Category: Symbolism

  • “O Captain! My Captain!”: Symbolism, Imagery, and the American Dream

    Table of Contents Introduction “O Captain! My Captain!” and the American Dream Abraham Lincoln in “O Captain! My Captain!” References Introduction The famous “O Captain! My Captain!” written by Walt Whitman is a short literary work encompassing several complex topics important to each American. It is personal and national mourning for Abraham Lincoln as well…

  • “The Young Goodman Brown” by Nathaniel Hawthorne: Symbolism

    Table of Contents Introduction “The Young Goodman Brown” analysis Close connection with autobiographical motives The description of Puritan society in the story Symbolism Conclusion Works Cited Introduction Nathaniel Hawthorne was an outstanding writer of the 17th century and produced several works that took a reasonable place in the world’s classical literature. Judging from the example…

  • Symbolism in Herman Melville’s “Bartleby the Scrivener”

    Herman Melville’s “Bartleby the Scrivener” is the story about a person, who made himself imprisoned in his office. The main theme of the essay is to show the life of most people in New York from the point of view of capitalism which took its development during the time when the story was written. The…

  • Symbolism in “The Egg” and “Bernice Bobs Her Hair”

    One of the most effective learning approaches is through fictional and real-life narratives. Short stories have been used in the history of humanity to offer studying materials that allow students to connect emotionally with the texts and relate them with their experiences. The Egg and Bernice Bobs Her Hair are examples of narrations that attract…

  • Symbolism in The Lottery Story by Shirley Jackson

    The Lottery was written by Shirley Jackson in 1948 and contains many notable themes. It has an exciting plot that, simultaneously, can cause a contradictable sense of averse for the events that take place. It might be rational to suggest that The Lottery is significant and relevant to discuss. The reflections below will explore the…

  • Symbolism of Raymond Carver’s “The Bath” Story

    The story of The Bath by Raymond Carver is short. It begins with a woman, Ann Weiss, ordering a cake from a baker on a Saturday afternoon for her son’s eighth birthday. On Monday morning, when the boy was walking to school, a car hit him. The husband arrives at the hospital, where the wife…

  • Symbolism in Poe’s “Masque of the Red Death”

    The Masque of the Red Death is a horror story by E. A. Poe that talks about Prince Prospero and his masquerade ball during the Red Death plague spreading. The disease symbolizes Tuberculosis, an illness common during the writer’s lifetime (Jones, 2017). In the film, it is possible to see the resemblance between the fictional…

  • Symbolism in “A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings” by Marquez

    Symbolism is often employed in literature to represent, signify, and express ideas and qualities that differ from their literal sense in real life. As a literary device, symbolism can assume various forms by using abstract ideas to give an object a more vivid and deeper meaning by the use of symbols. It has become a…

  • Symbolism in O’Neill’s Long Day’s Journey into Night

    In Eugene O’Neill’s play “Long Day’s Journey into Night”, the playwright presents the inner workings of a dysfunctional family long before the term dysfunctional became a buzzword of American psychology. The play, written in 1941 but not performed until 1957, is set in 1912 in the predominantly Irish Connecticut home of the Tyrones. It is…

  • Symbolism in Steinbeck’s The Chrysanthemums

    The book Chrysanthemums by John Ernst Steinbeck is full of symbolism. The most obvious and closest to the reader meaning of symbolism is the glorification of nature. In the novel, nature appears both as a living object of observation and as a symbol. For example, natural features such as mountains, valleys, forests are symbolic images…