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"kashpaw" - 3 õppematerjali

Assignment Analysis of literature-prose
4
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Assignment Analysis of literature: prose

`The World's Greatest Fishermen' 3. Introduce the setting (time and place) of the chapter. Spring, Williston, North Dakota. 4. Analyse the shifting points of view and modes of narration in the subchapters. Through whose eyes is the action presented to the reader? First it was a 3-rd person narrator (author) and the second subchapter is presented through Albertine Johnson eyes (1 st person narration). 5. What details suggest that June Kashpaw is poor, hungry, and unwell? What can you say about the life that she has been leading? Why does she hope that the man in the bar `could be different' (3)? She was killing time before bus arrival - she had no car, she accepted invitation of a man without a hesitation thinking that she may tip down one or two with him; her boots were thin, when she was eating the egg she realized how hungry she was,

Keeled → Inglise keel
2 allalaadimist
Love medicine
2
docx

Love medicine

Louise Erdrich Introduction My name is Karl-Erik Lett. The title of my book is Love medicineand the autor of this book is Louise Erdich. This book was Publisher in 1984. I really enjoyed reading this book, seeing events from different point of views was facinating and made reading interesting. I chose this book because of its interesting title. Native American government policy is a recurrent topic, especially because the Kashpaw family is (according to Nector) “respected as the last hereditary leaders of this tribe. Loss of a cultural identity and Native American spirituality characterizes and separates the two generations in Love Medicine: “They gave you worthless land to start with and then they chopped it out from under your feet. They took your kids away and stuffed the English language in their mouth.” The generations that Erdrich covers experience that loss of culture. The youngest

Keeled → Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist
Love Medicine vocabulary
3
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Love Medicine vocabulary

They had jars on their heads and they never stumbled. They had a calm tread. bleary (332) ­ Unable to see clearly; Blurred or dimmed by or as if by tears: bleary eyes.; Vaguely outlined; indistinct.; Exhausted; worn-out. King was advising Lipsha to turn himself in. King tells him that he was in the Marines, Nam. Lynette, with a bleary confiding look, says to Lipsha that King never got off the West Coast. to be thick as thieves (334) - allies, very friendly (Cliché) Lipsha describes Grandma Kashpaw and Lulu now as thick as thieves. bleak (338) ­ offering little hope, no hope; to describe a situation in a particular way; hopeless Lipsha stole Grandma Kashpaw's money from her apartment. He justifies the crime by being unhappy. He feels confused and this confusion is a bleak sadness sweeping through his brain. galled (340) ­ Angry, upset; Bitterness of feeling; rancor; Something bitter to endure Lipsha wants to run away

Kirjandus → Ingliskeelne kirjandus
5 allalaadimist


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