Septimus And Mrs...
The stream of consciousness in literature can give the main idea of the story in a multitude of
different ways while being represented in different formats. In the novel Mrs. Dalloway, the story is
being told through the perspective of multiple characters. While each part seems to have a
connection with one another, each part affects the overall story. For example, when Mrs. Dalloway
sees Septimus for the first and only time, it allows the reader to connect Septimus's mindset with
Mrs. Dalloway's mindset. Even though Septimus and Mrs. Dalloway belong to two different classes
in society, their struggles can be viewed as a parallel, meaning that their experiences during the day
can be compared and contrasted as time passes in the novel. Mrs. Dalloway pulls herself away from
thoughts of the past in order to prepare of the party she will be hosting in the future. Septimus, on
the other hand, is mentally stuck in a chaotic fusion of his past and present. Another good example
of consciousness is Peter Walsh, when he is introduced; he reveals the consciousness of someone
who is hindered in the present by his past decisions and wishes to move on. Much like Mrs.
Dalloway and Septimus, Peter has moments when he slips from the present and thinks about the past
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Dalloway but still differs when it comes to displaying streams of thought. Krapp's Last Tape,
however, shows its stream of consciousness in a different way. Unlike Mrs. Dalloway, The Hours
divides up its streams of consciousness into three types of chapters named after the character it was
about, Ms. Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway and Mrs. Brown. Each section tells the story and prospective of
the women as they exists at different spans of time. However, all of the sections interlay with one
another, for example Ms. Woolf spends her section on her ideas for a novel while in Mrs. Brown is
reading Ms. Woolf's finished work while Mrs. Dalloway is interacting with Mrs. Brown's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Catcher In The Rye
Stream of consciousness is a type of narrative that traces the thoughts and feelings of a character. It
is a collection of myriad impressions that influence the flow of thoughts. It is a representation of the
continuous movement in the mind of an individual. It approximates the flow of thoughts and sensory
impressions that pass the mind each instant. This kind of narrative is often fragmented. There may
be a lack of proper organization of ideas as thoughts do not necessarily flow in a particular order.
The interior mental and emotional state is emphasized on, rather than the outside world. A stream of
consciousness novel may use a technique called 'interior monologue.' The character's thoughts are
presented directly and may be restricted to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Next, he has a prostitute, Sunny, come to his room but is uncomfortable once she enters. Maurice,
the bell boy, punches him and gets an extra 5 dollars from him. Post a quick sleep, he calls Sally, an
old acquaintance, for a date. Before meeting her, he checks in his luggage at Grand Central Station,
meets two nuns and buys a record for his little sister, Pheobe. He then watches a play with Sally
after which they go skating. He impulsively makes a rude comment which makes her leave
immediately. He then watches a show by himself and gets fully drunk. While trying to find ducks at
a frozen pond at the Central Park, he trips and breaks the record he'd bought for Pheobe. Completely
exhausted, Holden decides to head home and secretly meet Pheobe.
Fortunately, Holden's parents aren't at home and he manages to meet Phoebe. He describes to her his
fantasy of being a guardian of children playing in a rye field, catching them in case they fall off.
This justifies the title, The Catcher in the Rye. When he parents arrive, he sneaks out and goes to the
home of Mr. Antolini, his English teacher, to spend the night. After receiving advice on life, Holden
falls into a short sleep. He wakes up to find Mr. Antolini patting his head, which causes him great
discomfort and he
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness
Narrative technique. Use of the "stream of consciousness"
Stream of consciousness is a narrative technique which, using words, describes the flow of thoughts
within the characters' minds. This term was at first coined by psychologist William James in his
work "The Principles of Psychology". With regard to the stream of consciousness, he stated that "...it
is nothing joined; it flows. A 'river' or a 'stream' is the metaphor by which it is most naturally
described. In talking of it hereafter, let's call it the stream of thought, consciousness, or subjective
life."
James Joyce is one of the most outstanding and famous representatives of stream of consciousness
in literature. Following this technique, Joyce presents the thoughts of his characters ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Greyish over the ears. Madame: smiling. I smiled back. A smile does a long way. Only politeness
perhaps. Nice fellow. Who knows is that true about the woman he keeps? Not pleasant for the wife.
Yet they say, who was it told me, there is no carnal. You would imagine that would get played out
pretty quick. Yes, it was Crofton met him one evening bringing her a pound of rumpsteak. What is
this she was? Barmaid in Jury's. Or the Moira, was it?
Ulysses is a novel that takes place in just one day, so the stream of consciousness is a great tool to
know more about the characters' background.
He [Martin Cunningham] looked away from me. He knows. Rattle his bones.
That afternoon of the inquest. The red labelled bottle on the table. The room in the hotel with
hunting pictures. Stuffy it was. Sunlight through the slats of the Venetian blinds. The coroner's ears,
big and hairy. Boots giving evidence. Thought he was asleep first. Then saw like yellow streaks on
his face. Had slipped down to the foot of the bed. Verdict: overdose. Death by misadventure. The
letter. For my son Leopold.
No more pain. Wake no more. Nobody owns.
At this part of the novel the reader discovers that Leopold Bloom's father died by committing
suicide, and all thanks to the stream of consciousness. The reader can see how the sentences tend to
be shorter than in most of the novels, more clear and succinct to show Bloom's endless flow of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
As I Lay Dying Language Analysis
In As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner effectively uses linguistic abnormalities to challenge the
potency of language. This produces an overarching idea on the cyclic nature of mortality and its
ultimate nihilistic significance. To unite these otherwise restricted concepts, the novel requires an
unusual relationship between its characters and the author. This relationship is only complicated by
the delicate nature of mortality. Thus, Faulkner antagonizes the limitations of language and
challenges words to convey more significance than their flat definitions. Faulkner overcomes the
boundaries of language by stream of consciousness. This allows him to encompass contemporary
artistry and cultural phenomena. Therefore, the novel's unique construction ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Its linguistic complexities seem unnecessary and flawed. This effect is produced because of the
novel's twisted humor and structures such as unexplained italicized paragraphs, a pictogram of a
coffin (Faulkner 88), sporadic punctuation, and a line of blank space (Faulkner 173). These things
make the novel seem chaotic and even contradictory. Regardless of its complexity, these linguistic
abnormalities are necessary to explicate the novel's purpose: the insignificance of life and death.
This attitude is apparent only because of stream of consciousness, artistry, and cultural diction.
Stream of consciousness unifies the narrators and the author. This change in scope produces a more
intimate understanding of each character. For example, it allows for Addie's postmortem narration.
Thus, stream of consciousness operates as a fundamental platform for the novel's purpose. Similarly,
the surrealist and cubist point of view heightens the dark comedy of mortality. The unification of
these two perspectives––the symmetry of cubism and the cynical surrealism––creates Dewey Dell:
the mirror and product of Addie's suppressed station. Just as Addie never wanted her children,
Dewey Dell attempts to have an abortion. Upon Addie's death, the novel's dark humor comes full
circle: Dewey Dell is made a motherless mother and left a child with child. This cynical creation is
only possible because of the reader's context in cubism and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stream Of Consciousness In Faulkner's As I Lay Dying
Stream of Consciousness: A strong case for character relation When I sit down to read a story I do
not only wish to be entertained, but also to somehow relate to the story in some way. Most of the
time, I feel this relation through the characters in the story. There are many ways that a writer can
make their characters relatable, but one notable technique used by writers Ernest Hemingway in The
Nick Adams Stories and As I lay Dying by William Faulkner, is stream of consciousness or interior
monologue. Stream of consciousness is defined as a literary technique used to convey a characters
thoughts and feelings as perceived by him or her (Wheeler). This technique can be perceived as sort
of jumbled or out of order like a person's actual thoughts ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
In an essay by Elizabeth Kerr, she recounts the novel of As I Lay Dying as an "ironic quest" by the
Bundren family to take the family matriarch, Addie Bundren, upon her death, to Jefferson to be
buried (5–6). This critique of the novel does well to include the irony of the story by explaining how
each of the characters except Darl and Jewel, have their own agendas for wanting to go on this
journey forty miles away, other than just to keep the promise to their mother to get her to her desired
burial place (Kerr 6). While this critic uses irony as its main description for the story as a whole, it
does not put enough emphasis on the use of stream of consciousness as main technique used by
Faulkner to help the reader relate to the characters, to understand their true emotions, as written by
Faulkner. Kerr doesn't completely dismiss the use of the technique, as she explains how certain
characters' stream of consciousness help us to better understand the irony of the story, but does not
include how important the technique is in the story when it comes to character relation. When I read
As I lay dying, which undoubtedly uses the stream of consciousness technique, saturated throughout
the novel, I feel like I could understand the readers true emotions about what was happening to them
at any particular time. One interior monologue that I found particularly strong for character relation
was that of the character Addie Bundren. Because Addie is the basic subject of the whole book, and
the reason the journey is being taken in the first place, to understand her character is essential. Being
able to understand Addie helped me understand the other characters motivations for their actions and
intentions. In her interior monologue she explains how she really feels about her family and her
choice to marry Anse, to have children, and how she feels about being a mother (Faulkner 169–176).
When I read the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Success Of Stream Of Consciousness
Cameron Davis
Mr. James
AP Literature p.3
17 March 2015
The Success of Stream of Consciousness The stream of consciousness form of writing used in The
Sound and The Fury helps the reader better understand the many dramatic events that take place in
the novel with the Compson Family. The way Faulkner uses stream of consciousness throughout the
novel is a unique way of getting his story across in a way that the reader is seeing the narrators point
of view as opposed to just being told a story. Stream of consciousness is when the author writes as if
inside the minds of the characters jumping from one event to another like the way one thinks. For
example in Benjy 's section, everything is presented through unorganized thoughts ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
In Benjy 's section his thoughts are repeatedly interrupted, sometimes returned to many times not.
"Caddy was all wet and muddy behind, and I started to cry and she came and squatted in the water.
"Hush now." she said. "I'm not going to run away." So I hushed. Caddy smelled like trees in the
rain." This quote from Benjy 's section is very representing of how Faulkner displays Benjy through
many imagery and senses with smell, sight, etc. The Stream of Consciousness form Faulkner uses to
depict Benjy is very accurate for his condition and at first can be difficult for the reader to
understand but helps the reader better understand him further on. Faulkner couldn 't have done a
better job of creating how Benjy 's mind would act realistically while still bringing enough order to
his thoughts for the reader to make sense of it. Faulkner 's style is not complex whatsoever in
presenting the simple mindedness of Benjy, yet his style takes a change for the more complex mind
of Quentin. Quentin 's section consists of many long difficult ideas he try 's solving therefore, his
section is more complicated. However Quentin 's thoughts jump from one idea to another being that
he had a more advanced mind. Faulkner gives order to Quentin 's section by presenting it on the day
when Quentin is to commit suicide so his mind is concerned only with his father and Caddy 's
Behavior. "Listen no good taking it so hard its not your fault kid it would have been some other
fellow
Did you
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stream of Consciousness Novel
The Development of the 'Stream–of–Consciousness' Technique in Modernist English Fiction (with
Special Reference to the Contributions of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf)
Arpan Adhikary
The term 'stream of consciousness' as applied in literary criticism to designate a particular mode of
prose narrative was first coined by philosopher William James in his book Principles of Psychology
(1890) to describe the uninterrupted flow of perceptions, memories and thoughts in active human
psyche. As a literary term, however, it denotes a certain narrative technique used in novels in which
the narrator records in minute but somewhat abstract way whatever passes through his or her
conscious mind. The socalled 'stream of consciousness' in a work of ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The style is highly allusive and Joyce deliberately confuses the narrative by making a pastiche of the
styles of several genres together while presenting the flows of the continuous thoughts of the
principal characters. Here for the first time Joyce also employed the 'interior monologue' which is
deemed to be the purest form of the 'stream–of–consciousness' mode. In Joyce's third and last novel
Finnegans Wake (1939) the complexity of the 'stream–of–consciousness' technique reaches its
heights necessitating the text's being one of the least read ones in any language. In this novel Joyce
used around forty languages other than English and presented an awkwardly extensive range of
literary, mythical, political and historical allusions while narrating the one–night dream sequence of
the protagonist, a Dublin tavern–keeper named Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker. Apart from Joyce,
Virginia Woolf also made remarkable contribution to the development of the 'stream–of–
consciousness' mode in the modernist English fiction. In Mrs. Dalloway (1925) Woolf presents the
diverse mental recourses of Clarissa Dalloway within the span of one single day, and in the interior
monologue of Mrs. Dalloway the narrative breaks with the realistic mode in order to suit the inner
reality of the narrator's psyche which is different from the external reality by which she is
surrounded. Similar intellectual cogency and finer technical
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Other Wes Moore Critical Analysis
Twenty–eight–year–old Anthony Frederico was fired from his dream job as a sports reporter after
making the mistake of publishing an article with a racist headline. After years filled with regret over
his career–ending mistake, Frederico finds new life as a Catholic priest living by the word of god
(Zauzmer 1). The world is teeming with second chances and forgiveness, which is a recurring theme
in the novel, The Other Wes Moore and the classic, The Scarlet Letter. The theme of second chances
is supported throughout these narratives using the literary elements of imagery and stream of
consciousness.
The subject matter of second chances is detected in the novel The Other Wes Moore through the use
of stream of consciousness and imagery. After ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Throughout the book, the characters, along with the narrator, start to notice that "Such helpfulness
was found in [Hester]..." (Hawthorne 243) and the community decides to change the meaning of her
sinful letter from "adultery" to "able". The narrator uses stream of consciousness to describe how
Hester Prynne was finally viewed by the Puritans in a different light, as more of a benevolent being.
The idea of second chances is also supported throughout the story The Scarlet Letter through the use
of imagery. In the beginning of the novel, Hester is depicted being released from the prison after
serving time for her crime for adultery. For the first time, the Puritans get a glimpse of the
"...elaborate embroidery and fantastic flourishes of gold thread..." (Hawthorne 55) that is her sinful
letter. Hester's letter is her ultimate sin and the reason for her suffering, but it is also really her
second chance. Because of her actions that led to her letter, she was able to find new love with
Dimmesdale and live a life that was not controlled by her horrible husband. The use of imagery is
used to describe this letter as "elaborate" and even goes on to say that it is made with gold thread, so
obviously the author is trying to convey that Hester's letter is of extreme significance.
By closely examining both The Other Wes Moore and The Scarlet Letter it can be concluded that
both of these novels have a strong recurring theme
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Reading And Writing About Family Guy : The Semiotics Of...
In the essay "Reading and Writing about Family Guy: The Semiotics of Stream of Consciousness"
Lee Transue explains how Seth MacFarlane integrates his own unique version of stream of
consciousness in the animated sitcom Family Guy to entertain its viewers. The reason Transue wrote
this essay is he was invited by Dr. Johnathan Silverman to write a piece for the book, The World is a
Text. He chose to write about Family Guy because of its popularity and he is a fan of the show. To
begin the writing process, Transue sat down and started his research, which was watching several
episodes of Family Guy. Afterwards he quickly looked over a few texts and refreshed his brain on
the stream of consciousness concept and began the drafting process. According to Transue, the
drafting of the essay took about three hours. He then did some slight editing and the essay was
finished. After all was said and done the whole process took about 10 hours. To start off, Lee
Transue begins by giving some background on the concept of stream of consciousness. He begins by
writing "It is the certification of true talent when a storyteller can write that which he or she feels
can be written, and not should be written by typical literary standards, while the audience remains
unaware of his or her sleight of hand. There are many words and phrases to describe this technique,
foremost among them stream of consciousness" (94). These two sentences act as support for the
thesis because in Family Guy a normal
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The As A Stream Of Consciousness
on transference, in which, in his case studies the patients transferred feelings for others onto the
doctor (Thurschwell, 39). Therefore in, The Prelude, the narrator appears to transfer feelings
intended for the female onto Nature and then proceeds to sexualize Nature.
"For Freud, every thought is unconscious before it is conscious" (Thurschwell, 4). With that being
said, the imagination allows unconscious thoughts to reach consciousness once they are written.
They exist within the imagination until consciously, the narrator releases the words through a
process Freud refers to as "free association" and allows them to exist on the page. Free Association
when used in psychoanalysis entails the patient to say whatever thought comes to mind when
triggered by something else. The process of Free Association resembles the process of a writer
imagining and writing what comes to mind. This process, also known as a "stream of
consciousness", was first referred to by William James in "The Principles of Psychology" published
in 1889. When referring to 'Substantive' and 'Transitive' States of Mind, James writes, "When we
take a general view of the wonderful stream of our consciousness, what strikes us first is the
different pace of its parts. Like a bird's life, it seems to be an alternation of flights and perchings.
The rhythm of language expresses this, where every thought is expressed in a sentence, and every
sentence closed by a period. The resting–places are usually occupied by
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
'Mending Wall, And Lyndall Hough'sStopping By Woods'
Discoveries often demand the re–evaluation of an individual's outlook on life, a process in which
reconsidering perspectives allows one to make sense of the world and come to terms with
confronting realities. Two composers who's work reflect this notion are Robert Frosts poems
'Mending Wall' and 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening', and Lyndall Hough's short story 'The
Shooting Kid'. Each text explores the varied emotionally and intellectually significant discoveries on
individuals and their ability to allow for reconsideration of personal perspectives and understand
their place in the world. Self–discovery is often accompanied by internal metacognitive dialogue
due to its ability to allow individuals to re–evaluate their outlook on life and develop a better
understanding of the world. Frost's 'Stopping by Woods', his 1922 lyric poem provides a pre–
eminent example of an internal monologue. Use of first person present tense language allows for the
reader to relish the quiet splendour of the dark woods and ponder, if only for a moment, the allure of
escaping indefinitely from the exhausting world of people and promises. The confronting and
emotionally significant discovery of the persona's morbid attraction to oblivion is conveyed through
the furtive tone in the first stanza "He will not see me stopping here/ to watch this wood fill up with
snow" suggesting a feeling of delight that may be associated with the deep, dark woods. Potent
connotations of the words 'dark',
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Exploring The Possibilities Of Discovering The Neural...
Exploring the possibilities of discovering the neural correlates of visual consciousness
In the ongoing strive to better understand the mechanism of consciousness, the possibility of
discovering the neural correlates of consciousness (NCCs) is arguably the leading agenda in its
