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the tradition of woman's “place”; although Henry Allen is well-meaning and basically decent, his concentration on his own role as provider, organizer, and decision-maker has blinded him to the fact that Elisa needs something more in her lif...
her wedding ceremony? her sense of isolation from the world and her concealed yearns to articulate herself as a woman? to discover her sexuality and reside a more fervent life. The setting of the story strengthens Elisa's sentiments of iso...
experience; Steinbeck has chosen to connect her psychic state to the season, the climate, and the terrain she inhabits. The mood of the story is set by his description of a fogbound valley in winter, a description that is also applicable t...
struggling with strong inner feelings of loneliness and isolation. Elisa Allen is initially portrayed as a woman who overcompensates and whose tasks are far exceeded by her abilities. She appears content with her life and adores tending to...
Systems Modelling RICH INTERNET APPLICATIONS (RIA) Introduction It is easy to see that web pages that we use today resemble little or very little to those that were used in the early Internet. Currently, many web sites are able to be surpr...
Rich Internet Application for an organisation which could be fictitious in nature. The application could be developed using one of the following ways: Using Flash 8 & Action Script 2.0 programming to connect with some basic server side scri...
John Steinbeck captures a sense of the 1930’s in the United States in his depiction of the relationship between Elisa Allen and her husband, Henry. (Bloom 125-126) In “The Chrysanthemums,” the image of weather figures importantly in the sto...