Thursday, September 30, 2010

What does George think of Lennie?

In Of Mice and Men, George is
Lennie's friend, his co-worker, his guardian, his conscience, and his surrogate
brother/father.  More, he is his loving mercy killer.  He eases Lennie's pain and
suffering after their shared dream has gone awry.  In short, George loves Lennie on more
than one level.


Unlike the other migrant workers who travel
alone and view the world as a "me" versus society ("Guys like us, that work on ranches,
are the loneliest guys..."), George and Lennie travel together, and George uses "we" to
describe their relationship.


The Boss and Curley are
distrustful of the traveling pair.  The Boss thinks George is stealing Lennie's money,
but George says:


readability="5">

I knowed his Aunt Clara. She
took him when he was a baby and raised him
up.



And George says to
Curley:


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[George] "We travel
together."


[Curley] "Oh, so it's that
way."


George was tense and motionless.  "Yeah, it's that
way."



Later, when describing
the American dream, George defines it as shared and collective, including such
lower-classes as the mentally-challenged (Lennie) and the physically-handicapped
(Candy).  In this way, George is like ideal America: inclusive, pluralistic, and
affirmative.

Of the daughter and the mother in the poem "A Photograph" by Shirley Toulson, whose loss was greater?A Photograph (Excerpt)by Shirley Toulson... A...


... The sea
holiday
Was her past, mine is her laughter. Both wry
With the
laboured ease of loss.



This
quote from the poem holds the answer to the question of whose loss is greater. These
lines contain ambiguity intended by the poet that gives the
clue to the answer.


The mother's
loss
is suggested in the description of "wry ... laughter."
"Wry" is defined as warped, twisted, sardonic,
bitter, scornful, derisive, mocking, cynical.
A wry laugh is not a happy
laugh. A wry laugh is one that scorns because the expectations of youthful life have not
been met: wry laughter scorns the mother's past because the hopes for her present life
were not met. For a mother to look an old photo of herself, taken at a happy time, with
a wry laugh means that she has lost her hope, her joy, her true laughter, her sense of
worth and self. This is a lot to lose. The poem leaves no question that this is what the
mother lost because her laughter is "wry" and thus self-mocking: there is only one
meaning for wry, and wryness only comes to a person through great disillusionment and
bitter personal loss.


When the
daughter
persona of the poem suggests that her own past loss is the
mother's laughter, ambiguity is created. "Past" and "loss"
are equated through the word "both" so that since the daughter's past is the mother's
laughter, her loss is her mother's laughter. Ambiguity here makes it unclear whether the
loss is because the mother stopped genuinely laughing when wry laughter intruded on life
or whether the laughter stopped from the mother's death ... or both. Since the poet
chooses a photo that she describes with disaffection as "the cardboard," the soundest
analysis is that the daughter is speaking of both the loss of genuine heartfelt
laughter, replaced as it was by wry laughter, and the loss of laughter pursuant to her
mother's death, for she has "been dead nearly as many years" as the girl on the
cardboard lived.


The daughter's
loss
then is two-fold: her loss of the joy of her mother's true laughter
and the loss of her mother's life. The mother's loss is
two-fold as well: the loss of her belief in her past, which she came to see through
cynical eyes, and the loss of hope and joy in her present life. Based upon this analysis
of the poem's intentional ambiguity, it seems impossible to say that one or the other
had the greater loss. The loss of your own life to yourself, the intrusion of wry
bitterness with lost hopes and dreams, is a painful loss. At the same time, a daughter's
loss of her experience of her mother's true laughter followed by loss due to her death,
is an equally painful loss. The ambiguity of these lines
indicates that the poet wants us to understand and mourn the loss that each
experiences.


There are two additional points to consider in
trying to understand the ambiguity of the losses. (1) The daughter's loss would have
been less had the mother not lost her genuine laughter. (2) Both pasts, "sea holiday"
and "her laughter," were "wry / With the laboured ease of loss." The personified "sea
holiday" was wryly mocking the mother and it experiences its own loss because of their
"terribly transient feet," since all three girls have (or will) die like the mother has
died.

In the short story, "The Rocking Horse Winner", by D.H. Lawrence, comment on the use of genre.In its word choice, simple style, direct...