scientific research. Although the question of whether consciousness can be fully reduced to its
neural correlates remains debatable, it is still credible that whenever an appropriate brain process
occurs, the associated subjective experience follows (Chalmers, 2013). Thus, this essay will
demonstrate that it is plausible that the minimal brain processes necessary for a conscious percept
can be experimentally narrowed down to a smaller coalition of neurons. Understandably, the
complexity of the cortical system that is yet to be fully deciphered, along with the technological
difficulties in obtaining essential data has hindered the search for the NCCs and have lead some to
doubt the possibility of ever locating it (Fins & Plum, 2004). It is also likely that there are numerous
NCCs, each associated with different modalities, which complicates the task further (Chalmers,
2013). For the purpose of this essay, the possibilities of discovering the neural correlates of visual
consciousness are discussed in particular. This essay aims to define the foundational concepts of the
science of consciousness, outline the experimental projects in finding the neural correlates of visual
consciousness, and address
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Katherine Anne Porter's The Jilting of Granny Weatherall...
Stream of Consciousness in Katherine Anne Porter's The Jilting of Granny Weatherall
In "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall," Katherine Anne Porter applies the rhetorical technique stream
of consciousness to guide her audience through the last sixty years of a leathery, bitter woman jilted
in life, and finally in death. The seemingly aimless and casual technique, similar to a human's
thought pattern, effectively develops the exposition, conflict, and denouement.
By using the stream of consciousness technique, Porter establishes Granny Weatherall's background.
The occasional glimpse into the main character's past reveals the demanding responsibilities of a
young widow. She reflects on how digging post holes, riding country roads in the ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
This technique establishes the dramatic conflict as Granny Weatherall recalls how her beau, George,
jilted her at the altar. Although it is unclear to the reader what leads up to the wedding day
abandonment, she was clearly haunted for sixty years as "she had prayed against remembering him
and against losing her soul in the deep pit of hell." She becomes a bitter, controlling woman striving
for a neat and orderly life by "tucking in the edges" as if it were a sheet. She spends her life avoiding
and despising surprises, after the stunning surprise at the altar.
By applying the stream of consciousness technique to demonstrate the effects of Granny
Weatherall's lifetime struggle with the jilting and its effects, Porter establishes the main character's
need to control circumstances, even death. The darkness of death, like the familiar dark, smoky hell
of being jilted, surprises Granny Weatherall. After sixty years of anger and bitterness, the jilting of
death blocks out any other sorrow because the grief of dying erases them from her memory.
Determined to control her death as she had her life, she blows "out the light."
In conclusion, Porter's flowing inner monologue provides an opportunity for many interpretations.
Did the jilting cause her to be an angry, bitter woman
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Jilting Of Granny Weatherall And Arabing Essay
It is something everyone does, continuously, in everything we do; a running dialogue of thoughts
always occupying our minds, perceptible to only us. In everyday life, this common train of thoughts
is never scrutinized or examined, but in literature, it is something referred to as stream of
consciousness and it is what will be surveyed in this essay. The two stories being observed are
Katherine Porter's "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall", a short story about an 80–year–old woman's
thoughts and memories as she lives out her last day. The second story is James Joyce's "Araby", the
fictional story of a young boy in Dublin and his infatuation with a girl in his neighborhood. This
essay will examine stream of consciousness vital role in these ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
576). The character of the boy is described as early pubescent which permits the reader to deduce on
what he fully knows regarding life, love, and lust. An unreliable narrator, however, is a narrator that
we perceive to be misleading, self–deceptive, deluded or deranged. Porter articulately depicts
Granny Weatherall to be most of these in "The Jilting..." particularly when the reader encounters an
interaction between Granny, also referred to as Ellen, and her daughter Cornelia, "tell Hapsy to take
off her cap. I can't see her plain." The reader is later made aware of the circumstance that Hapsy, one
of Ellen's children, has died. Once more, half–way through the story, Granny displays how truly
jumbled by reality she is when she tells Cornelia that she won't see the doctor again because "he's
only been gone three minutes" and her daughter informs Granny and the reader, "That was this
morning, Mother. It's night now." (p. 80). These exchanges highlight how much Granny Weatherall
is as an untrustworthy narrator. Opposed to "Araby", which is told in first person from the
perspective of the young boy, "The Jilting..." is disconcertingly told in limited third person by which
we can see inside the mind of only Granny Weatherall; as such, when Granny is lucid, the story
proceeds in sequential order.
Consequently, for stream of consciousness to be operative, the working of the character's mind
should
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Writing Tool of the Twentieth Century: Stream of...
Stream of Consciousness
Thoughts, emotions, and motives make up whom a person is. These are the same things that make
up the characters in some of the most famous literary works. Stream of consciousness shows the
thoughts, feelings, and ideas of a character through the character's point of view. Stream of
consciousness is a writing tool used most notably in the early twentieth century, during the rise of
modernism. Another description for stream of consciousness is interior monologue. This interior
monologue gives the reader a look into the thoughts that drives the character to their actions.
William James explains the term in The Principles of Psychology, stating, "Consciousness, then,
does not appear to itself chopped up in bits. Such ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Alfred Prufrock". In "Prufrock", Eliot uses a combination of stream of consciousness and imagery to
tell the story. The imagery is evident by the amount of descriptive language the speaker uses, while
stream of consciousness is represented by the story being told entirely through the speaker's mind.
In "Prufrock", the thoughts are of Prufrock himself, not of the author, T. S. Eliot. The use of stream
of consciousness in "Prufrock" opens the mind of the character, allowing the thoughts and feelings
of the character to be exposed. This exposure makes the character more relatable because it shows
the strengths, and more primarily, the insecurities of the character. Prufrock's insecurities are on full
display during the entire poem, and are apparent in the fifth stanza, line 39, as he thinks "Time to
turn back and descend the stair, / With a bald spot in the middle of my hair– / (They will say: 'How
his hair is growing thin!')" (39–41). The parenthesis indicates a break in his original thought. As he
notices the bald spot in his hair, he seems to immediately think to himself what "they" will say. He
adds, "My morning coat, my collar mounting firmly to the chin, / My necktie rich and modest, but
asserted by a simple pin– / (They will say: 'But how his arms and legs are thin!') (42–44). Again, his
thought is broken by a worry. He realizes that his clothes do not fit him as well as they used to, and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Stream of Consciousness in A Rose for Emily by William...
"A Rose for Emily" is a short story written by American author William Faulkner and centres around
an old lady named Emily. The story is written in the classic Faulkner method of a streaming
consciousness. By constructing the story through use of the stream of consciousness, Faulkner is
able to manipulate the predetermined short story structure and create an outstanding, critically
acclaimed story. In using the thematic concept of creating contrasts between two opposing entities,
Faulkner is able to entice his audience. Through the use of the specific contrasts made between the
past and present and the contrast between Homer and, Faulkner is able to pass to his readers the
concept that man's plight is tragic but that there is heroism in an attempt to rise above it.
Ray B. West's "Atmosphere and Theme in Faulkner's 'A Rose for Emily'" is a paper in which West
does an excellent job of analysing and explaining the three stated contrasts present in Faulkner's "A
Rose to Emily." West's interpretation of the contrasts present in "A Rose for Emily," further validate
the point of view that the use of contrasts aid Faulkner in his plight to relay the underlying meaning
concealed in the story. Contrast between Past Time and Present
In the course of "A Rose for Emily," there are many instances in which William Faulkner uses the
contrast between past time and the present to illustrate how hard it is for the protagonist, Emily, to
let go of the past. A key and integral example
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Use Of Stream Of Consciousness Techniques By William Faulkner
Simile. Metaphor. Onomatopoeia. We are taught these terms in elementary school and soon forget
them, but they are some of the most important tools authors can use to make their characters more
captivating and their narrative more convincing. Each writer's style is as unique as a fingerprint; the
particular pattern of loops and whorls, so to speak, depends in part on their use of these literary
modes. The literary fingerprint of William Faulkner, while typically adhering to standard rules of
writing, is recognized by its use of stream of consciousness techniques, a term coined by
psychologist William James in 1890 (Pomerleau). This form of writing attempts to break free of
previous literary conventions in an effort to portray thoughts and ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
She is akin to the 'straight man' in a sitcom–if there were nobody to react to the antics of the other
actors, many jokes would fall flat. Similarly, the mental crises which many characters in Light in
August undergo seem more significant after the reader has been exposed to Lena's stability. Lena is
also the immediate stimulus for several turning points for other characters: Byron Bunch falls in
love with her and puts himself on a quest to gain her trust; Hightower helps her give birth and is
reintroduced to the world; Brown has a moment of self–realization when he meets her in the cabin.
She is like an enzyme, not consumed by the reaction she catalyzes. During the course of the book,
she goes directly through the town of Jefferson without being harmed or even affected, a strong
backbone to support the whirlwind of events that seems to follow her.
The writing style used throughout Lena's backstory is relatively uncomplicated, which reinforces her
role and characterization. Her entire backstory in the first chapter is told primarily by the narrator
and includes short, precise sentences such as "She was the youngest living child. Her mother died
first. She said, 'Take care of paw.' Lena did so" (Faulkner 6). This concise narration stands out
against the rest of the book, which is told largely through stream of consciousness ramblings or
through other characters recounting events. But the plainness of style in Lena's introduction reflects
her role as an 'straight
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Theme Of Stream Of Consciousness
The Stream of Consciousness was introduced by William James over 100 years ago. It means that
our consciousness moves ahead with continuity. James suggested that this theme can serve as a
major focus for psychology. (James, 1890). Isn't it strange, though, that psychology almost never
speaks of this dimension? We might talk about emotions, perceptions, actions or desires, but almost
never about "the inner thought flow."
James foresaw the difficulty of studying these phenomena. He stated that to capture the Stream of
Consciousness conceptually was like trying to study a moving river by capturing it in a bucket.
Another metaphor that he proposed: "It's like trying to try to study a snowflake by capturing it in
your hand." Conceptual language ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In their examples, cited as classical works of the Stream of Consciousness, (Joyce, 1914;
Woolf,1925), the thought sequences seems to be like "mental tourism," with thoughts jumping from
island to island (or from theme to theme) in a helicopter. In contrast, the three people sharing their
Impasse, in the article "Three Extracts," show a deep level of continuity and profundity in their inner
sequences. In fact, their revelations manifest a particular courage in presenting thoughts that can be
found universally, but that would almost never be revealed to another person because they show a
deep personal truth of anxiety, humiliation or self worthlessness. As a literary analogy, the three
extracts they are closer to Kafka than to Joyce and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Romanticism In Stream Of Consciousness
Abstract: Stream of Consciousness technique is not a new term as per as Indian literature is
concerned. But in recent times it is used strictly to promote inner ideas of a protagonist, antagonist
of the novelist. It is a method to give a self analysis and interpretation o f the character. The
portrayal of the character strikes reality of life, frankness, explicit description of sexuality and above
all fulfilling her desire to the deepest depths. Namita's "Paro: Dreams of Passions" created havoc in
the history of Indian Writing in English and set an identical genre of its own. The novel deals with
erotic overtures, and obsession of love. It is the story of irrestible, outrageous woman with the same
name.
Key Words: Stream of Consciousness, inner ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
For her aspirations she married B.R. Their marriage develop jealous and depression in the mind of
Priya. It adds a pinch of salt to Priya with that she adds "Ivy, Mary and I loved him (B.R.) madly....
(Page no. 1). Behavior of Paro at marriage ceremony with new wedding is expresses minutely and it
expresses the status of woman in modern society after marriage how the economic independence
was restrained by the man. Paro's life is full of glitter but men think her behavior as that of
decisiveness. She is accepted as a final outcome for her capricious social extremes. She tries to
enjoy the small things of the life as a rich person, but that is different, colorless, tasteless and
emotionless. For an emancipation nature of Paro she could not continue with one man and marriage
is not a permanent feature of Paro for this Priya has expressed: This is the Paro who is recently
liberated from marriage and convention: she is still convinced that she is young and desirable as she
was. Her massive breasts, like the enlarged pores of her109 skin, have grown ponderous with age.
Even her fingers have become fatter–but this coarsening of body has also somehow catalyzed a
startling vitality of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is The Author's Point Of View Of The Catcher In The Rye
Salinger wrote The Catcher in the Rye to relate to the teens of the 1950, and he did a brilliant job.
Salinger was able to really connect to teens through narration and his use of first person point of
view, wording, and stream of consciousness.
The first piece of evidence is first person point of view because the reader sees the world through
the lens of the character. In The Capture in the Rye any people and concepts are viewed through that
of the main character Holden Crawfield. Throughout the book we see many instances where thing
are distorted or morphed, like our slightly deranged character and narrator may see it. From the
reader's perspective The Catcher in the Rye isn't written by Salinger, but by Holden himself proving
how perfectly
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Jane Eyre
Stream Of Consciousness in Jane Eyre Jane Eyre written by charlotte Bronte. She was very famous
writer. In this particular novel she introduced the element of stream of consciousness for the first
time. This term was used by her for very first time in writing novel. It was age of reason when she
introduces this element for the very first time.
Age of reasons:
Age of reason was an eighteenth century movement which was following strictly in the Middle Ages
after mysticism, religion and superstition. The age of reasons represented an origin of the perception
of man about himself, for the search of knowledge and the universe. In this time period, man's
previous perceptions ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She thought about his uncle who was dead nine years ago in the same room. At that time Jane's
stream of consciousness was:
"I had heard of dead men troubled in their graves by the disobedience of their last wishes. I thought
Mr. Reed's spirit would rise before me in this chamber. Suddenly, I felt, I saw a streak of light,
across the room!"
In this particular paragraph, there is flow of thoughts in Jane's mind about her religion that her
uncle's soul must be in pain because according to her religion the situation is proclaiming this thing
actually.
There is another monologue when her friend was punished and shows no signs of pain or of shame.
At that time Jane's consciousness was:
"How she can bear it so quietly, I thought. I wander what sort of girl she is, whether good or
naughty."
In this thought her flow of thought was related to her past experiences, as she always got punished
by her aunt and then was blamed by her cousins.
Later when Mr. Brocklehurst asked her for standing on the stool and everyone was watching her at
that time Helen Burns passed by her and smiled at her.
"What a smile! It imparted strengths in me to lift my head and take a firm stand on the stool."
This was a difference in her thoughts because of her
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cinematic Thought Experiments Of The Living Dead
"Cinematic Thought Experiments of the Living Dead"
Philosophical conceptions of consciousness represented through the zombie film The zombies that
George R. Romero showcases in Night of the Living Dead (1968) now dominate the film industry as
the prototype for the undead: the mindless corpse that is void of its prior consciousness. And the
preferred food source of the undead has become like law for any pop–culture universe about
zombies–even undead superheroes will eat people in the comic books from the Marvel Zombies
series. As the prototypical zombie thought experiment, the Night of the Living Dead allows the
audience to confidently respond to any questions about the undead's identity, actions, or morality by
referring to that void of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Romero's Mindless Undead I initiate the discourse on the purpose of consciousness by first
introducing Night of the Living Dead, as an effort to reveal an intuitive claim as a running theme of
the movie: consciousness is what distinguishes me from the living dead. Romero's Night of the
Living Dead can teach us about what our assumptions on the purpose of higher consciousness by
having it be the root feature that distinguishes the living from the undead. When Johnny dies and his
corpse comes back from the local cemetery, the consciousness of his mind is left behind–there
remains only emptiness inside the zombie. As his consciousness vanishes, so does the person that
we used call Johnny–the corpse itself is now just a mindless shell. The Romero zombie comes back
as completely subject to the zombie law of nature; leaving behind the mind, all that they can do is
what a zombie does–and all zombies devour. The absolute mindlessness that characterizes the
zombies in Romero's creation, reflects on the idea, that, a free–acting human being can be reduced
to nothing more than a mindless corpse by stripping away their consciousness. Also apparent in the
Night of the Living Dead, is the assumption, that, it is from consciousness that I claim to have an
identity, to act on reasons and to rise above my innate instincts–all of which are concepts
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Catcher In The Rye
Stream of consciousness – an uninterrupted and unhindered collection and occurrence of thoughts
and ideas in the conscious mind. "Stream of Consciousness." Literary Devices. N.p., n.d. Web. 04
Nov. 2016. . Example: "I'm not gonna tell you my whole goddamn biography or anything. I'll just
tell you all about this madman stuff that happened to me around last Christmas just before I got
pretty run down and had to come out here and take it easy." (Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye, pg. 1)
Function Context: In The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger, the story starts off with a teenager
named Holden Caulfield. He begins by telling you about how clingy his parents are before
proceeding to about to begin his life story before changing topics and is instead talking about his
older brother, D.B.'s life and occupation. It takes him awhile to get to the point and finally revealing
when it all started. His story begins at the time he was expelled from Pencey prep. He had lost his
teams fencing equipment, fought with his friend, and left the school before the acquainted time ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He writes colloquially as if writing in a diary and the fact that he's "not gonna tell you [his] whole
biography" (Salinger, pg. 1) proves it. His journal basically does last only a few days long like a
normal diary and doesn't tell the entire story of his life like an autobiography. The readers are better
able to sympathize and relate to Holden as to why he does the things he does in contrast to a third
person narrative. He reveals the part that he wants people to know such as how "this madman stuff
happened to [him] around last Christmas" in a more casual manner than in a novel that's not written
in the main characters voice. This technique gives readers deeper insight on the main characters
personality as well as how he thinks personally of any situations he's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stream Of Consciousness In Virginia Wolff's The Mark On...
Storytelling Through the Use of Stream of Consciousness Telling a story through the stream of
consciousness has been practiced by several authors in their works, however it is neither new to this
time or a common form of writing. It is a complex take on what would seem like an easy writing
style as the author sometimes has to put themselves into the mind of their character to describe their
thoughts, or the author may draw inspiration from their own thoughts. Virginia Wolff's The Mark on
the Wall is an example of stream of consciousness writing as the narrator goes through her own
thoughts, trying to figure out what could have made the mark on the wall. It is believed that Wolff
