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“Delia was an overbearing cake with condescending

frosting, and frankly, I was on a diet.”

― Maggie Stiefvater, Lament: The Faerie

Queen's Deception

Look carefully at the quotation that appears above. Virtually every literary character in Moore, Dante, Homer, Virgil, Sophocles, Marlowe, and Shakespeare who we will read about together, cannot stay on a diet or steadfastly refuses to embark upon one in the first place. Select a temptation (in one of these attached texts) that threatens to irrevocably mess things up for our hero.

What is the temptation? Why does the hero or storyteller give in (they always do)? Are the events depicted timeless or do we still see evidence of these occurrences today?

  1. one of the attached texts and focus upon it and authors who write critically about it (and the author). There are a few ways to approach this study. Imagine yourself as a psychologist or a psychiatrist or a counselor. How would you ‘treat” the hero? Can he/she see that he/she is making mistakes? Does he or she have a mentor? Would others deal with these circumstances differently?

REQUIREMENTS

Use attached text files and links for sources

(8) Eight Full Pages

Times New Roman Font

MLA Style

Double Space

Size Twelve

Use at Minimum (3) Three Hard Critical Sources

Quote From Your Sources and Use In-Text Citations

Use Electronic Sources

Work Cited Page

Use at Minimum (1) One Block Quotation

Text 1: https://genius.com/Christopher-marlowe-the-tragical-history-of-doctor-faustus-full-text-annotated

Text 2: Uploaded

Text 3: http://shakespeare.mit.edu/asyoulikeit/full.html

Text 4: Uploaded - Odyssey

  •  

 

TheOdyssey.pdf

 

  •  

 

Text2-SAINTTHOMASMOORESUTOPIA.docx

 

“Delia was an overbearing cake with condescending

frosting, and frankly, I was on a diet.”

― Maggie Stiefvater, Lament: The Faerie

Queen's Deception

Look carefully at the quotation that appears above. Virtually every literary character in Moore, Dante, Homer, Virgil, Sophocles, Marlowe, and Shakespeare who we will read about together, cannot stay on a diet or steadfastly refuses to embark upon one in the first place. Select a temptation (in one of these attached texts) that threatens to irrevocably mess things up for our hero.

What is the temptation? Why does the hero or storyteller give in (they always do)? Are the events depicted timeless or do we still see evidence of these occurrences today?

  1. one of the attached texts and focus upon it and authors who write critically about it (and the author). There are a few ways to approach this study. Imagine yourself as a psychologist or a psychiatrist or a counselor. How would you ‘treat” the hero? Can he/she see that he/she is making mistakes? Does he or she have a mentor? Would others deal with these circumstances differently?

REQUIREMENTS

Use attached text files and links for sources

(8) Eight Full Pages

Times New Roman Font

MLA Style

Double Space

Size Twelve

Use at Minimum (3) Three Hard Critical Sources

Quote From Your Sources and Use In-Text Citations

Use Electronic Sources

Work Cited Page

Use at Minimum (1) One Block Quotation

Text 1: https://genius.com/Christopher-marlowe-the-tragical-history-of-doctor-faustus-full-text-annotated

Text 2: Uploaded

Text 3: http://shakespeare.mit.edu/asyoulikeit/full.html

Text 4: Uploaded - Odyssey

  •  

 

TheOdyssey.pdf

 

  •  

 

Text2-SAINTTHOMASMOORESUTOPIA.docx

 

“Delia was an overbearing cake with condescending

frosting, and frankly, I was on a diet.”

― Maggie Stiefvater, Lament: The Faerie

Queen's Deception

Look carefully at the quotation that appears above. Virtually every literary character in Moore, Dante, Homer, Virgil, Sophocles, Marlowe, and Shakespeare who we will read about together, cannot stay on a diet or steadfastly refuses to embark upon one in the first place. Select a temptation (in one of these attached texts) that threatens to irrevocably mess things up for our hero.

What is the temptation? Why does the hero or storyteller give in (they always do)? Are the events depicted timeless or do we still see evidence of these occurrences today?

  1. one of the attached texts and focus upon it and authors who write critically about it (and the author). There are a few ways to approach this study. Imagine yourself as a psychologist or a psychiatrist or a counselor. How would you ‘treat” the hero? Can he/she see that he/she is making mistakes? Does he or she have a mentor? Would others deal with these circumstances differently?

