Black Cat Essay

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    Both “The Black Cat” and “The Tell-Tale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe has a dark side that arises from each narrator. Both short stories start with the reassurance of the narrator's sanity. This is especially ironic because both turn out to be completely mad. In the short stories both narrators have some sort of trigger that sets them off and exposes there mad man tendencies. In “The Tell-Tale Heart” Poe's narrator has an obsession with the old man's vulture of an eye. He speaks of it like a person

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    Poe’s The Black Cat is essentially an extended metaphor for insanity, specifically resulting from obsession, and the psychopathic complexity of human nature. Through the narrator’s reactions to and Poe’s incorporation of various symbols, the struggle the narrator faces with his conscience and moral surface. The symbols that Poe employs, especially those relating to the black cats, work together to form the convention of horror and suspense, as well as to convey the alteration of morality through

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    The events that unfolded in Edgar Allen Poe’s, “The black Cat,” are all due to one person, the narrator. It is because of his Mental state, being an alcoholic, and being abusive to his wife and pets that the fault lies heavily on the narrator. What this paper will entail is all three of the reasons why it is the narrator's fault for what happens in the story and it will come to a conclusion based off the findings in the story. One of the reasons that the narrator is responsible for his

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    The Black Cat I don’t expect you to believe the story I am about to write. But in order to die peacefully, I must tell my story. My wife and I loved pets. One of my wife’s favorite pets was Pluto, the cat. Pluto was a very clever black cat. One day I came home very drunk. I was in a very bad temper. For some reasons, Pluto made me angry. In a rage I seized the cat, took a small knife out of my pocket and cut its throat and took one of its eyes out ! Then I hanged the poor creature

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    Similarly, in “The Black Cat,” the nameless protagonist defends the reliability of his narrative. He, too, tells his story from a prison cell after committing murder. His victim, however, was his wife. The narrator tells us that he and his wife were very happy, and together they loved and owned a variety of pets. The narrator cannot fully explain his transition to cruelty, however. On the one hand, he blames his alcoholism as a rational explanation for his mood swings. On the other hand, he faults

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    Black Cat Research Paper

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    The Black Cat, written by Edgar Allen Poe, is a short story about a man, also the narrator, who starts out by living a “happy” life with his wife and favorite black cat, Plato. Although, he begins to be consumed by his drinking and becomes irritable. The black cat used to be by his side but now avoids him. This irritability leads him into becoming overly aggressive, which results in him hurting and murdering the cat. Then, a second cat appears who looks the same as Pluto but with a white spot on

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    "The Black Cat", in which the narrator related a series of "most wild" yet "most homely" events he went through, is one of Edgar Allan Poe's masterpieces. The narrator first told readers that he had loved animals so much that he was often laughed at by his companions. He and his wife had many pets, among which a giant black cat called Pluto was their favourite. But it has all changed since he became an alcoholic. He suddenly lost his temper and his love for animals. He began to abuse them, including

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    Black Cat Research Paper

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    I’ve always found my willpower in my deceased black cat. I was twelve when I received my first pet. It was a dog, I bet you thought it was the cat, and I named him Toby. Long story short, we had to give Toby back to the breeder after a day with him. Naturally, my eleven year old self was devastated that I couldn’t keep my pet. I got home from school one day and discovered that a stray kitten had found it’s way into my backyard. My dad, whom has never loved animals, was all about giving her away to

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    In Heidi Hanrahan’s analysis of “The Black Cat,” By Edgar Allen Poe, she starts off by claiming that this story is “Poe’s commentary on nineteenth-century American domesticity”(Hanrahan, 40). Hanrahan then points out that Pluto should be viewed not as a symbol for something deeper, but as what he is in reality; the narrators pet. She uses excerpts and quotes from texts such as Uncle Tom’s Cabin and The Lamplighter to support her claims that having and “Caring for animals, writers argued, helped people

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    The Black Cat is about fear/guilt being driven into Poe’s mind enough to put him to pure madness, enough to murder as well. Throughout the story Poe talks to himself in his mind about numerous things about his madness growing inside of him. This guilt at certain times actually didn’t show up at the moments you would think. In his time of pure murderous rage, he seemed to have a HUGE lack of guilt. He was was even scared of his own cat, which later we’ll learn that it would lead to his downfall.

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