wrote the story based on the thoughts within her own mind as if it is taking place in real time as she
wonders what the mark on the wall could be. Wolff tells the story by breaking from traditional
writing, which brilliantly captivates the audience by often times distracting them from the original
intent of the story.
***While stream of consciousness is common, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The story's plot changes from paragraph to paragraph as the woman's mind and her ideas change and
go from one thought to the next. For instance, the woman goes from thinking that a nail caused the
mark on the wall above the mantle to thinking that it is a "wonder is that I've any clothes on my
back." (Wolff) The distraction is partly due to Wolff's use of intonation aides in this distraction from
shifting from rises and falls as the story progresses (Durban, 2011). Wolff successfully told a story
that takes place almost completely in someone's thoughts and that figuring out what the mark on the
wall is not the priority of the story. Wolff created a real character with a mind that is seldom
explored through the use of stream of consciousness
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Rape Fantasies Analysis
In Margaret Atwood's Rape Fantasies, the narrator Estelle describes her "rape fantasies" in which is
never assaulted. Initiated by a conversation with her coworkers about their controversial daydreams,
Estelle recounts her own reoccurring visions, though hers differ from those discussed between the
women. Throughout the piece, Atwood utilizes stream of conscious writing to show her narrator's
jumbled thoughts as she describes her "fantasies." Atwood's short story depicts a narrator
inexperienced in courtship and meeting men, as Estelle's honest and seemingly endless stream of
thoughts highlight her critical view of women she knows well and explain daydreams in which she
meets and (hopes to) build relationships with unfamiliar men. As a whole, Atwood's use of longer
sentences and stream of consciousness emphasize the narrator's disorganized and honest opinions.
Within the first few pages, the narrator voices her inner, cynical thoughts about her female
colleagues. She describes Chrissy the receptionist as being "[v]arnished" and "like she's been
painted over with nail polish" (Atwood 1). When Greta, a coworker, makes a comment about
another's concern for being out late at night, Estelle reveals, "[Greta] worked in Detroit for three
years and she never lets you forget it, it's like she thinks she's a war hero or something, we should all
admire her just for the fact that she's still walking this earth" (Atwood 2). She continues criticizing
Greta and Chrissy: "They're both
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Conservationist By Nadine Gordimer Essay
The novelist employs some methods of representation, but he/she does so in the form of a
narrative.The novelistdescribes life or experience of life which is content of the novel. Therefore,
the content of life which is presented in the novel is important.
Nadine Gordimer is one of the foremost fiction writers in South Africa and winner of the Nobel
Prize for literature in 1991. Nadine Gordimer was recognized as a potentially major artist, a talented,
serious and careful writer who treated important contemporary issues. She has anusual interest in the
symbolic, the psychological and also the art of fiction. Her novel The Conservationist (1974) is in a
sort of the stream of consciousness technique describing the life of Mehring the Afrikaner, whose
farm is as barren as his life.
As pointed out by Macauley and Lanning (1964:163), it is usually through dialogue that the
character is revealed. In the novel, The Conservationist, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Gordimer makes creative use of imagery. The hero works in images. The images "Pale freckled
eggs" of the guinea fowls, with which the novel opens, recur and keep the action of the novel based
on the farm together. There is the macabre image – the corpse of an unknown black murdered on
Mehring's farm and rudely buried by the heartless Boer police. The body's inadequate burial has
been haunting him for about ten years, through he has endeavoured hard to forget it. The murdered
man is the image of the black's claim to their land. Christopher Heywood (1983:32) states:"The
Conservationist explores its theme of sterility and renewal through the imagery of landscape and
physiology..." Mehring is allowed to live in a world of dream and also reflection. The narrative
which takes us through his dreams is fascinating. Mehring is unable to communicate with both the
living and the dead. His fantasy takes all sorts of shapes – he is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Persuasive Essay
As humans, we are trained to avoid contradiction. Therefore, you don't say goodnight every
morning, and I don't stand here and tell you my shirt is orange. To contradict oneself is a sure
indication of stupidity, laziness, or even a liar. This is engrained, conventional wisdom.
Consequently, avoiding contradiction is a fundamental, enduring literary requirement. Significant
time, and copious amounts of editing, are commonly dedicated to eradicating continuity errors,
thereby producing clear, precise prose. I'm sure you're all agonisingly familiar with this process. You
simply cannot introduce a character with stunning blue eyes, and then, in the very next sentence,
describe those same eyes as muddled brown. You certainly can't flippantly change your character's
name; not if you aspire to be taken seriously, at least. Readers are so attuned to these apparent
errors, that they often closely scrutinise works and actively seek them, then proudly wave any
discrepancies' in authors' faces.
Yet, challenging conventions is precisely what experimentation mandates. So, allow me to entirely
contradict myself. As you may have guessed, my project, entitled Thirty Seconds in D♯, wholly
embraces contradiction. Thus my foremost aim is to produce a story which is neither confined to,
nor restricted by, itself, but rather encompasses a broad spectrum of narrative possibilities. To
achieve this, I interweave several experimental elements. Today, I will analyse three primary
experimental
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock Essay: Stream of...
Stream of Consciousness in The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock is a uniquely styled piece of literature. In this poem Eliot
employs a literary method of writing called "stream of consciousness." This is a difficult method to
grasp outside of the literary genre to attempt to understand it within the context of the higher
language of poetry can further confuse readers.
Stream of consciousness is simply how our brain thinks. Perhaps as the teacher reads through this
poem we hear the word "Mermaid". Our minds see the singing mermaids on the rocks in "Jason and
the Argonauts" and then jump to Peter Pan and from Peter Pan to Mary Poppins. The idea of stream
of consciousness ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His pen wanders and jumps from place to place with no apparent pattern.
I think this style of writing is also a reflection of Eliot's feelings about the time. Eliot was more of a
Modernist than Victorian poet and as such held to beliefs like: there is no higher power in the
universe, man is alone on this planet to govern his own affairs, everyone is truly alone, there is no
unity, no support, for we live in a godless heartless world (Stacey Donohue). The floating,
confusing, jumbled mix of emotions and directions in this poem mirrors the modernist image of
society.
Though he was a modernist I believe this poem is a reflection of what he saw during the Victorian
period. He says, "Do I dare/Disturb the universe?" (Eliot, Longman 2419 ll. 45–46). He speaks here,
not of the universe as you and I think –– a celestial body –– but of the universe in the sense of the
Victorian period itself. The world where everything is a mask of propriety, manners, and tradition;
this can be seen in his reference to the popular Victorian custom of afternoon tea, "Before the taking
of tea and toast." (Eliot, Longman 2419 l. 34). A word or simple action could topple a system as
balanced as this one and Prufrock struggles with the question, "Do I dare?" (Eliot, Longman 2419 l.
38). Does he dare to disturb the Victorian culture with what he has seen? His struggle is represented
by the yellow smoke/fog. This represents
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Rhetorical Devices Used In Literature
Houle 1 Rhetorical devices are used in all types of literature. Literary devices are narrative
techniques authors used strategically to convey information in the text that is not blatantly given the
reader. The use of stream–of–consciousness is an unique literary device used by well–known
authors like William Faulkner and Virginia Woolf. The stream–of–consciousness had some
popularity in the first half of the 20th century. This literary device is sometimes used instead of
using dialogue or description. The stream–of–consciousness technique is the uninterrupted thoughts
of the author through a character to show the ideas in the conscious mind. The use of the stream–of–
consciousness technique can benefit both the story and the readers experience ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Her short story is, ?A Haunted House? from Monday or Tuesday. The short story starts with the
narrator, most likely a woman, says: ?Whatever hour you woke there was a door shutting.?12 The
narrator and her husband experience the sensations of a home which is alive with memories. She
does not keep the readers in suspense on the mysteriousness of the opening and closing of windows
and doors. She lets the readers know that there are two ghosts that haunt her house. The narrator
says herself and her husband are not afraid of these ghosts because they have not caused any harm to
either of them. The ghosts are searching for something. They might be looking for something that
may have been left out in the garden or in the loft. The narrator is anxious to know what the ghost
are searching for. It also seems like the house itself has a response to the searchers; it has a pulse
that quickens as the ghosts come close to finding what they have lost. The narrator hears the house?s
heartbeat as if the word ?safe? was repeated rhythmically. The house also says it has hidden treasure
hidden somewhere in its rooms; this is most likely what the ghosts are looking for. The narrator
reveals she has learned a few details from the ghosts? past. They lived in a house as a married
couple hundreds of years before. When the wife died suddenly, the man abandoned the house and
traveled the globe. After his death, he
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Fahrenheit 451
"He was not happy. He was not happy. He said the words to himself. He recognized this as the true
state of affairs. He wore his happiness like a mask and the girl had run off across the lawn with the
mask and there was no way of going to knock on her door and ask for it back" is what Montag, the
protagonist of Fahrenheit 451, thought to describe the situation he had found himself in; however,
there is a deeper meaning to this quote that provides an insight into what the Modern period was
(10). The Modern period was influenced by the atrocities that had occurred at that time such as
World War I, The Great Depression, and World War II. This led to questions such as, "What was
becoming of this world?" and "What did it mean to be American?". Additionally, ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Bradbury references the Bible multiple times in his works, and not many of them are easily seen.
One such example is when Montag remembers a Biblical verse that says, "And on either side of the
river was there a tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month;
And the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations," (162). The "tree of life" symbolizes
the future of mankind while the fruit may symbolize the knowledge that Montag and the fragmented
group he is with possess. Another major allusion Bradbury makes is when Montag reads a pamphlet
that says that the firemen were, "Established [in] 1970, to burn English–influenced books in the
Colonies, First Fireman: Benjamin Franklin," (Bradbury 32). This can be seen as an ironic allusion
for two reasons: one is that Benjamin Franklin established a fire company and two is that he wrote a
famous book called Poor Richard's Almanac. Furthermore, Bradbury alludes to Shakespeare when
Beatty says to Montag, "'There is no terror, Cassius, in your threats, for I am arm'd so strong in
honesty that they pass by me as an idle wind, which I respect not!'" (117). Not only does this
reference Julius Caesar, but it also compares Montag to Cassius and Beatty as Brutus, which
foreshadows Beatty's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stream Of Consciousness Essay
First associated with the modernist movement, stream of consciousness is a form of interior
monologue which its goal is to represent a leading consciousness in a narrative novel, a typical
fiction novel. This representation of consciousness includes perceptions or impressions, thoughts
which are incited by outside world, and parts of random unattached thoughts. Stream of
consciousness writing technique often lacks correct punctuation, favoring a looser and a more
incomplete style. The invention of this term has generally been credited to the American
psychologist William James, older brother of novelist Henry James. It was used originally by
psychologists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century to describe the personal awareness
of someone's mental processes. In The Principles of Psychology, Chapter IX, The Stream of ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Such words as chain do not describe it fitly as it presents itself in the first instance. It is nothing
jointed, it flows. A river or a stream is the metaphor by which it is most naturally described. In
talking of it hereafter let us call it the stream of thought, of consciousness , or of subjective life"
(William James, 1890). It is helpful at the beginning to distinguish stream of consciousness from
free association. Stream of consciousness describes metaphorically the phenomenon–the continuous
flow of sensations, impressions, images, memories and thoughts–experienced by each person, at all
levels of consciousness, and which is generally associated with each person's subjectivity. On the
other hand, free association is a process in which apparently random information accumulated by a
subject allow connections to be done from the different aspects of consciousness of mind to the
conscious mind of that subject. Translated and mapped to the space of narrative literatures, free
association is one element in the text that is used to signify the stream of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Differences Between Virginia Woolf And Mrs Dalloway
Chapter 2: Virginia Woolf and Mrs.Dalloway
Virginia Woolf"s novel, Mrs.Dalloway has been classified as a modernist novel,mainly because of
its use of what is known as the 'stream of consciousness' technique.This particular technique does
not allow narration of the actions,deeds and incidents of characters or a depiction of the external or
outward aspect of their lives.But it aims at the exploration of the minds of the characters and this
makes it rather challenging for the readers to follow the storyline.Mrs.Dalloway is a wonderfully
representative modernist text not because of this narrative technique but also because it captures so
brilliantly the fragmented consciousness that has come to be considered symptomatic of life in the
twentieth century.As we step into the twenty–first more than half a continent away, we may be
surprised to find how eloquently it continues to speak to us, here today.
In her novel, Mrs.Dalloway,Virginia Woolf has been able to interweave characters with such
ingenuity that they flow into each other, each representing a single or more of her concerns, building
together a complex structure of human fallibilities that at once speak to,but are greatre than, any
single protagonist burdened with the kind of anxieties that plagued Woolf."They–Clarissa and
Richard Dalloway, their daughter ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Thus touching and merging has been achieved through the 'stream of consciousness' technique in the
novel. The stream of consciousness is a technique in which the entire psyche of the characters is put
forward in words. This internalisation of characters is done by a division of time. One is mechanical
time, that is hours of the clock, and the other is the inner time, that is the time of the mind, one past's
life. The division of the time validates the turning loose of emotion that helped Woolf to celebrate to
the "inner life" of her characters in contrast to the outside
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is The Stream Of Consciousness In The Secret Life Of...
Imagine being able to travel anywhere in the world, at any time. This is such an exhilarating
thought, as it may excite the mind of any individual. This was something that Walter Mitty was able
to do, in The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, directed by Ben Stiller. Although Walter's travels may not
have always been physical travels, his mind possessed the ability to take his mental consciousness
into a state of euphoria at any time. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty is based on the short story "The
Secret Life of Walter Mitty," by James Thurber. The main character is a man, Walter Mitty, that
frequently daydreams about desirable experiences of all kinds; the character of Walter Mitty evolves
throughout the movie and ends up actually doing some amazing things instead of just daydreaming
about them. The movie, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, uses the stream of consciousness technique
very well. The premise of the movie is essentially built on this writing technique. At the beginning
of the movie, Walter experiences daydreams very frequently, while his actual life is very average
and boring. The viewer even gains a sense of pity for Walter because he dreams of doing so many
amazing things, but lacks the courage and boldness to realize these fantasies. ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Although Walter Mitty eventually musters up a great amount of courage, for most of the movie he is
afraid to go get what he wants. This is ironic because he obviously wants to have some of these
qualities and relationships so badly, but his fear of failure and his fear of confrontation scares him
too much for him to attempt to get these things. Walter is also on a journey to find a man that gave
him the a transcendent gift, that seems to have gotten lost. Walter finds out that he unknowingly
threw away this gift after chasing the man halfway across the world. This situation should be
categorized as being in the epitome of ironic
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is Stream Of Consciousness?. Marina B. Rodriguez.
What is stream of consciousness?
Marina B. Rodriguez
Miami Dade College Abstract
"An idea, to be suggestive, must come to the individual with the force of revelation.
(https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/w/williamjam157182.html)
To understand stream of consciousness, we must first define; what is consciousness? In Merriam's
Webster dictionary defines consciousness as: "the state of being characterized by sensation, emotion,
volition, and thought:mind, and the medical portion of the definition reads: the totality in
psychology of sensations, perceptions, ideas, attitudes, and feelings of which an individual or a
group is aware at any given time or within a given time span."
With consciousness defined we can come to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Being aware of ourselves and the environment simultaneously.
An excerpt from "The principles of psychology"
According to James' (1890) on his theory of stream of consciousness:
How does it go on? We notice immediately five important characters in the process, of which it shall
be the duty of the present chapter to treat in a general way:
1. Every thought tends to be part of a personal consciousness.
2. Within each personal consciousness thought is always changing.
3. Within each personal consciousness thought is sensibly continuous.
4. It always appears to deal with objects independent of itself.
5. It is interested in some parts of these objects to the exclusion of the others, and welcomes or
rejects – chooses from among them, in a word – all the while. (pg. 225; second paragraph)
Literature Review
The first point James states thoughts are individual to each and every thing that is capable of
thinking. With each state of consciousness, it has both cognitive and emotional aspects, affected by
the internal and external stimuli, making it personalized and exclusive to every single person. In the
second point , it does not mean that the flow and constant change of thought is something that has
no continuance, but that a thought once experienced can not recur and be identical. As the mind has
already made connections with that specific thought and feeling, it will not
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Literary Techniques In Virginia Woolf's The Mark On The Wall
Virginia Woolf is a prominent female writer, and is regarded as a skilled exponent of the stream of
consciousness technique in English literature of the twentieth century. Being uninterested in the
traditional way of novel writing, she made great efforts on the experiment and innovation of novel
writing and rebelled against some of the British novelists of her era, including Arnold Bennett, John
Galsworthy and H. G. Wells. By trying out her technical experiments with fiction in her earlier
sketches, Virginia Woolf is intended to seek to develop a new technique of expression to put her
theories into practice. The short piece The Mark on the Wall published in 1919 was her first
experimental novel, being considered to be her first successful achievements. ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Although it seems that there is no movement, no plot, no tragedy, no comedy, and no love interest,
much less to mention the description of the exterior world except the object the mark on the wall,
the narration is balanced in construction and well organized. However, the Mark on the Wall mainly
focuses on the revelation of heroine's spiritual activities that are quite opposite to the traditional way
of novel writing. Probing into the origin and development of the stream of consciousness technique,
I found it was actually based on three theories. First of all, William James coined the psychological
term 'consciousness'. According to James (1971), consciousness does not appear to itself chopped up
in bit; it is nothing joined, it flows, like a 'stream', or a 'stream of water'; let us call it the stream of
thought, of consciousness, or of subjective life. Secondly, French philosopher Henry Bergson
established the notion of duration, or lived time, as opposed to what he viewed as the spatialized
conception of time, measured by a clock, so he suggested that "reality" exists in the inseparable
stream of consciousness (Kumar 1963). Therefore, he encouraged writers to pursue the inner world
and depict the characters from the angle of psychology. Thirdly, an Austrian physician and
neurologist Sigmund Freud (1950) put
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

