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Hello! Iâm Anthony, I am a 19 yr old self taught teacher who has taught at UCLA and New York for over 6 years! I am going to try to share my love of college student life! Thanks to everyone whoâs asked me about my writing and the way my teaching process is developing. I love my work and am so excited to see what I do next!
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So I decided to try using Twitter for the first time about a month ago. Well it was a little awkward. It was nice to get back on my feet, but I still donât know why that got taken away from me. I started using Twitter to share books with other people, and sometimes if I get some attention I share it with friends. I was getting in so bad that I started to wonder what was wrong with me at the time. I ended up posting everything on twitter myself, but I still donât
Hello! Iâm Anthony, I am a 19 yr old self taught teacher who has taught at UCLA and New York for over 6 years! I am going to try to share my love of college student life! Thanks to everyone whoâs asked me about my writing and the way my teaching process is developing. I love my work and am so excited to see what I do next!
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*Email/Twitter
In addition to having a lot to say, Anthony is going to be asking for your time and help in improving your Twitter application.
Dear Anthony,HiThank you for visiting me @AnthonyDoyle. Iâve been studying for a year so I canât even write to your company. I look forward to your feedback.@AnthonyDoyle:
So I decided to try using Twitter for the first time about a month ago. Well it was a little awkward. It was nice to get back on my feet, but I still donât know why that got taken away from me. I started using Twitter to share books with other people, and sometimes if I get some attention I share it with friends. I was getting in so bad that I started to wonder what was wrong with me at the time. I ended up posting everything on twitter myself, but I still donât
Index/LiteratureEmma as an Unusual Heroine of Jane AustenNAME: NASREEN ILYAS CLASS: M.A FINAL SUBJECT: NOVEL TOPIC: EMMA SUBMITTED TO: MADAM NUDRAT DATE: 14TH DEC 2016# Emma as an unusual heroin of heroin of Jane AustenJane Austen created the most imperfect heroin in the realm of a perfect novel. A heroin âwhom no one but myself will much likeâ, Jane called her eponymous heroin when she was writing Emma. It may not be as popular as Pride and Prejudice but it has become the novel that critics consider to be a masterpiece. Emma the character of the novel due to her complexity is not entirely imperfect but also perfect. No other Jane Austen heroin is as complex as Emma. She is the unique combination of good and bad to an extent that no other Jane Austen character is. It is evident that Austen was experimenting with creating a unique character that was an exceptional combination of good and bad, which somehow managed to keep that balance and brought forth something memorable. Emma is also an exceptional heroine from various other points of view. She absolutely stands out of the circle of Austen heroines. She is different from all of them for example, because of her physical attractiveness, outstanding intelligence, artistic capabilities, financial situation, social status and most of all, her power position, which is the source of most of the evil she causes. It is important to emphasize that she is a well-meaning person, and every terrible thing that she does or say, when she causes harm to other people, it is not the result of her ill-intention but of improper management of her power and capabilities.There are certain differences that distinguish Emma from Austenâs other heroines.âEmma woodhouse handsome, clever and rich, with a comfortable home and happy disposition seemed to unite some of the best blessings of existence; and had lived nearly twenty one years in the world with very little to distress or vex herâAusten usually does not create a physically attractive, outstanding or beautiful heroin. Generally the heroines themselves are more or less pretty or good-looking, but mostly not even that for example Mr. Darcy says about Elizabeth Bennet that âshe is tolerable; but not handsome enough to temp meâ and Catharine in Northanger Abbey who is a tomboy and an absolutely hopeless case concerning feminine matters. Emma is precisely called pretty and beautiful.
Another attribute of character is intelligence or cleverness. The Austenian heroines are usually not dimwit and they are generally quite or relatively intelligent but they are never concretely called clever or strikingly intelligent, but Emma is.âEmma is spoiled by being the cleverest of her family. At ten years old, she had the misfortune of being able to answer any question which puzzled her sister at seventeen. She always quick and assured Isabella slow and diffident.âArtistic skills and excellence in arts are always shortcomings of Austenian heroines. The Bennet sisters were not properly educated the Marianne in Sense and Sensibility is a good musician but cannot draw or paint and Catharine of Northanger Abbey is a very simple girl whoânever could learn or understand anything before she was taughtâ. Emma however is quite good at painting as well as drawing; this is acknowledged from the painting of Harrietâs picture or the singing at the Colesâ party. Still the most outstanding differences across the heroin arise from the financial situation, social status and power. The financial situation is usually the most strenuous trouble of Austenian heroines. These young women are always financially challenged and are always in need of loveable, proper yet wealthy husband although they never strive to catch someone only for money. Austen seems to be always strict about this that never to marry solely for money because that brings misery, love has to come first always in marriage but income also has to be taken under consideration because poverty destroys familiesâ bliss. Emma was Austenâs first heroine who was free from financial concern. Her other heroines view marriage as a financial necessity; Emma expresses no interest or desire in marriage in the majority part of the novel. She is different in this aspect also because she is aware of the fact that the Woodhouse family is one of the richest families, if not the richest one in their region, thus she does not have to worry about her livelihood. She says to Harriet âAnd I am not only, not going to be married, at present, but have very little intention of ever marrying at allâ. After disclosing the possibility of love that she does not presume as a probability in her case, she adds:
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