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The Death of the American Dream
The Death of the American Dream
Iva Pavlović
This paper will focus on the decline of the American Dream and the reasons for its decline. The American Dream is dying because certain social and economic changes that have occurred in America have made it impossible for the majority of Americans to achieve their Dream. The original traditional American values gave rise to the development of the American Dream and the portrayal of America as ‘the land of opportunity.’ However, with time, the original values as well as the American Dream...
The Degeneration of the Imperial Truth into Religious Dogma in Warhammer 40.000
The Degeneration of the Imperial Truth into Religious Dogma in Warhammer 40.000
Mario Paradžiković
The universe of Warhammer 40,000 fosters one of the most draconian forms of humanity in all of fiction. This zealously religious Imperium of Mankind is defined by xenophobia and hatred, with all of its planets exporting millions of men, women, and children to sustain the countless war efforts across its myriad battlefields. The ruler of this Imperium is the titular God-Emperor of Mankind, one venerated by every single loyal Imperial citizen; anything less is met with death or worse. This...
The Depiction of Women Characters in John Green's Novels/Prikaz ženskih likova u romanima Johna Greena
The Depiction of Women Characters in John Green's Novels/Prikaz ženskih likova u romanima Johna Greena
Helena Nikolašević
Most young adult novels nowadays deal with teenage issues, such as young love, self-confidence, heartbreak, and similar. The protagonists of such stories are boys and girls that are mostly considered as “outcasts” in their schools or neighbourhoods and who meet another person that is either on the same side of the spectrum or the complete opposite. The authors of such novels tend to use the same formula in these stories: either a girl meets a boy who changes her life forever or a boy is...
The Depiction of Women Characters in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire
The Depiction of Women Characters in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire
Zrinka Mavretić
The play A Streetcar Named Desire, often regarded as one of the best plays of the twentieth century, was written in 1947 by American playwright Tennessee Williams. One of the recurring themes in the play is the conflict between fantasy and reality, honesty and lies, best depicted through the female protagonists of the play: Blanche DuBois and Stella Kowalski. They are sisters, the last representatives of a once aristocratic yet now moribund family. Blanche and Stella are both dependent on...
The Destruction of Southern Patriarchal Values in William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury
The Destruction of Southern Patriarchal Values in William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury
Petra Mađerek
The Sound and the Fury is one of the most complex novels of William Faulkner and of Southern literature in general. The themes of the novel are numerous, yet the theme this BA paper is focused on the most is the death and destruction of the traditional South and its ideals. The destruction will be shown through the analysis of the novel’s main characters’ tragic fates. The concluding chapter of the paper brings a note of optimism for the survival of the traditional Southern ideals.
The Development of Figurative Competence of Students of English
The Development of Figurative Competence of Students of English
Matej Adlešić
Figurative competence refers to the ability to understand and interpret figurative speech – in other words, utterances such as metaphors and metonymy, which are cases in which we use certain words to express something different from what we literally said. These expressions serve as ways to say ordinary things in extraordinary ways, which have to be properly used by speakers (or writers) and properly decoded by listeners (or readers) in order to have the desired effect. As students get...
The Development of the Speaking Skill: a textbook analysis
The Development of the Speaking Skill: a textbook analysis
Lada Dumančić
This paper focuses on the development of the speaking skill in English as a foreign language in the elementary school. The research was done on the corpus of tasks compiled on the basis of the analysis of the “Dip In” textbooks and workbooks for English as a foreign language in primary school. The paper contains two main parts. The first part deals with the theoretical background related to the speaking skill and the second part describes the research regarding the speaking tasks in the...
The Digital Age of Feminism
The Digital Age of Feminism
Lucija Belošević
Since the inception of the feminist movement, literature has been an invaluable tool in spreading its messages of equality and liberation, as well as immortalizing the observations and conclusions made by the women who have spearheaded the movement. Over the centuries, the works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Virginia Woolf, Simone de Beauvoir, bell hooks and so many more have shaped feminist thought and the course of the movement at large. In the recent years, feminists have begun to find their...
The Distortion of the American Dream
The Distortion of the American Dream
Dubravka Dubravac
The paper will deal with the distortion of values of the American Dream when put into practice. Firstly, it will trace back the origin of the term of the American Dream, and define its meaning. Secondly, it will evaluate the main tenets of the American Dream stressing the positive as well as the negative sides of concept. Thirdly, it will give an in depth analysis of the play Death of a Salesman written by Arthur Miller in relation to the distorted values of the American Dream. In the end,...
The Dominant Culture and the Identity of Post-Indian Warrior in Zitkala-Sa's Works
The Dominant Culture and the Identity of Post-Indian Warrior in Zitkala-Sa's Works
Marta Bezjak
This paper explores the creation of the post-Indian warrior identity in Zitkala-Sas literary work American Indian Stories. It analyzes the work of the author and extracts the elements of post-Indian warrior of survivance identity from it. The paper puts the authors work into the context of survivance narratives by describing its features and by providing examples from the work. The post-Indian warrior of survivance identity is built on the resistance to the dominant culture and the new...
The Downfall of Mankind in H.G.Wells's "The Time Machine"
The Downfall of Mankind in H.G.Wells's "The Time Machine"
Jasmin Prišć
Time travelling is a common theme of many writers and scientists. George Herbart Wells describes his vision of the future in his novel The Time Machine. The hero of the novel, Time Traveller, meets unusual creatures and starts to interact with them. Eloi and Morlocks resemble humans to a certain extent, but further inspection will show how significant the difference between them and today's people is. The hierarchy between the two races turns out to be more complicated than the Time...
The Dystopian Elements in Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games
The Dystopian Elements in Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games
Andrea Nikoloso
Suzanne Collins’s most popular work The Hunger Games, published in 2008, is the first novel in The Hunger Games trilogy. Although the entire trilogy contains the elements of dystopia, the first novel in the trilogy best explains how the dystopian universe that Suzanne Collins created works. The aim of this paper is to single out the dystopian elements in The Hunger Games and to explain how they work in the narrative space of the novel. The dystopian elements that are going to be discussed...

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