More Related Content

More from Nicole Savoie

Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.
Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.
Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Savoie
 
Business Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business Studie
Business Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business StudieBusiness Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business Studie
Business Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business StudieNicole Savoie
 
Veterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPT
Veterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPTVeterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPT
Veterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPTNicole Savoie
 
Tips For The Inevitable College Essay Question
Tips For The Inevitable College Essay QuestionTips For The Inevitable College Essay Question
Tips For The Inevitable College Essay QuestionNicole Savoie
 
Pin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap Argumentative
Pin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap  ArgumentativePin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap  Argumentative
Pin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap ArgumentativeNicole Savoie
 
Statement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - Inhissteps
Statement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - InhisstepsStatement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - Inhissteps
Statement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - InhisstepsNicole Savoie
 
What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.
What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.
What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Savoie
 
Writing ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By Medeainside
Writing ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By MedeainsideWriting ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By Medeainside
Writing ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By MedeainsideNicole Savoie
 
Science Research Paper Example - Format Of A Sci
Science Research Paper Example -  Format Of A SciScience Research Paper Example -  Format Of A Sci
Science Research Paper Example - Format Of A SciNicole Savoie
 
Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01
Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01
Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01Nicole Savoie
 
A Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis Teacher
A Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis  TeacherA Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis  Teacher
A Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis TeacherNicole Savoie
 
Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.
Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.
Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Savoie
 
Essay Interview With Old Person. Interview With An
Essay Interview With Old Person.  Interview With AnEssay Interview With Old Person.  Interview With An
Essay Interview With Old Person. Interview With AnNicole Savoie
 
Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...
Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...
Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...Nicole Savoie
 
Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.
Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.
Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Savoie
 
APA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And Ou
APA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And OuAPA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And Ou
APA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And OuNicole Savoie
 
How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.
How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.
How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Savoie
 
Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper Best ...
Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper  Best ...Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper  Best ...
Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper Best ...Nicole Savoie
 
9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined Letter
9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined Letter9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined Letter
9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined LetterNicole Savoie
 
Template For Scholarship Application Essay - Sampl
Template For Scholarship Application Essay - SamplTemplate For Scholarship Application Essay - Sampl
Template For Scholarship Application Essay - SamplNicole Savoie
 

More from Nicole Savoie (20)

Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.
Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.
Essay Writing On Child Labour Bisb. Online assignment writing service.
 
Business Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business Studie
Business Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business StudieBusiness Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business Studie
Business Essay 1920 Year 11 HSC - Business Studie
 
Veterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPT
Veterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPTVeterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPT
Veterans Day Writing Paper By Beth Ann Averill TPT
 
Tips For The Inevitable College Essay Question
Tips For The Inevitable College Essay QuestionTips For The Inevitable College Essay Question
Tips For The Inevitable College Essay Question
 
Pin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap Argumentative
Pin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap  ArgumentativePin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap  Argumentative
Pin By Fairy Vaux On Ray Ban For Cheap Argumentative
 
Statement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - Inhissteps
Statement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - InhisstepsStatement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - Inhissteps
Statement Of Hypothesis In Research Paper - Inhissteps
 
What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.
What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.
What Is Paper In Academic Writing. Online assignment writing service.
 
Writing ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By Medeainside
Writing ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By MedeainsideWriting ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By Medeainside
Writing ESSAY - ESL Worksheet By Medeainside
 
Science Research Paper Example - Format Of A Sci
Science Research Paper Example -  Format Of A SciScience Research Paper Example -  Format Of A Sci
Science Research Paper Example - Format Of A Sci
 
Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01
Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01
Essay Structure Plan. What Is A Structured Essay. 2022-11-01
 
A Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis Teacher
A Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis  TeacherA Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis  Teacher
A Polar Bear Writing Paper By Regina Davis Teacher
 
Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.
Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.
Worst Written Essay Everythin. Online assignment writing service.
 
Essay Interview With Old Person. Interview With An
Essay Interview With Old Person.  Interview With AnEssay Interview With Old Person.  Interview With An
Essay Interview With Old Person. Interview With An
 
Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...
Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...
Top Essay Writing Service - Best Essay Writing Service UK 2020 - Essay ...
 
Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.
Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.
Research Paper Rubric. Online assignment writing service.
 
APA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And Ou
APA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And OuAPA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And Ou
APA Style Research Papers Example Of Format And Ou
 
How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.
How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.
How To Avoid Plagiarism Essay. Online assignment writing service.
 
Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper Best ...
Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper  Best ...Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper  Best ...
Websites That Write Essays For You Have Kids - Write My Paper Best ...
 
