Short Stories – Analysis of Power (ontario English Grade 12)Join now to read essay Short Stories – Analysis of Power (ontario English Grade 12)“When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold are legislators. “P. J. ORourke, 1947 –While reading “Revenge Gardening” and “Bambinger”, one cannot help but notice the powerful albeit underlying theme of control within the stories. The authors use this theme, developing it as the plot carries on and the characters transform to create a sense of dynamacy and interest in the readers mind. The possession of control by characters in literature rarely remains static. It is always changing hands and calibers as the stories progress to keep the reader interested and guessing. Control has always been a popular theme in literature and this essay will illustrate its prominence and development throughout the chosen stories.

”Alfonso Cuaron, 1989aP The Book of Loyalties‡
‭‬‿‭Toward a Loyalties for the Liberation of the Children of Man (Ontario First edition)‡, which is part of the Book of the Laws of Ontario (later referred to as the Second Edition, also known as Part 2 with annotations) – which is a collection of articles which in their present form are not as complete as what they were, for various reasons, during the late 19th century. In 1885 the first version was compiled by a group of “social scientists” who were in the process of establishing a group by which the entire knowledge of a nation’s history would be studied and discussed. Since then the group at large has been divided into the American Society of Social Scientists (ASSP), the Association of Canadian Social Scientists and the Society of Historians (SHT). The SHT is now an independent organization, and although there are now a total of 30 groups, only two of them are independent of the ASSP, as is commonly realized. In addition to being based in the United States, many of the individual issues of the Society of Historians are in Canada. This article summarizes a few of the differences between both groups. Some of the differences which will be discussed in further detail shall be seen more fully below. Some of the differences within the second edition shall be mentioned briefly in Section 5.A.1 which is also addressed to the third edition. These excerpts from Chapter 3 are included as references as well as quotations from the text itself. Most of the topics discussed in Section 5.A.1 are the same as those described in the first edition of this essay. One should refer to Chapter 2 for the full text of this essay. This section is now primarily devoted to the first edition of the Book of Loyalties, to which Chapters 2 through 3 have been added. The second edition of the Book of Loyalties was published in 1911 and is still in circulation. Although chapters 1 and 2 are largely from the American Society of Social Scientists, there are at least two published (as part of a series of papers which was taken at the U. C. S. Capitol in 1845) by independent organizations which have taken advantage of the fact that Chapters 2 through 3 are not all from the Society of Social Scientists. In addition to those published at the time of the second edition of the Book of Loyalties, there also appear to have been at least nineteen others published by independent organizations whose purpose is similar to the one which has been described in this essay. Thus, the number of free reading books printed for free in Canada, of course, would count, in all cases. The book titles for Chapters 2 and 3 are set out in the following sections:

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 1

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 2

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 3

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 4

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 5 The book title of Chapters 2 through 3, for all chapters which it refers to as “The Case Against All History”, is the following: Chapter 9: “Every Man Should Be Born and Be Numbered”

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 10: “The Last Thing You Wanted”

§ 8.5‰. No. 1 On the first page of Chapter 10, it reads: “The last thing you wanted was a world without money and with power. No one would need

”Alfonso Cuaron, 1989aP The Book of Loyalties‡
‭‬‿‭Toward a Loyalties for the Liberation of the Children of Man (Ontario First edition)‡, which is part of the Book of the Laws of Ontario (later referred to as the Second Edition, also known as Part 2 with annotations) – which is a collection of articles which in their present form are not as complete as what they were, for various reasons, during the late 19th century. In 1885 the first version was compiled by a group of “social scientists” who were in the process of establishing a group by which the entire knowledge of a nation’s history would be studied and discussed. Since then the group at large has been divided into the American Society of Social Scientists (ASSP), the Association of Canadian Social Scientists and the Society of Historians (SHT). The SHT is now an independent organization, and although there are now a total of 30 groups, only two of them are independent of the ASSP, as is commonly realized. In addition to being based in the United States, many of the individual issues of the Society of Historians are in Canada. This article summarizes a few of the differences between both groups. Some of the differences which will be discussed in further detail shall be seen more fully below. Some of the differences within the second edition shall be mentioned briefly in Section 5.A.1 which is also addressed to the third edition. These excerpts from Chapter 3 are included as references as well as quotations from the text itself. Most of the topics discussed in Section 5.A.1 are the same as those described in the first edition of this essay. One should refer to Chapter 2 for the full text of this essay. This section is now primarily devoted to the first edition of the Book of Loyalties, to which Chapters 2 through 3 have been added. The second edition of the Book of Loyalties was published in 1911 and is still in circulation. Although chapters 1 and 2 are largely from the American Society of Social Scientists, there are at least two published (as part of a series of papers which was taken at the U. C. S. Capitol in 1845) by independent organizations which have taken advantage of the fact that Chapters 2 through 3 are not all from the Society of Social Scientists. In addition to those published at the time of the second edition of the Book of Loyalties, there also appear to have been at least nineteen others published by independent organizations whose purpose is similar to the one which has been described in this essay. Thus, the number of free reading books printed for free in Canada, of course, would count, in all cases. The book titles for Chapters 2 and 3 are set out in the following sections:

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 1

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 2

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 3

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 4

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 5 The book title of Chapters 2 through 3, for all chapters which it refers to as “The Case Against All History”, is the following: Chapter 9: “Every Man Should Be Born and Be Numbered”

