Natural Study Guides, Literature Essays

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  • The Natural

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    The Natural is the story of Roy Hobbs, a young baseball player whose promising career is derailed by a sudden shooting. The shooter, a mysterious woman, sends Hobbs careering out of control as he struggles to define himself outside the context of baseball and simultaneously strives to reenter the field of competitive play. In the end Hobbs is able to return to the game, but his career is short-lived and he soon becomes corrupt and finds himself ejected and stricken from all records.

  • Unnatural Exposure

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  • Supernatural Love

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  • Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place

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  • The Supernatural in Macbeth

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    Exhibits of supernatural activities were used throughout Macbeth and indication of this was brought out in the appearance of the three Witches When Shakespeare was around they did not use special effects in plays As a result the dramatic performances and the thrilling scene were the elemental qualities to producing a great play Shakespeare used the aspect of the unfamiliar to inducing fear in the minds of his audience Since the witches could see into the future it made the play more suspenseful

  • The Supernatural in Macbeth

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    The supernatural has played a major role in many medieval stories There has been a sort of dread fascination with the unknowns of witchcraft for hundreds of years The belief in the superstitious has compelled man to horrifying deeds The Spanish Inquisition or the numerous witch hunts that plagued Europe during the middle ages are some examples of the extremes man will go to when faced with horrifying unknowns of the superstitious Macbeth from Shakespeares tragic play Macbeth is by no means an e

  • The Supernatural's Dominance Over the Natural in King Lear

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    King Lear In King Lear the unnatural elements seem to always dominate the natural elements throughout the play There exists a reversal of order in the play where the evil prosper in the downfall of the good and where mans life is meaningless and arbitrary King Lear the tragic hero dies in the end despite the torment and agony he had to endure to regenerate and repent But it is the worthless destruction of countless other lives because of Lears own personal tragedy that supports the view of the

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