9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined Letter
9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined Letter9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined Letter
9 Best Images Of Free Printable Lined Letter
 
Template For Scholarship Application Essay - Sampl
Template For Scholarship Application Essay - SamplTemplate For Scholarship Application Essay - Sampl
Template For Scholarship Application Essay - Sampl
 

Recently uploaded

MULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptx
MULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptxMULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptx
MULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptxAnupkumar Sharma
 
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of managementHierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of managementmkooblal
 
Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17
Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17
Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatYousafMalik24
 
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choomENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choomnelietumpap1
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon AUnboundStockton
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Educationpboyjonauth
 
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptxGrade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptxChelloAnnAsuncion2
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for BeginnersSabitha Banu
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptxSherlyMaeNeri
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTiammrhaywood
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️9953056974 Low Rate Call Girls In Saket, Delhi NCR
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfMr Bounab Samir
 
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17Celine George
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Jisc
 
Roles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in PharmacovigilanceRoles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in PharmacovigilanceSamikshaHamane
 
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxEPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxRaymartEstabillo3
 

Recently uploaded (20)

MULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptx
MULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptxMULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptx
MULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptx
 
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of managementHierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
 
Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17
Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17
Field Attribute Index Feature in Odoo 17
 
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice greatEarth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
Earth Day Presentation wow hello nice great
 
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptxRaw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
 
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choomENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
ENGLISH6-Q4-W3.pptxqurter our high choom
 
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon ACrayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
Crayon Activity Handout For the Crayon A
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
 
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
 
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptxGrade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
Grade 9 Q4-MELC1-Active and Passive Voice.pptx
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
 
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
 
Roles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in PharmacovigilanceRoles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
 
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxEPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
 