REQUIREMENTS

Use attached text files and links for sources

(8) Eight Full Pages

Times New Roman Font

MLA Style

Double Space

Size Twelve

Use at Minimum (3) Three Hard Critical Sources

Quote From Your Sources and Use In-Text Citations

Use Electronic Sources

Work Cited Page

Use at Minimum (1) One Block Quotation

Text 1: https://genius.com/Christopher-marlowe-the-tragical-history-of-doctor-faustus-full-text-annotated

Text 2: Uploaded

Text 3: http://shakespeare.mit.edu/asyoulikeit/full.html

Text 4: Uploaded - Odyssey

  •  

 

TheOdyssey.pdf

 

  •  

 

Text2-SAINTTHOMASMOORESUTOPIA.docx

 

“Delia was an overbearing cake with condescending

frosting, and frankly, I was on a diet.”

― Maggie Stiefvater, Lament: The Faerie

Queen's Deception

Look carefully at the quotation that appears above. Virtually every literary character in Moore, Dante, Homer, Virgil, Sophocles, Marlowe, and Shakespeare who we will read about together, cannot stay on a diet or steadfastly refuses to embark upon one in the first place. Select a temptation (in one of these attached texts) that threatens to irrevocably mess things up for our hero.

What is the temptation? Why does the hero or storyteller give in (they always do)? Are the events depicted timeless or do we still see evidence of these occurrences today?

  1. one of the attached texts and focus upon it and authors who write critically about it (and the author). There are a few ways to approach this study. Imagine yourself as a psychologist or a psychiatrist or a counselor. How would you ‘treat” the hero? Can he/she see that he/she is making mistakes? Does he or she have a mentor? Would others deal with these circumstances differently?

REQUIREMENTS

Use attached text files and links for sources

(8) Eight Full Pages

Times New Roman Font

MLA Style

Double Space

Size Twelve

Use at Minimum (3) Three Hard Critical Sources

Quote From Your Sources and Use In-Text Citations

Use Electronic Sources

Work Cited Page

Use at Minimum (1) One Block Quotation

Text 1: https://genius.com/Christopher-marlowe-the-tragical-history-of-doctor-faustus-full-text-annotated

Text 2: Uploaded

Text 3: http://shakespeare.mit.edu/asyoulikeit/full.html

Text 4: Uploaded - Odyssey

  •  

 

TheOdyssey.pdf

 

  •  

 

Text2-SAINTTHOMASMOORESUTOPIA.docx

 

“Delia was an overbearing cake with condescending

frosting, and frankly, I was on a diet.”

― Maggie Stiefvater, Lament: The Faerie

Queen's Deception

Look carefully at the quotation that appears above. Virtually every literary character in Moore, Dante, Homer, Virgil, Sophocles, Marlowe, and Shakespeare who we will read about together, cannot stay on a diet or steadfastly refuses to embark upon one in the first place. Select a temptation (in one of these attached texts) that threatens to irrevocably mess things up for our hero.

What is the temptation? Why does the hero or storyteller give in (they always do)? Are the events depicted timeless or do we still see evidence of these occurrences today?

  1. one of the attached texts and focus upon it and authors who write critically about it (and the author). There are a few ways to approach this study. Imagine yourself as a psychologist or a psychiatrist or a counselor. How would you ‘treat” the hero? Can he/she see that he/she is making mistakes? Does he or she have a mentor? Would others deal with these circumstances differently?

REQUIREMENTS

Use attached text files and links for sources

(8) Eight Full Pages

Times New Roman Font

MLA Style

Double Space

Size Twelve

Use at Minimum (3) Three Hard Critical Sources

Quote From Your Sources and Use In-Text Citations

Use Electronic Sources

Work Cited Page

Use at Minimum (1) One Block Quotation

Text 1: https://genius.com/Christopher-marlowe-the-tragical-history-of-doctor-faustus-full-text-annotated

Text 2: Uploaded

Text 3: http://shakespeare.mit.edu/asyoulikeit/full.html

Text 4: Uploaded - Odyssey

  •  

 

TheOdyssey.pdf

 

  •  

 

Text2-SAINTTHOMASMOORESUTOPIA.docx

 

 

Michael King

Michael King