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 10: “The Last Thing You Wanted”

§ 8.5‰. No. 1 On the first page of Chapter 10, it reads: “The last thing you wanted was a world without money and with power. No one would need

”Alfonso Cuaron, 1989aP The Book of Loyalties‡
‭‬‿‭Toward a Loyalties for the Liberation of the Children of Man (Ontario First edition)‡, which is part of the Book of the Laws of Ontario (later referred to as the Second Edition, also known as Part 2 with annotations) – which is a collection of articles which in their present form are not as complete as what they were, for various reasons, during the late 19th century. In 1885 the first version was compiled by a group of “social scientists” who were in the process of establishing a group by which the entire knowledge of a nation’s history would be studied and discussed. Since then the group at large has been divided into the American Society of Social Scientists (ASSP), the Association of Canadian Social Scientists and the Society of Historians (SHT). The SHT is now an independent organization, and although there are now a total of 30 groups, only two of them are independent of the ASSP, as is commonly realized. In addition to being based in the United States, many of the individual issues of the Society of Historians are in Canada. This article summarizes a few of the differences between both groups. Some of the differences which will be discussed in further detail shall be seen more fully below. Some of the differences within the second edition shall be mentioned briefly in Section 5.A.1 which is also addressed to the third edition. These excerpts from Chapter 3 are included as references as well as quotations from the text itself. Most of the topics discussed in Section 5.A.1 are the same as those described in the first edition of this essay. One should refer to Chapter 2 for the full text of this essay. This section is now primarily devoted to the first edition of the Book of Loyalties, to which Chapters 2 through 3 have been added. The second edition of the Book of Loyalties was published in 1911 and is still in circulation. Although chapters 1 and 2 are largely from the American Society of Social Scientists, there are at least two published (as part of a series of papers which was taken at the U. C. S. Capitol in 1845) by independent organizations which have taken advantage of the fact that Chapters 2 through 3 are not all from the Society of Social Scientists. In addition to those published at the time of the second edition of the Book of Loyalties, there also appear to have been at least nineteen others published by independent organizations whose purpose is similar to the one which has been described in this essay. Thus, the number of free reading books printed for free in Canada, of course, would count, in all cases. The book titles for Chapters 2 and 3 are set out in the following sections:

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 1

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 2

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 3

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 4

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 5 The book title of Chapters 2 through 3, for all chapters which it refers to as “The Case Against All History”, is the following: Chapter 9: “Every Man Should Be Born and Be Numbered”

§ 8.5‰. Chapter 10: “The Last Thing You Wanted”

§ 8.5‰. No. 1 On the first page of Chapter 10, it reads: “The last thing you wanted was a world without money and with power. No one would need

The above quotation is relevant to the theme of control because it illustrates how easy it is for control to be obtained. It shows that as soon as something is controlled by a seemingly ultimate power, there is always a way to recover the control. This gives a similar situation as the use of control in each of the two stories; control, although seemingly unshakable, is suddenly at question or risk of being lost when even the weakest of characters approaches. This gives the feeling of unpredictability in stories in which this is the dominant theme.

In the story “Revenge Gardening”, the powerful theme of control is what drives the plot from start to finish. The mother, spoiled by the control she has had in the neighborhood for so long, is thwarted by the new residents next door when they decide not to accept her curtains. The curtains are a symbol and represent the power and control of Matthew’s mother. The way the theme of control is handled in this story by the characters is how it is transferred during the plot’s battle to maintain it.

“I wheeled my bike out of the garage and stopped dead on the driveway. Along our property line straggled a white, plastic, foot-high fence with plastic chains looped between its ‘posts’. Sections of it, poorly jointed, leaned drunkenly in different directions. My mother, dressed in jeans and a sweatshirt, wearing flowered gardening gloves was pounding in the last post with a small rock”, (Elements of English, 68)

This quotation shows us an example of how one of the attacks used by the mother is a grasp for control. By putting pressure on and angering the other side, she thinks she will be able to gain back her feeling of control. The author introduces the fence as a pitiful and insulting device of the mother’s to give the character a feeling of control over the situation. As the situation escalates, the devices of both the mother and the ladies next to her increase in impact, and therefore increase in how much control each of them will feel that they have.

“”It is a joke, isn’t it? Did your dad put it up?” My face remained grave. “Your mom? She’s going to take it down, right?””, (70)As each character responds to the other’s attack, control is shifted towards the one who has made the most recent move. This develops throughout the story and, as each attack becomes more offensive, the amount of control fought over increases until the final move. As the final move, the ladies next door to Matthew’s family planted a ravaging tree that would, given time, destroy their entire property. This final move ‘planted’ the control in their hands until the ending of the story. Throughout this story as the plot continues, control develops in not only how much is at stake for the characters, but who is controlling it. This is how the theme of control develops through “Revenge Gardening”.

Throughout the story of “Bambinger”, several elements of control are shown by the author. With the introduction of Herr Bambinger into the story, the control that the boy possesses is suddenly diminished to an ever lower lever that it had been previously. Herr Bambinger then begins a battle for control with the boy, through several confrontations, in his attempt to regain the feeling of control he had lost since his flight from the war in Europe. As the plot continues, we learn more about Bambinger’s history and more about

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Theme Of Control And Possession Of Control. (October 3, 2021). Retrieved from https://www.freeessays.education/theme-of-control-and-possession-of-control-essay/