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
 

Stream Of Consciousness Examples

  • 1. Stream Of Consciousness Examples In regards to your story, it does a good job of achieving a stream of consciousness narrative through the rapid flowing details of thoughts and what is happening in the now of the story in the first part of the piece. I did get a clear sense of what was going on as you were explaining your story and why you did what you did overall. You convey your sense of uncertainty and cynicism well. I feel as if you were writing this as a reluctant catharsis to your psyche. Your portrayal of military life is bleak and terrifying which in turn validates the reasons of why you began to tell your story. The strengths of your piece is that you write with candor, and that in turn, gets the reader invested in what you have to say. You also use your humor ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Stream Of Consciousness Movie Vs Book Stream of consciousness (different development between novel and film) The personality of Christopher is described in a quite different way in the book and in the film, or at least, the perspective of Krakauer is not the same than Penn's perspective. In the book, Christopher is shown as a selfish, arrogant and irresponsible man, whereas in the film he's a friendly and cheerful one, who just looks for freedom and independence. The film skip some passages, such as a brief introduction to his infancy and childhood. On the contrary, it adds some superficial and less reliable information as in the case of the romantic encounter with Tracy (Kristen Stewart) at the camp. The main difference between novel and film is the narrating. The book is narrated ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Locke Personal Identity Locke's Theory of Personal Identity In order to get clear Locke's theory of personal identity, first Locke gives us his view of person as some kind of thinking thing that is not a substance. Locke's intuitions from changing the parts of a unified life to identifying a unified body which persists over repair and replacement helps illustrate personal identity to allow for the substance of the reasoning being to change over time provided the reasoning beings share one continued life (ECHU 27). However, Locke's theory of personal identity differs from unified life because it requires the unity of consciousness. A consciousness is a unique consciousness when it accompanies a being that has reason, reflection, and considers itself as the same self. The consciousness which accompanies some person is the same just in case the person shares a stream of consciousness. Rational beings have the reflection capacity to remember from a consciousness' stream that is their own. Rational beings which reflect upon ideas from their own extended stream then must be either the same person or a rational being who could not reflect upon ideas from that unique stream. Thus, at any point on a single stream the same self as a consciousness on another point are in fact one and the same person. Reid's Objection to Locke's Theory ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... We are given a case where the personal identity theory of Locke should be consistent with identity between persons but is not. The case Reid's objection considers supposes if a stream of consciousness extends only as far as the memory, then the memory is the extension of any unifiable consciousness. And, the extension of memory is not the extension of personal identity. Then, the stream of consciousness extends only as far as the memory which Locke does not want to accept, or extension of personal identity is not any unifiable stream of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Examples Of Personification In Virginia Woolf Most of the figurative expressions that were used by her such as simile and metaphor in the description of London as a place "where beauty goes unrewarded"(pg.9), where the end of the west world is "a small golden tassel on the edge of a vast black coach"(pg.12). In addition, Virginia Woolf demonstrates some metaphoric continuity: the first one, she depicts London as less than important because it looks too small .The second one, she depicts it as lowly because it seems so shabby. As Craig Hamilton (2004: 5) Considering characters, Woolf used personification metaphor in order to represent cities in terms of people, to Hamilton the use of the personification metaphor by Virginia Woolf follows from conventional conceptualizations of cities in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Thought Mrs. Ramsay, taking her place at the head of the table and looking at all the plates making. White circles on it. "William, sit by me", she said. "Lily", she said, wearily, "over there". They had that –– Paul Rayley and Minta Doyle –– She, only this –– an infinitely long table and plates and knives. At the far end, was her husband, sitting down, all in a heap, frowning. What at? She did not know. She did not mind. She could not understand how she had ever felt any emotion or affection for him. She had a sense of being past everything, as she helped the soup, as if there was an eddy –– there –– and one could be in it, or one could. be out of it, and she was out of it. It's all come to an end, she thought, while they came in one after another, Charles Tansley – "Sit there.please", she said –– Augustus Carmicheal –– and sat down. And meanwhile she waited, passively, for someone to answer her, for something. to happen. But this is not a thing, she thought, ladling out soup that one says. Raising her eyebrows at the discrepancy –– that was what she was thinking, this was what she was doing –– ladling out soup – she felt. more and more strongly, outside that eddy; or as if a shade had fallen, and, robbed of colour, she saw things truly". (pg. 83 of ''To the Lighthouse'' by Virginia Woolf, 1969). So, the stream of consciousness is a narrative technique which has been developed by so many writers, essayist, and novelists, but the most well known is that Virginia Woolf is considered as the forerunner of this style of writing and that what was affirmed by Maria T(2005) when she said: Influenced by the works of French writer Marcel Proust and Irish writer James Joyce, among others, Woolf strove to create a literary form that would convey inner life. To this end, she elaborated a technique known as Stream of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. The Great Gatsby Compare And Contrast Septimus And Mrs... The stream of consciousness in literature can give the main idea of the story in a multitude of different ways while being represented in different formats. In the novel Mrs. Dalloway, the story is being told through the perspective of multiple characters. While each part seems to have a connection with one another, each part affects the overall story. For example, when Mrs. Dalloway sees Septimus for the first and only time, it allows the reader to connect Septimus's mindset with Mrs. Dalloway's mindset. Even though Septimus and Mrs. Dalloway belong to two different classes in society, their struggles can be viewed as a parallel, meaning that their experiences during the day can be compared and contrasted as time passes in the novel. Mrs. Dalloway pulls herself away from thoughts of the past in order to prepare of the party she will be hosting in the future. Septimus, on the other hand, is mentally stuck in a chaotic fusion of his past and present. Another good example of consciousness is Peter Walsh, when he is introduced; he reveals the consciousness of someone who is hindered in the present by his past decisions and wishes to move on. Much like Mrs. Dalloway and Septimus, Peter has moments when he slips from the present and thinks about the past ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Dalloway but still differs when it comes to displaying streams of thought. Krapp's Last Tape, however, shows its stream of consciousness in a different way. Unlike Mrs. Dalloway, The Hours divides up its streams of consciousness into three types of chapters named after the character it was about, Ms. Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway and Mrs. Brown. Each section tells the story and prospective of the women as they exists at different spans of time. However, all of the sections interlay with one another, for example Ms. Woolf spends her section on her ideas for a novel while in Mrs. Brown is reading Ms. Woolf's finished work while Mrs. Dalloway is interacting with Mrs. Brown's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Catcher In The Rye Stream of consciousness is a type of narrative that traces the thoughts and feelings of a character. It is a collection of myriad impressions that influence the flow of thoughts. It is a representation of the continuous movement in the mind of an individual. It approximates the flow of thoughts and sensory impressions that pass the mind each instant. This kind of narrative is often fragmented. There may be a lack of proper organization of ideas as thoughts do not necessarily flow in a particular order. The interior mental and emotional state is emphasized on, rather than the outside world. A stream of consciousness novel may use a technique called 'interior monologue.' The character's thoughts are presented directly and may be restricted to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Next, he has a prostitute, Sunny, come to his room but is uncomfortable once she enters. Maurice, the bell boy, punches him and gets an extra 5 dollars from him. Post a quick sleep, he calls Sally, an old acquaintance, for a date. Before meeting her, he checks in his luggage at Grand Central Station, meets two nuns and buys a record for his little sister, Pheobe. He then watches a play with Sally after which they go skating. He impulsively makes a rude comment which makes her leave immediately. He then watches a show by himself and gets fully drunk. While trying to find ducks at a frozen pond at the Central Park, he trips and breaks the record he'd bought for Pheobe. Completely exhausted, Holden decides to head home and secretly meet Pheobe. Fortunately, Holden's parents aren't at home and he manages to meet Phoebe. He describes to her his fantasy of being a guardian of children playing in a rye field, catching them in case they fall off. This justifies the title, The Catcher in the Rye. When he parents arrive, he sneaks out and goes to the home of Mr. Antolini, his English teacher, to spend the night. After receiving advice on life, Holden falls into a short sleep. He wakes up to find Mr. Antolini patting his head, which causes him great discomfort and he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness Narrative technique. Use of the "stream of consciousness" Stream of consciousness is a narrative technique which, using words, describes the flow of thoughts within the characters' minds. This term was at first coined by psychologist William James in his work "The Principles of Psychology". With regard to the stream of consciousness, he stated that "...it is nothing joined; it flows. A 'river' or a 'stream' is the metaphor by which it is most naturally described. In talking of it hereafter, let's call it the stream of thought, consciousness, or subjective life." James Joyce is one of the most outstanding and famous representatives of stream of consciousness in literature. Following this technique, Joyce presents the thoughts of his characters ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Greyish over the ears. Madame: smiling. I smiled back. A smile does a long way. Only politeness perhaps. Nice fellow. Who knows is that true about the woman he keeps? Not pleasant for the wife. Yet they say, who was it told me, there is no carnal. You would imagine that would get played out pretty quick. Yes, it was Crofton met him one evening bringing her a pound of rumpsteak. What is this she was? Barmaid in Jury's. Or the Moira, was it? Ulysses is a novel that takes place in just one day, so the stream of consciousness is a great tool to know more about the characters' background. He [Martin Cunningham] looked away from me. He knows. Rattle his bones. That afternoon of the inquest. The red labelled bottle on the table. The room in the hotel with hunting pictures. Stuffy it was. Sunlight through the slats of the Venetian blinds. The coroner's ears, big and hairy. Boots giving evidence. Thought he was asleep first. Then saw like yellow streaks on his face. Had slipped down to the foot of the bed. Verdict: overdose. Death by misadventure. The letter. For my son Leopold. No more pain. Wake no more. Nobody owns. At this part of the novel the reader discovers that Leopold Bloom's father died by committing suicide, and all thanks to the stream of consciousness. The reader can see how the sentences tend to be shorter than in most of the novels, more clear and succinct to show Bloom's endless flow of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. As I Lay Dying Language Analysis In As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner effectively uses linguistic abnormalities to challenge the potency of language. This produces an overarching idea on the cyclic nature of mortality and its ultimate nihilistic significance. To unite these otherwise restricted concepts, the novel requires an unusual relationship between its characters and the author. This relationship is only complicated by the delicate nature of mortality. Thus, Faulkner antagonizes the limitations of language and challenges words to convey more significance than their flat definitions. Faulkner overcomes the boundaries of language by stream of consciousness. This allows him to encompass contemporary artistry and cultural phenomena. Therefore, the novel's unique construction ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Its linguistic complexities seem unnecessary and flawed. This effect is produced because of the novel's twisted humor and structures such as unexplained italicized paragraphs, a pictogram of a coffin (Faulkner 88), sporadic punctuation, and a line of blank space (Faulkner 173). These things make the novel seem chaotic and even contradictory. Regardless of its complexity, these linguistic abnormalities are necessary to explicate the novel's purpose: the insignificance of life and death. This attitude is apparent only because of stream of consciousness, artistry, and cultural diction. Stream of consciousness unifies the narrators and the author. This change in scope produces a more intimate understanding of each character. For example, it allows for Addie's postmortem narration. Thus, stream of consciousness operates as a fundamental platform for the novel's purpose. Similarly, the surrealist and cubist point of view heightens the dark comedy of mortality. The unification of these two perspectives––the symmetry of cubism and the cynical surrealism––creates Dewey Dell: the mirror and product of Addie's suppressed station. Just as Addie never wanted her children, Dewey Dell attempts to have an abortion. Upon Addie's death, the novel's dark humor comes full circle: Dewey Dell is made a motherless mother and left a child with child. This cynical creation is only possible because of the reader's context in cubism and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Stream Of Consciousness In Faulkner's As I Lay Dying Stream of Consciousness: A strong case for character relation When I sit down to read a story I do not only wish to be entertained, but also to somehow relate to the story in some way. Most of the time, I feel this relation through the characters in the story. There are many ways that a writer can make their characters relatable, but one notable technique used by writers Ernest Hemingway in The Nick Adams Stories and As I lay Dying by William Faulkner, is stream of consciousness or interior monologue. Stream of consciousness is defined as a literary technique used to convey a characters thoughts and feelings as perceived by him or her (Wheeler). This technique can be perceived as sort of jumbled or out of order like a person's actual thoughts ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In an essay by Elizabeth Kerr, she recounts the novel of As I Lay Dying as an "ironic quest" by the Bundren family to take the family matriarch, Addie Bundren, upon her death, to Jefferson to be buried (5–6). This critique of the novel does well to include the irony of the story by explaining how each of the characters except Darl and Jewel, have their own agendas for wanting to go on this journey forty miles away, other than just to keep the promise to their mother to get her to her desired burial place (Kerr 6). While this critic uses irony as its main description for the story as a whole, it does not put enough emphasis on the use of stream of consciousness as main technique used by Faulkner to help the reader relate to the characters, to understand their true emotions, as written by Faulkner. Kerr doesn't completely dismiss the use of the technique, as she explains how certain characters' stream of consciousness help us to better understand the irony of the story, but does not include how important the technique is in the story when it comes to character relation. When I read As I lay dying, which undoubtedly uses the stream of consciousness technique, saturated throughout the novel, I feel like I could understand the readers true emotions about what was happening to them at any particular time. One interior monologue that I found particularly strong for character relation was that of the character Addie Bundren. Because Addie is the basic subject of the whole book, and the reason the journey is being taken in the first place, to understand her character is essential. Being able to understand Addie helped me understand the other characters motivations for their actions and intentions. In her interior monologue she explains how she really feels about her family and her choice to marry Anse, to have children, and how she feels about being a mother (Faulkner 169–176). When I read the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. The Success Of Stream Of Consciousness Cameron Davis Mr. James AP Literature p.3 17 March 2015 The Success of Stream of Consciousness The stream of consciousness form of writing used in The Sound and The Fury helps the reader better understand the many dramatic events that take place in the novel with the Compson Family. The way Faulkner uses stream of consciousness throughout the novel is a unique way of getting his story across in a way that the reader is seeing the narrators point of view as opposed to just being told a story. Stream of consciousness is when the author writes as if inside the minds of the characters jumping from one event to another like the way one thinks. For example in Benjy 's section, everything is presented through unorganized thoughts ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Benjy 's section his thoughts are repeatedly interrupted, sometimes returned to many times not. "Caddy was all wet and muddy behind, and I started to cry and she came and squatted in the water. "Hush now." she said. "I'm not going to run away." So I hushed. Caddy smelled like trees in the rain." This quote from Benjy 's section is very representing of how Faulkner displays Benjy through many imagery and senses with smell, sight, etc. The Stream of Consciousness form Faulkner uses to depict Benjy is very accurate for his condition and at first can be difficult for the reader to understand but helps the reader better understand him further on. Faulkner couldn 't have done a better job of creating how Benjy 's mind would act realistically while still bringing enough order to his thoughts for the reader to make sense of it. Faulkner 's style is not complex whatsoever in presenting the simple mindedness of Benjy, yet his style takes a change for the more complex mind of Quentin. Quentin 's section consists of many long difficult ideas he try 's solving therefore, his section is more complicated. However Quentin 's thoughts jump from one idea to another being that he had a more advanced mind. Faulkner gives order to Quentin 's section by presenting it on the day when Quentin is to commit suicide so his mind is concerned only with his father and Caddy 's Behavior. "Listen no good taking it so hard its not your fault kid it would have been some other fellow Did you ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. Stream of Consciousness Novel The Development of the 'Stream–of–Consciousness' Technique in Modernist English Fiction (with Special Reference to the Contributions of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf) Arpan Adhikary The term 'stream of consciousness' as applied in literary criticism to designate a particular mode of prose narrative was first coined by philosopher William James in his book Principles of Psychology (1890) to describe the uninterrupted flow of perceptions, memories and thoughts in active human psyche. As a literary term, however, it denotes a certain narrative technique used in novels in which the narrator records in minute but somewhat abstract way whatever passes through his or her conscious mind. The socalled 'stream of consciousness' in a work of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The style is highly allusive and Joyce deliberately confuses the narrative by making a pastiche of the styles of several genres together while presenting the flows of the continuous thoughts of the principal characters. Here for the first time Joyce also employed the 'interior monologue' which is deemed to be the purest form of the 'stream–of–consciousness' mode. In Joyce's third and last novel Finnegans Wake (1939) the complexity of the 'stream–of–consciousness' technique reaches its heights necessitating the text's being one of the least read ones in any language. In this novel Joyce used around forty languages other than English and presented an awkwardly extensive range of literary, mythical, political and historical allusions while narrating the one–night dream sequence of the protagonist, a Dublin tavern–keeper named Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker. Apart from Joyce, Virginia Woolf also made remarkable contribution to the development of the 'stream–of– consciousness' mode in the modernist English fiction. In Mrs. Dalloway (1925) Woolf presents the diverse mental recourses of Clarissa Dalloway within the span of one single day, and in the interior monologue of Mrs. Dalloway the narrative breaks with the realistic mode in order to suit the inner reality of the narrator's psyche which is different from the external reality by which she is surrounded. Similar intellectual cogency and finer technical ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. The Other Wes Moore Critical Analysis Twenty–eight–year–old Anthony Frederico was fired from his dream job as a sports reporter after making the mistake of publishing an article with a racist headline. After years filled with regret over his career–ending mistake, Frederico finds new life as a Catholic priest living by the word of god (Zauzmer 1). The world is teeming with second chances and forgiveness, which is a recurring theme in the novel, The Other Wes Moore and the classic, The Scarlet Letter. The theme of second chances is supported throughout these narratives using the literary elements of imagery and stream of consciousness. The subject matter of second chances is detected in the novel The Other Wes Moore through the use of stream of consciousness and imagery. After ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Throughout the book, the characters, along with the narrator, start to notice that "Such helpfulness was found in [Hester]..." (Hawthorne 243) and the community decides to change the meaning of her sinful letter from "adultery" to "able". The narrator uses stream of consciousness to describe how Hester Prynne was finally viewed by the Puritans in a different light, as more of a benevolent being. The idea of second chances is also supported throughout the story The Scarlet Letter through the use of imagery. In the beginning of the novel, Hester is depicted being released from the prison after serving time for her crime for adultery. For the first time, the Puritans get a glimpse of the "...elaborate embroidery and fantastic flourishes of gold thread..." (Hawthorne 55) that is her sinful letter. Hester's letter is her ultimate sin and the reason for her suffering, but it is also really her second chance. Because of her actions that led to her letter, she was able to find new love with Dimmesdale and live a life that was not controlled by her horrible husband. The use of imagery is used to describe this letter as "elaborate" and even goes on to say that it is made with gold thread, so obviously the author is trying to convey that Hester's letter is of extreme significance. By closely examining both The Other Wes Moore and The Scarlet Letter it can be concluded that both of these novels have a strong recurring theme ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Reading And Writing About Family Guy : The Semiotics Of... In the essay "Reading and Writing about Family Guy: The Semiotics of Stream of Consciousness" Lee Transue explains how Seth MacFarlane integrates his own unique version of stream of consciousness in the animated sitcom Family Guy to entertain its viewers. The reason Transue wrote this essay is he was invited by Dr. Johnathan Silverman to write a piece for the book, The World is a Text. He chose to write about Family Guy because of its popularity and he is a fan of the show. To begin the writing process, Transue sat down and started his research, which was watching several episodes of Family Guy. Afterwards he quickly looked over a few texts and refreshed his brain on the stream of consciousness concept and began the drafting process. According to Transue, the drafting of the essay took about three hours. He then did some slight editing and the essay was finished. After all was said and done the whole process took about 10 hours. To start off, Lee Transue begins by giving some background on the concept of stream of consciousness. He begins by writing "It is the certification of true talent when a storyteller can write that which he or she feels can be written, and not should be written by typical literary standards, while the audience remains unaware of his or her sleight of hand. There are many words and phrases to describe this technique, foremost among them stream of consciousness" (94). These two sentences act as support for the thesis because in Family Guy a normal ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. The As A Stream Of Consciousness on transference, in which, in his case studies the patients transferred feelings for others onto the doctor (Thurschwell, 39). Therefore in, The Prelude, the narrator appears to transfer feelings intended for the female onto Nature and then proceeds to sexualize Nature. "For Freud, every thought is unconscious before it is conscious" (Thurschwell, 4). With that being said, the imagination allows unconscious thoughts to reach consciousness once they are written. They exist within the imagination until consciously, the narrator releases the words through a process Freud refers to as "free association" and allows them to exist on the page. Free Association when used in psychoanalysis entails the patient to say whatever thought comes to mind when triggered by something else. The process of Free Association resembles the process of a writer imagining and writing what comes to mind. This process, also known as a "stream of consciousness", was first referred to by William James in "The Principles of Psychology" published in 1889. When referring to 'Substantive' and 'Transitive' States of Mind, James writes, "When we take a general view of the wonderful stream of our consciousness, what strikes us first is the different pace of its parts. Like a bird's life, it seems to be an alternation of flights and perchings. The rhythm of language expresses this, where every thought is expressed in a sentence, and every sentence closed by a period. The resting–places are usually occupied by ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. 