Book critism
Answer two of the followin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing three questions
. I. Both Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Franz Kafka's Metamorphosis are about lookin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing beneath the surface in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in one way or another. Explain" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in, as thoroughly as possible, how each of these works
is about lookin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing beneath the surface and what is found there in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in each case.
2. Both Thomas Mann's Tonio Krueger and Albert Camus's The Stranger are about in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">individuals who are, in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in one way or another, outsiders in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in regard to the social circumstances in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in which they fin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ind
themselves. Explain" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in, as thoroughly as possible. how each of these works is about an in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">individual who fin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">inds himself an outsider. Then explain" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in, as thoroughly as possible, how, eventually, each
character learns more regardin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing himself, and in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">include in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in your answer what each character learns as well as how each character's status as an outsider plays a role in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in how the character comes to learn
what he learns about himself.
1. Both Henry James's The Bean in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in the Jungle and Samuel Beckett's Wailin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing for Coda( are about waitin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing. Explain" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in, as thoroughly as possible, how each of these works is about waitin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing. Then, explain" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in,
as thoroughly as possible, what we might learn from the waitin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in each ease about bein" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing human.