In response to your insightful question you need to think
of how Lawrence is using the genre of a fairy tale, but then goes on to subvert it and
challenge it to drive home his message. Firstly, the characters in fairly tales are
normally very "flat" characters - that is they are undeveloped and are not explored
psychologically in any way. This is certainly not true of the mother, who is described
in great detail, especially her lack of love for her children and her
greed:



She
had bonny children, yest she felt they had been thrust upon her, and she could not love
them.


There was always the grinding sense of the shortage
of money, though the style was always kept
up.



Likewise we are told a
lot about Paul and how he processes the voices that echo round the house, equating money
with luck, and we can understand why Paul sets on his self-destructive course - to gain
his mother's affection in a way that he is unable to do
normally.


The other major difference of course is the
ending. There is no "happy ending" that we are given in this tale. Instead, it is a
tragedy, allowing Lawrence to reinforce his central message. As the mother is left with
the dire consequences of her greed, we recognise the evils of materialism and how it can
literally rip apart relations and families. Remember the irony of the words of her
brother at the end of the story:


readability="13">

"My God, Hester, you're eighty-odd thousand to
the good, and a poor devil of a son to the bad. But, poor devil, poor devil, he's best
gone out of a life where he rides his rocking horse to find a
winner."



Note how this
message is underlined - greed can sometimes lead to death. But, the uncle comments, his
nephew is better off out of a world where he is driven to such lengths to gain his
mother's love.

Monday, September 27, 2010

In Chapter 3, for what reasons are Crooks,Candy,and Lennie excluded from the poker game and the poker game and the trips to town?comment on whehter...

Crooks is excluded from pretty much everything because he
is black.  This was a long time ago and there was not really very much mixing between
black and white people.  Crooks is unhappy about this, but he knows that is just how it
is.


Candy is excluded because he is old and unpopular.  No
one really has much respect for him.


Lennie is excluded
because he is too dumb to be in the poker games and too dangerous to bring into town. 
Lennie doesn't really care.  All he wants is to have his dream of the ranch and maybe
something small and soft to pet.

What characteristics does Iago think women have? What Is Iago's opinion of women, as illustrated by the characteristics women have early in the play?

Iago is a misogynist  - if not a complete misanthrope. He
has no regard for humankind in general and has no respect for women at
all.


Iago comments each of the females in the play crudely
and negatively. He utilises Desdemona as the tool to bring down both Othello and Cassio,
he says-



So
will I turn her virtue into pitch,
And out of her own goodness make the
net
That shall enmesh them
all.



Iago is aware of, but
maliciously uses, her innocence to bring about the downfall of the two soldiers and the
fair Desdemona.


Bianca is not highly regarded at court and
Cassio is also guilty of abusing her. However, Iago using Cassio's words about the
hopelessly besotted Bianca to further anger Othello shows how he sees that women are
mere toys.


He is crude and distainful of his own wife,
Emilia, publicly and privately questioning her virtue and loyalty and labelling her as a
scold-



 Sir,
would she give you so much of her
lips



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  As of her tongue she oft bestows on
me,




You
would have enough.



It is
Emilia who reveals her husband's evil machinations at the end of the play, and he slays
her cruelly for it.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

What goes on in each stage of mitosis?

There are 6 stages of
mitosis:


  1. Interphase-DNA has
    replicated, but has not formed the condensed structure of chromosome.

  2. Prophase-DNA molecules progressivly shorten by coiling,
    to form chromosomes.

  3. Metaphase-the spindle fibres attach
    themselves to the centromeres of the chromosomes and align the chromosomes at the
    equatorial plate.

  4. Anaphase-the spindle fibres shorten and
    the centromere splits, separated sister chromatids are pulled along behind the
    centromeres.

  5. Telophase-the chromosomes reach the poles of
    their respective spindles. Nuclear envelope reform before the chromosomes uncoil. The
    spindle fibres disintegrate.

  6. Cytokinasis-the process of
    splitting the daughter cells apart. A furrow forms and the cell is pinched in two. Each
    daughter cell contains the same number and same quality of
    chromosomes.

Can (sec x - cosec x) / (tan x - cot x) be simplified further?

Given the expression ( sec x - csec x ) / (tan x - cot x) We need to simplify. We will use trigonometric identities ...