'Mending Wall, And Lyndall Hough'sStopping By Woods' Discoveries often demand the re–evaluation of an individual's outlook on life, a process in which reconsidering perspectives allows one to make sense of the world and come to terms with confronting realities. Two composers who's work reflect this notion are Robert Frosts poems 'Mending Wall' and 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening', and Lyndall Hough's short story 'The Shooting Kid'. Each text explores the varied emotionally and intellectually significant discoveries on individuals and their ability to allow for reconsideration of personal perspectives and understand their place in the world. Self–discovery is often accompanied by internal metacognitive dialogue due to its ability to allow individuals to re–evaluate their outlook on life and develop a better understanding of the world. Frost's 'Stopping by Woods', his 1922 lyric poem provides a pre– eminent example of an internal monologue. Use of first person present tense language allows for the reader to relish the quiet splendour of the dark woods and ponder, if only for a moment, the allure of escaping indefinitely from the exhausting world of people and promises. The confronting and emotionally significant discovery of the persona's morbid attraction to oblivion is conveyed through the furtive tone in the first stanza "He will not see me stopping here/ to watch this wood fill up with snow" suggesting a feeling of delight that may be associated with the deep, dark woods. Potent connotations of the words 'dark', ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Exploring The Possibilities Of Discovering The Neural... Exploring the possibilities of discovering the neural correlates of visual consciousness In the ongoing strive to better understand the mechanism of consciousness, the possibility of discovering the neural correlates of consciousness (NCCs) is arguably the leading agenda in its scientific research. Although the question of whether consciousness can be fully reduced to its neural correlates remains debatable, it is still credible that whenever an appropriate brain process occurs, the associated subjective experience follows (Chalmers, 2013). Thus, this essay will demonstrate that it is plausible that the minimal brain processes necessary for a conscious percept can be experimentally narrowed down to a smaller coalition of neurons. Understandably, the complexity of the cortical system that is yet to be fully deciphered, along with the technological difficulties in obtaining essential data has hindered the search for the NCCs and have lead some to doubt the possibility of ever locating it (Fins & Plum, 2004). It is also likely that there are numerous NCCs, each associated with different modalities, which complicates the task further (Chalmers, 2013). For the purpose of this essay, the possibilities of discovering the neural correlates of visual consciousness are discussed in particular. This essay aims to define the foundational concepts of the science of consciousness, outline the experimental projects in finding the neural correlates of visual consciousness, and address ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Katherine Anne Porter's The Jilting of Granny Weatherall... Stream of Consciousness in Katherine Anne Porter's The Jilting of Granny Weatherall In "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall," Katherine Anne Porter applies the rhetorical technique stream of consciousness to guide her audience through the last sixty years of a leathery, bitter woman jilted in life, and finally in death. The seemingly aimless and casual technique, similar to a human's thought pattern, effectively develops the exposition, conflict, and denouement. By using the stream of consciousness technique, Porter establishes Granny Weatherall's background. The occasional glimpse into the main character's past reveals the demanding responsibilities of a young widow. She reflects on how digging post holes, riding country roads in the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This technique establishes the dramatic conflict as Granny Weatherall recalls how her beau, George, jilted her at the altar. Although it is unclear to the reader what leads up to the wedding day abandonment, she was clearly haunted for sixty years as "she had prayed against remembering him and against losing her soul in the deep pit of hell." She becomes a bitter, controlling woman striving for a neat and orderly life by "tucking in the edges" as if it were a sheet. She spends her life avoiding and despising surprises, after the stunning surprise at the altar. By applying the stream of consciousness technique to demonstrate the effects of Granny Weatherall's lifetime struggle with the jilting and its effects, Porter establishes the main character's need to control circumstances, even death. The darkness of death, like the familiar dark, smoky hell of being jilted, surprises Granny Weatherall. After sixty years of anger and bitterness, the jilting of death blocks out any other sorrow because the grief of dying erases them from her memory. Determined to control her death as she had her life, she blows "out the light." In conclusion, Porter's flowing inner monologue provides an opportunity for many interpretations. Did the jilting cause her to be an angry, bitter woman ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. The Jilting Of Granny Weatherall And Arabing Essay It is something everyone does, continuously, in everything we do; a running dialogue of thoughts always occupying our minds, perceptible to only us. In everyday life, this common train of thoughts is never scrutinized or examined, but in literature, it is something referred to as stream of consciousness and it is what will be surveyed in this essay. The two stories being observed are Katherine Porter's "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall", a short story about an 80–year–old woman's thoughts and memories as she lives out her last day. The second story is James Joyce's "Araby", the fictional story of a young boy in Dublin and his infatuation with a girl in his neighborhood. This essay will examine stream of consciousness vital role in these ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 576). The character of the boy is described as early pubescent which permits the reader to deduce on what he fully knows regarding life, love, and lust. An unreliable narrator, however, is a narrator that we perceive to be misleading, self–deceptive, deluded or deranged. Porter articulately depicts Granny Weatherall to be most of these in "The Jilting..." particularly when the reader encounters an interaction between Granny, also referred to as Ellen, and her daughter Cornelia, "tell Hapsy to take off her cap. I can't see her plain." The reader is later made aware of the circumstance that Hapsy, one of Ellen's children, has died. Once more, half–way through the story, Granny displays how truly jumbled by reality she is when she tells Cornelia that she won't see the doctor again because "he's only been gone three minutes" and her daughter informs Granny and the reader, "That was this morning, Mother. It's night now." (p. 80). These exchanges highlight how much Granny Weatherall is as an untrustworthy narrator. Opposed to "Araby", which is told in first person from the perspective of the young boy, "The Jilting..." is disconcertingly told in limited third person by which we can see inside the mind of only Granny Weatherall; as such, when Granny is lucid, the story proceeds in sequential order. Consequently, for stream of consciousness to be operative, the working of the character's mind should ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Writing Tool of the Twentieth Century: Stream of... Stream of Consciousness Thoughts, emotions, and motives make up whom a person is. These are the same things that make up the characters in some of the most famous literary works. Stream of consciousness shows the thoughts, feelings, and ideas of a character through the character's point of view. Stream of consciousness is a writing tool used most notably in the early twentieth century, during the rise of modernism. Another description for stream of consciousness is interior monologue. This interior monologue gives the reader a look into the thoughts that drives the character to their actions. William James explains the term in The Principles of Psychology, stating, "Consciousness, then, does not appear to itself chopped up in bits. Such ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Alfred Prufrock". In "Prufrock", Eliot uses a combination of stream of consciousness and imagery to tell the story. The imagery is evident by the amount of descriptive language the speaker uses, while stream of consciousness is represented by the story being told entirely through the speaker's mind. In "Prufrock", the thoughts are of Prufrock himself, not of the author, T. S. Eliot. The use of stream of consciousness in "Prufrock" opens the mind of the character, allowing the thoughts and feelings of the character to be exposed. This exposure makes the character more relatable because it shows the strengths, and more primarily, the insecurities of the character. Prufrock's insecurities are on full display during the entire poem, and are apparent in the fifth stanza, line 39, as he thinks "Time to turn back and descend the stair, / With a bald spot in the middle of my hair– / (They will say: 'How his hair is growing thin!')" (39–41). The parenthesis indicates a break in his original thought. As he notices the bald spot in his hair, he seems to immediately think to himself what "they" will say. He adds, "My morning coat, my collar mounting firmly to the chin, / My necktie rich and modest, but asserted by a simple pin– / (They will say: 'But how his arms and legs are thin!') (42–44). Again, his thought is broken by a worry. He realizes that his clothes do not fit him as well as they used to, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. A Stream of Consciousness in A Rose for Emily by William... "A Rose for Emily" is a short story written by American author William Faulkner and centres around an old lady named Emily. The story is written in the classic Faulkner method of a streaming consciousness. By constructing the story through use of the stream of consciousness, Faulkner is able to manipulate the predetermined short story structure and create an outstanding, critically acclaimed story. In using the thematic concept of creating contrasts between two opposing entities, Faulkner is able to entice his audience. Through the use of the specific contrasts made between the past and present and the contrast between Homer and, Faulkner is able to pass to his readers the concept that man's plight is tragic but that there is heroism in an attempt to rise above it. Ray B. West's "Atmosphere and Theme in Faulkner's 'A Rose for Emily'" is a paper in which West does an excellent job of analysing and explaining the three stated contrasts present in Faulkner's "A Rose to Emily." West's interpretation of the contrasts present in "A Rose for Emily," further validate the point of view that the use of contrasts aid Faulkner in his plight to relay the underlying meaning concealed in the story. Contrast between Past Time and Present In the course of "A Rose for Emily," there are many instances in which William Faulkner uses the contrast between past time and the present to illustrate how hard it is for the protagonist, Emily, to let go of the past. A key and integral example ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Use Of Stream Of Consciousness Techniques By William Faulkner Simile. Metaphor. Onomatopoeia. We are taught these terms in elementary school and soon forget them, but they are some of the most important tools authors can use to make their characters more captivating and their narrative more convincing. Each writer's style is as unique as a fingerprint; the particular pattern of loops and whorls, so to speak, depends in part on their use of these literary modes. The literary fingerprint of William Faulkner, while typically adhering to standard rules of writing, is recognized by its use of stream of consciousness techniques, a term coined by psychologist William James in 1890 (Pomerleau). This form of writing attempts to break free of previous literary conventions in an effort to portray thoughts and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She is akin to the 'straight man' in a sitcom–if there were nobody to react to the antics of the other actors, many jokes would fall flat. Similarly, the mental crises which many characters in Light in August undergo seem more significant after the reader has been exposed to Lena's stability. Lena is also the immediate stimulus for several turning points for other characters: Byron Bunch falls in love with her and puts himself on a quest to gain her trust; Hightower helps her give birth and is reintroduced to the world; Brown has a moment of self–realization when he meets her in the cabin. She is like an enzyme, not consumed by the reaction she catalyzes. During the course of the book, she goes directly through the town of Jefferson without being harmed or even affected, a strong backbone to support the whirlwind of events that seems to follow her. The writing style used throughout Lena's backstory is relatively uncomplicated, which reinforces her role and characterization. Her entire backstory in the first chapter is told primarily by the narrator and includes short, precise sentences such as "She was the youngest living child. Her mother died first. She said, 'Take care of paw.' Lena did so" (Faulkner 6). This concise narration stands out against the rest of the book, which is told largely through stream of consciousness ramblings or through other characters recounting events. But the plainness of style in Lena's introduction reflects her role as an 'straight ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Theme Of Stream Of Consciousness The Stream of Consciousness was introduced by William James over 100 years ago. It means that our consciousness moves ahead with continuity. James suggested that this theme can serve as a major focus for psychology. (James, 1890). Isn't it strange, though, that psychology almost never speaks of this dimension? We might talk about emotions, perceptions, actions or desires, but almost never about "the inner thought flow." James foresaw the difficulty of studying these phenomena. He stated that to capture the Stream of Consciousness conceptually was like trying to study a moving river by capturing it in a bucket. Another metaphor that he proposed: "It's like trying to try to study a snowflake by capturing it in your hand." Conceptual language ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In their examples, cited as classical works of the Stream of Consciousness, (Joyce, 1914; Woolf,1925), the thought sequences seems to be like "mental tourism," with thoughts jumping from island to island (or from theme to theme) in a helicopter. In contrast, the three people sharing their Impasse, in the article "Three Extracts," show a deep level of continuity and profundity in their inner sequences. In fact, their revelations manifest a particular courage in presenting thoughts that can be found universally, but that would almost never be revealed to another person because they show a deep personal truth of anxiety, humiliation or self worthlessness. As a literary analogy, the three extracts they are closer to Kafka than to Joyce and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Romanticism In Stream Of Consciousness Abstract: Stream of Consciousness technique is not a new term as per as Indian literature is concerned. But in recent times it is used strictly to promote inner ideas of a protagonist, antagonist of the novelist. It is a method to give a self analysis and interpretation o f the character. The portrayal of the character strikes reality of life, frankness, explicit description of sexuality and above all fulfilling her desire to the deepest depths. Namita's "Paro: Dreams of Passions" created havoc in the history of Indian Writing in English and set an identical genre of its own. The novel deals with erotic overtures, and obsession of love. It is the story of irrestible, outrageous woman with the same name. Key Words: Stream of Consciousness, inner ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For her aspirations she married B.R. Their marriage develop jealous and depression in the mind of Priya. It adds a pinch of salt to Priya with that she adds "Ivy, Mary and I loved him (B.R.) madly.... (Page no. 1). Behavior of Paro at marriage ceremony with new wedding is expresses minutely and it expresses the status of woman in modern society after marriage how the economic independence was restrained by the man. Paro's life is full of glitter but men think her behavior as that of decisiveness. She is accepted as a final outcome for her capricious social extremes. She tries to enjoy the small things of the life as a rich person, but that is different, colorless, tasteless and emotionless. For an emancipation nature of Paro she could not continue with one man and marriage is not a permanent feature of Paro for this Priya has expressed: This is the Paro who is recently liberated from marriage and convention: she is still convinced that she is young and desirable as she was. Her massive breasts, like the enlarged pores of her109 skin, have grown ponderous with age. Even her fingers have become fatter–but this coarsening of body has also somehow catalyzed a startling vitality of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. What Is The Author's Point Of View Of The Catcher In The Rye Salinger wrote The Catcher in the Rye to relate to the teens of the 1950, and he did a brilliant job. Salinger was able to really connect to teens through narration and his use of first person point of view, wording, and stream of consciousness. The first piece of evidence is first person point of view because the reader sees the world through the lens of the character. In The Capture in the Rye any people and concepts are viewed through that of the main character Holden Crawfield. Throughout the book we see many instances where thing are distorted or morphed, like our slightly deranged character and narrator may see it. From the reader's perspective The Catcher in the Rye isn't written by Salinger, but by Holden himself proving how perfectly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Jane Eyre Stream Of Consciousness in Jane Eyre Jane Eyre written by charlotte Bronte. She was very famous writer. In this particular novel she introduced the element of stream of consciousness for the first time. This term was used by her for very first time in writing novel. It was age of reason when she introduces this element for the very first time. Age of reasons: Age of reason was an eighteenth century movement which was following strictly in the Middle Ages after mysticism, religion and superstition. The age of reasons represented an origin of the perception of man about himself, for the search of knowledge and the universe. In this time period, man's previous perceptions ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She thought about his uncle who was dead nine years ago in the same room. At that time Jane's stream of consciousness was: "I had heard of dead men troubled in their graves by the disobedience of their last wishes. I thought Mr. Reed's spirit would rise before me in this chamber. Suddenly, I felt, I saw a streak of light, across the room!" In this particular paragraph, there is flow of thoughts in Jane's mind about her religion that her uncle's soul must be in pain because according to her religion the situation is proclaiming this thing actually. There is another monologue when her friend was punished and shows no signs of pain or of shame. At that time Jane's consciousness was: "How she can bear it so quietly, I thought. I wander what sort of girl she is, whether good or naughty." In this thought her flow of thought was related to her past experiences, as she always got punished by her aunt and then was blamed by her cousins. Later when Mr. Brocklehurst asked her for standing on the stool and everyone was watching her at that time Helen Burns passed by her and smiled at her. "What a smile! It imparted strengths in me to lift my head and take a firm stand on the stool." This was a difference in her thoughts because of her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Cinematic Thought Experiments Of The Living Dead "Cinematic Thought Experiments of the Living Dead" Philosophical conceptions of consciousness represented through the zombie film The zombies that George R. Romero showcases in Night of the Living Dead (1968) now dominate the film industry as the prototype for the undead: the mindless corpse that is void of its prior consciousness. And the preferred food source of the undead has become like law for any pop–culture universe about zombies–even undead superheroes will eat people in the comic books from the Marvel Zombies series. As the prototypical zombie thought experiment, the Night of the Living Dead allows the audience to confidently respond to any questions about the undead's identity, actions, or morality by referring to that void of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Romero's Mindless Undead I initiate the discourse on the purpose of consciousness by first introducing Night of the Living Dead, as an effort to reveal an intuitive claim as a running theme of the movie: consciousness is what distinguishes me from the living dead. Romero's Night of the Living Dead can teach us about what our assumptions on the purpose of higher consciousness by having it be the root feature that distinguishes the living from the undead. When Johnny dies and his corpse comes back from the local cemetery, the consciousness of his mind is left behind–there remains only emptiness inside the zombie. As his consciousness vanishes, so does the person that we used call Johnny–the corpse itself is now just a mindless shell. The Romero zombie comes back as completely subject to the zombie law of nature; leaving behind the mind, all that they can do is what a zombie does–and all zombies devour. The absolute mindlessness that characterizes the zombies in Romero's creation, reflects on the idea, that, a free–acting human being can be reduced to nothing more than a mindless corpse by stripping away their consciousness. Also apparent in the Night of the Living Dead, is the assumption, that, it is from consciousness that I claim to have an identity, to act on reasons and to rise above my innate instincts–all of which are concepts ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Catcher In The Rye Stream of consciousness – an uninterrupted and unhindered collection and occurrence of thoughts and ideas in the conscious mind. "Stream of Consciousness." Literary Devices. N.p., n.d. Web. 04 Nov. 2016. . Example: "I'm not gonna tell you my whole goddamn biography or anything. I'll just tell you all about this madman stuff that happened to me around last Christmas just before I got pretty run down and had to come out here and take it easy." (Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye, pg. 1) Function Context: In The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger, the story starts off with a teenager named Holden Caulfield. He begins by telling you about how clingy his parents are before proceeding to about to begin his life story before changing topics and is instead talking about his older brother, D.B.'s life and occupation. It takes him awhile to get to the point and finally revealing when it all started. His story begins at the time he was expelled from Pencey prep. He had lost his teams fencing equipment, fought with his friend, and left the school before the acquainted time ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He writes colloquially as if writing in a diary and the fact that he's "not gonna tell you [his] whole biography" (Salinger, pg. 1) proves it. His journal basically does last only a few days long like a normal diary and doesn't tell the entire story of his life like an autobiography. The readers are better able to sympathize and relate to Holden as to why he does the things he does in contrast to a third person narrative. He reveals the part that he wants people to know such as how "this madman stuff happened to [him] around last Christmas" in a more casual manner than in a novel that's not written in the main characters voice. This technique gives readers deeper insight on the main characters personality as well as how he thinks personally of any situations he's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Stream Of Consciousness In Virginia Wolff's The Mark On... Storytelling Through the Use of Stream of Consciousness Telling a story through the stream of consciousness has been practiced by several authors in their works, however it is neither new to this time or a common form of writing. It is a complex take on what would seem like an easy writing style as the author sometimes has to put themselves into the mind of their character to describe their thoughts, or the author may draw inspiration from their own thoughts. Virginia Wolff's The Mark on the Wall is an example of stream of consciousness writing as the narrator goes through her own thoughts, trying to figure out what could have made the mark on the wall. It is believed that Wolff wrote the story based on the thoughts within her own mind as if it is taking place in real time as she wonders what the mark on the wall could be. Wolff tells the story by breaking from traditional writing, which brilliantly captivates the audience by often times distracting them from the original intent of the story. ***While stream of consciousness is common, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The story's plot changes from paragraph to paragraph as the woman's mind and her ideas change and go from one thought to the next. For instance, the woman goes from thinking that a nail caused the mark on the wall above the mantle to thinking that it is a "wonder is that I've any clothes on my back." (Wolff) The distraction is partly due to Wolff's use of intonation aides in this distraction from shifting from rises and falls as the story progresses (Durban, 2011). Wolff successfully told a story that takes place almost completely in someone's thoughts and that figuring out what the mark on the wall is not the priority of the story. Wolff created a real character with a mind that is seldom explored through the use of stream of consciousness ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Rape Fantasies Analysis In Margaret Atwood's Rape Fantasies, the narrator Estelle describes her "rape fantasies" in which is never assaulted. Initiated by a conversation with her coworkers about their controversial daydreams, Estelle recounts her own reoccurring visions, though hers differ from those discussed between the women. Throughout the piece, Atwood utilizes stream of conscious writing to show her narrator's jumbled thoughts as she describes her "fantasies." Atwood's short story depicts a narrator inexperienced in courtship and meeting men, as Estelle's honest and seemingly endless stream of thoughts highlight her critical view of women she knows well and explain daydreams in which she meets and (hopes to) build relationships with unfamiliar men. As a whole, Atwood's use of longer sentences and stream of consciousness emphasize the narrator's disorganized and honest opinions. Within the first few pages, the narrator voices her inner, cynical thoughts about her female colleagues. She describes Chrissy the receptionist as being "[v]arnished" and "like she's been painted over with nail polish" (Atwood 1). When Greta, a coworker, makes a comment about another's concern for being out late at night, Estelle reveals, "[Greta] worked in Detroit for three years and she never lets you forget it, it's like she thinks she's a war hero or something, we should all admire her just for the fact that she's still walking this earth" (Atwood 2). She continues criticizing Greta and Chrissy: "They're both ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. The Conservationist By Nadine Gordimer Essay The novelist employs some methods of representation, but he/she does so in the form of a narrative.The novelistdescribes life or experience of life which is content of the novel. Therefore, the content of life which is presented in the novel is important. Nadine Gordimer is one of the foremost fiction writers in South Africa and winner of the Nobel Prize for literature in 1991. Nadine Gordimer was recognized as a potentially major artist, a talented, serious and careful writer who treated important contemporary issues. She has anusual interest in the symbolic, the psychological and also the art of fiction. Her novel The Conservationist (1974) is in a sort of the stream of consciousness technique describing the life of Mehring the Afrikaner, whose farm is as barren as his life. As pointed out by Macauley and Lanning (1964:163), it is usually through dialogue that the character is revealed. In the novel, The Conservationist, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Gordimer makes creative use of imagery. The hero works in images. The images "Pale freckled eggs" of the guinea fowls, with which the novel opens, recur and keep the action of the novel based on the farm together. There is the macabre image – the corpse of an unknown black murdered on Mehring's farm and rudely buried by the heartless Boer police. The body's inadequate burial has been haunting him for about ten years, through he has endeavoured hard to forget it. The murdered man is the image of the black's claim to their land. Christopher Heywood (1983:32) states:"The Conservationist explores its theme of sterility and renewal through the imagery of landscape and physiology..." Mehring is allowed to live in a world of dream and also reflection. The narrative which takes us through his dreams is fascinating. Mehring is unable to communicate with both the living and the dead. His fantasy takes all sorts of shapes – he is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Persuasive Essay As humans, we are trained to avoid contradiction. Therefore, you don't say goodnight every morning, and I don't stand here and tell you my shirt is orange. To contradict oneself is a sure indication of stupidity, laziness, or even a liar. This is engrained, conventional wisdom. Consequently, avoiding contradiction is a fundamental, enduring literary requirement. Significant time, and copious amounts of editing, are commonly dedicated to eradicating continuity errors, thereby producing clear, precise prose. I'm sure you're all agonisingly familiar with this process. You simply cannot introduce a character with stunning blue eyes, and then, in the very next sentence, describe those same eyes as muddled brown. You certainly can't flippantly change your character's name; not if you aspire to be taken seriously, at least. Readers are so attuned to these apparent errors, that they often closely scrutinise works and actively seek them, then proudly wave any discrepancies' in authors' faces. Yet, challenging conventions is precisely what experimentation mandates. So, allow me to entirely contradict myself. As you may have guessed, my project, entitled Thirty Seconds in D♯, wholly embraces contradiction. Thus my foremost aim is to produce a story which is neither confined to, nor restricted by, itself, but rather encompasses a broad spectrum of narrative possibilities. To achieve this, I interweave several experimental elements. Today, I will analyse three primary experimental ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock Essay: Stream of... Stream of Consciousness in The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock is a uniquely styled piece of literature. In this poem Eliot employs a literary method of writing called "stream of consciousness." This is a difficult method to grasp outside of the literary genre to attempt to understand it within the context of the higher language of poetry can further confuse readers. Stream of consciousness is simply how our brain thinks. Perhaps as the teacher reads through this poem we hear the word "Mermaid". Our minds see the singing mermaids on the rocks in "Jason and the Argonauts" and then jump to Peter Pan and from Peter Pan to Mary Poppins. The idea of stream of consciousness ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His pen wanders and jumps from place to place with no apparent pattern. I think this style of writing is also a reflection of Eliot's feelings about the time. Eliot was more of a Modernist than Victorian poet and as such held to beliefs like: there is no higher power in the universe, man is alone on this planet to govern his own affairs, everyone is truly alone, there is no unity, no support, for we live in a godless heartless world (Stacey Donohue). The floating, confusing, jumbled mix of emotions and directions in this poem mirrors the modernist image of society. Though he was a modernist I believe this poem is a reflection of what he saw during the Victorian period. He says, "Do I dare/Disturb the universe?" (Eliot, Longman 2419 ll. 45–46). He speaks here, not of the universe as you and I think –– a celestial body –– but of the universe in the sense of the Victorian period itself. The world where everything is a mask of propriety, manners, and tradition; this can be seen in his reference to the popular Victorian custom of afternoon tea, "Before the taking of tea and toast." (Eliot, Longman 2419 l. 34). A word or simple action could topple a system as balanced as this one and Prufrock struggles with the question, "Do I dare?" (Eliot, Longman 2419 l. 38). Does he dare to disturb the Victorian culture with what he has seen? His struggle is represented by the yellow smoke/fog. This represents ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Rhetorical Devices Used In Literature Houle 1 Rhetorical devices are used in all types of literature. Literary devices are narrative techniques authors used strategically to convey information in the text that is not blatantly given the reader. The use of stream–of–consciousness is an unique literary device used by well–known authors like William Faulkner and Virginia Woolf. The stream–of–consciousness had some popularity in the first half of the 20th century. This literary device is sometimes used instead of using dialogue or description. The stream–of–consciousness technique is the uninterrupted thoughts of the author through a character to show the ideas in the conscious mind. The use of the stream–of– consciousness technique can benefit both the story and the readers experience ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Her short story is, ?A Haunted House? from Monday or Tuesday. The short story starts with the narrator, most likely a woman, says: ?Whatever hour you woke there was a door shutting.?12 The narrator and her husband experience the sensations of a home which is alive with memories. She does not keep the readers in suspense on the mysteriousness of the opening and closing of windows and doors. She lets the readers know that there are two ghosts that haunt her house. The narrator says herself and her husband are not afraid of these ghosts because they have not caused any harm to either of them. The ghosts are searching for something. They might be looking for something that may have been left out in the garden or in the loft. The narrator is anxious to know what the ghost are searching for. It also seems like the house itself has a response to the searchers; it has a pulse that quickens as the ghosts come close to finding what they have lost. The narrator hears the house?s heartbeat as if the word ?safe? was repeated rhythmically. The house also says it has hidden treasure hidden somewhere in its rooms; this is most likely what the ghosts are looking for. The narrator reveals she has learned a few details from the ghosts? past. They lived in a house as a married couple hundreds of years before. When the wife died suddenly, the man abandoned the house and traveled the globe. After his death, he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Examples Of Stream Of Consciousness In Fahrenheit 451 "He was not happy. He was not happy. He said the words to himself. He recognized this as the true state of affairs. He wore his happiness like a mask and the girl had run off across the lawn with the mask and there was no way of going to knock on her door and ask for it back" is what Montag, the protagonist of Fahrenheit 451, thought to describe the situation he had found himself in; however, there is a deeper meaning to this quote that provides an insight into what the Modern period was (10). The Modern period was influenced by the atrocities that had occurred at that time such as World War I, The Great Depression, and World War II. This led to questions such as, "What was becoming of this world?" and "What did it mean to be American?". Additionally, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Bradbury references the Bible multiple times in his works, and not many of them are easily seen. One such example is when Montag remembers a Biblical verse that says, "And on either side of the river was there a tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month; And the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations," (162). The "tree of life" symbolizes the future of mankind while the fruit may symbolize the knowledge that Montag and the fragmented group he is with possess. Another major allusion Bradbury makes is when Montag reads a pamphlet that says that the firemen were, "Established [in] 1970, to burn English–influenced books in the Colonies, First Fireman: Benjamin Franklin," (Bradbury 32). This can be seen as an ironic allusion for two reasons: one is that Benjamin Franklin established a fire company and two is that he wrote a famous book called Poor Richard's Almanac. Furthermore, Bradbury alludes to Shakespeare when Beatty says to Montag, "'There is no terror, Cassius, in your threats, for I am arm'd so strong in honesty that they pass by me as an idle wind, which I respect not!'" (117). Not only does this reference Julius Caesar, but it also compares Montag to Cassius and Beatty as Brutus, which foreshadows Beatty's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Stream Of Consciousness Essay First associated with the modernist movement, stream of consciousness is a form of interior monologue which its goal is to represent a leading consciousness in a narrative novel, a typical fiction novel. This representation of consciousness includes perceptions or impressions, thoughts which are incited by outside world, and parts of random unattached thoughts. Stream of consciousness writing technique often lacks correct punctuation, favoring a looser and a more incomplete style. The invention of this term has generally been credited to the American psychologist William James, older brother of novelist Henry James. It was used originally by psychologists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century to describe the personal awareness of someone's mental processes. In The Principles of Psychology, Chapter IX, The Stream of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Such words as chain do not describe it fitly as it presents itself in the first instance. It is nothing jointed, it flows. A river or a stream is the metaphor by which it is most naturally described. In talking of it hereafter let us call it the stream of thought, of consciousness , or of subjective life" (William James, 1890). It is helpful at the beginning to distinguish stream of consciousness from free association. Stream of consciousness describes metaphorically the phenomenon–the continuous flow of sensations, impressions, images, memories and thoughts–experienced by each person, at all levels of consciousness, and which is generally associated with each person's subjectivity. On the other hand, free association is a process in which apparently random information accumulated by a subject allow connections to be done from the different aspects of consciousness of mind to the conscious mind of that subject. Translated and mapped to the space of narrative literatures, free association is one element in the text that is used to signify the stream of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Differences Between Virginia Woolf And Mrs Dalloway Chapter 2: Virginia Woolf and Mrs.Dalloway Virginia Woolf"s novel, Mrs.Dalloway has been classified as a modernist novel,mainly because of its use of what is known as the 'stream of consciousness' technique.This particular technique does not allow narration of the actions,deeds and incidents of characters or a depiction of the external or outward aspect of their lives.But it aims at the exploration of the minds of the characters and this makes it rather challenging for the readers to follow the storyline.Mrs.Dalloway is a wonderfully representative modernist text not because of this narrative technique but also because it captures so brilliantly the fragmented consciousness that has come to be considered symptomatic of life in the twentieth century.As we step into the twenty–first more than half a continent away, we may be surprised to find how eloquently it continues to speak to us, here today. In her novel, Mrs.Dalloway,Virginia Woolf has been able to interweave characters with such ingenuity that they flow into each other, each representing a single or more of her concerns, building together a complex structure of human fallibilities that at once speak to,but are greatre than, any single protagonist burdened with the kind of anxieties that plagued Woolf."They–Clarissa and Richard Dalloway, their daughter ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Thus touching and merging has been achieved through the 'stream of consciousness' technique in the novel. The stream of consciousness is a technique in which the entire psyche of the characters is put forward in words. This internalisation of characters is done by a division of time. One is mechanical time, that is hours of the clock, and the other is the inner time, that is the time of the mind, one past's life. The division of the time validates the turning loose of emotion that helped Woolf to celebrate to the "inner life" of her characters in contrast to the outside ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. What Is The Stream Of Consciousness In The Secret Life Of... Imagine being able to travel anywhere in the world, at any time. This is such an exhilarating thought, as it may excite the mind of any individual. This was something that Walter Mitty was able to do, in The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, directed by Ben Stiller. Although Walter's travels may not have always been physical travels, his mind possessed the ability to take his mental consciousness into a state of euphoria at any time. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty is based on the short story "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty," by James Thurber. The main character is a man, Walter Mitty, that frequently daydreams about desirable experiences of all kinds; the character of Walter Mitty evolves throughout the movie and ends up actually doing some amazing things instead of just daydreaming about them. The movie, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, uses the stream of consciousness technique very well. The premise of the movie is essentially built on this writing technique. At the beginning of the movie, Walter experiences daydreams very frequently, while his actual life is very average and boring. The viewer even gains a sense of pity for Walter because he dreams of doing so many amazing things, but lacks the courage and boldness to realize these fantasies. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Although Walter Mitty eventually musters up a great amount of courage, for most of the movie he is afraid to go get what he wants. This is ironic because he obviously wants to have some of these qualities and relationships so badly, but his fear of failure and his fear of confrontation scares him too much for him to attempt to get these things. Walter is also on a journey to find a man that gave him the a transcendent gift, that seems to have gotten lost. Walter finds out that he unknowingly threw away this gift after chasing the man halfway across the world. This situation should be categorized as being in the epitome of ironic ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. What Is Stream Of Consciousness?. Marina B. Rodriguez. What is stream of consciousness? Marina B. Rodriguez Miami Dade College Abstract "An idea, to be suggestive, must come to the individual with the force of revelation. (https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/w/williamjam157182.html) To understand stream of consciousness, we must first define; what is consciousness? In Merriam's Webster dictionary defines consciousness as: "the state of being characterized by sensation, emotion, volition, and thought:mind, and the medical portion of the definition reads: the totality in psychology of sensations, perceptions, ideas, attitudes, and feelings of which an individual or a group is aware at any given time or within a given time span." With consciousness defined we can come to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Being aware of ourselves and the environment simultaneously. An excerpt from "The principles of psychology" According to James' (1890) on his theory of stream of consciousness: How does it go on? We notice immediately five important characters in the process, of which it shall be the duty of the present chapter to treat in a general way: 1. Every thought tends to be part of a personal consciousness. 2. Within each personal consciousness thought is always changing. 3. Within each personal consciousness thought is sensibly continuous. 4. It always appears to deal with objects independent of itself. 5. It is interested in some parts of these objects to the exclusion of the others, and welcomes or rejects – chooses from among them, in a word – all the while. (pg. 225; second paragraph) Literature Review The first point James states thoughts are individual to each and every thing that is capable of thinking. With each state of consciousness, it has both cognitive and emotional aspects, affected by the internal and external stimuli, making it personalized and exclusive to every single person. In the second point , it does not mean that the flow and constant change of thought is something that has no continuance, but that a thought once experienced can not recur and be identical. As the mind has already made connections with that specific thought and feeling, it will not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Literary Techniques In Virginia Woolf's The Mark On The Wall Virginia Woolf is a prominent female writer, and is regarded as a skilled exponent of the stream of consciousness technique in English literature of the twentieth century. Being uninterested in the traditional way of novel writing, she made great efforts on the experiment and innovation of novel writing and rebelled against some of the British novelists of her era, including Arnold Bennett, John Galsworthy and H. G. Wells. By trying out her technical experiments with fiction in her earlier sketches, Virginia Woolf is intended to seek to develop a new technique of expression to put her theories into practice. The short piece The Mark on the Wall published in 1919 was her first experimental novel, being considered to be her first successful achievements. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Although it seems that there is no movement, no plot, no tragedy, no comedy, and no love interest, much less to mention the description of the exterior world except the object the mark on the wall, the narration is balanced in construction and well organized. However, the Mark on the Wall mainly focuses on the revelation of heroine's spiritual activities that are quite opposite to the traditional way of novel writing. Probing into the origin and development of the stream of consciousness technique, I found it was actually based on three theories. First of all, William James coined the psychological term 'consciousness'. According to James (1971), consciousness does not appear to itself chopped up in bit; it is nothing joined, it flows, like a 'stream', or a 'stream of water'; let us call it the stream of thought, of consciousness, or of subjective life. Secondly, French philosopher Henry Bergson established the notion of duration, or lived time, as opposed to what he viewed as the spatialized conception of time, measured by a clock, so he suggested that "reality" exists in the inseparable stream of consciousness (Kumar 1963). Therefore, he encouraged writers to pursue the inner world and depict the characters from the angle of psychology. Thirdly, an Austrian physician and neurologist Sigmund Freud (1950) put ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...