Fantasies

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    The Fantasy Story

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    Today I’d like to tell you about fantasy literature. It is very hard to tell all about it but I’ll try to do it as good as possible and not being boring. First fantasy motifs were shown in romanticism. We all know the mystical and unreal characters: ghosts, phantoms etc. Authors for building the special mood and charm of that epoch used that figures. But fantasy is something more than romantic ways of showing nature or inner experiences of the main character in the novel. It’s

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    practically fill to the brim with imagination. Whether we choose to want to believe it or not, we are indefinitely leaning towards a lost generation if we do not put back the importance and nourishment of the minds of our youth through the help of Fantasy

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    Fantasy worlds, infamous for its make-believe and imaginative aspect, ironically is engaging as it is believable. The application of accurate description in great detail is a key factor in the composition of a realistic fantasy world. Additionally, what happens to the characters in these imaginary worlds must be acceptable in order to generate a believable world. Furthermore, the ability of keeping the world consistent throughout the whole novel establishes an air of reality. The existence of such

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    world of fantasy has called to mankind and enraptured their imaginations. “As The World Falls Down”, sung by David Bowie and featured in the movie “Labyrinth”, tells of such an experience where a girl, Sarah, becomes caught up in the fantasy world. Because she is so focused on her fantasy world, she forgets about the real world and her objective of rescuing her brother. David Bowie’s lyrics and the movie portray the theme that there can be pain and danger in getting caught up in fantasy for too long

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    Fantasy: Fantasy is a form of literary genre that cannot happen in the real world. This genre usually involves magical places and imaginary creatures from another world or time not known to man today. Summerland by Michael Chabon is a fantasy because the book follows a baseball game that could save the world. Draw the Dark by Llsa J. Bick tells the story of a young boy that can see into other people’s minds. Bone Chiller by Graham McNamee is the story of a boy bitten by a demon. There are

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    There & Back Again: Analysing The Journey in Children’s Fantasy Fiction in regards to the Escapism Debate So many children’s fantasy fiction stories began as larks, extempore creations for their delight, and were written down and published by chance – Lewis Carroll invented Alice In Wonderland (1865) simply to amuse Alice Liddell while boating one ‘golden afternoon’, while Neil Gaiman originally started writing Coraline (2002) for his daughter Holly because she liked scary stories. So much so, that

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    creatures, and wizardry. Or you might have read One Thousand and One Nights, or The Jungle Book or A Space Odyssey. You may find them adventurous, imaginative, and fascinating but it is due to the element of fantasy which is common in them. Fantasy is defined in the Encyclopedia Britannica as “Fantasy, also spelled phantasy, [is] imaginative fiction dependent for the effect of strangeness of setting (such as other worlds or times) and or characters (such as supernatural or unnatural beings)”. Psychologically

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    in the fantasy genre. Magic is often used as a significant plot device and can exist in a fantasy work for several purposes; magic is used as a mode of enticement to peak the reader's interest and signifier of the genre, it is used to advance the plot, and, magic is also used as a device in which the author can explore real-world concepts and contemporary concerns in a way that is both immediate, yet removed from reality. The incorporation of traditional mythology is also frequent in fantasy works

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    Rape Fantasies Analysis

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    In Margaret Atwood’s Rape Fantasies, the narrator Estelle describes her “rape fantasies” in which is never assaulted. Initiated by a conversation with her coworkers about their controversial daydreams, Estelle recounts her own reoccurring visions, though hers differ from those discussed between the women. Throughout the piece, Atwood utilizes stream of conscious writing to show her narrator’s jumbled thoughts as she describes her “fantasies.” Atwood’s short story depicts a narrator inexperienced

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    Brianna Blackwell Mrs. Owens English 1102 9 February 2018 Fantasy Cannot Overcome Reality Within “A Streetcar Named Desire” “A Streetcar Named Desire” by Tennessee Williams, is based around a woman named Blanche who faces a series of losses and leaves her background to seek refuge with her sister, Stella, in New Orleans. Blanche uses the world of fantasy to escape the harsh reality of her past as it seems to come back to haunt her in her new life in New Orleans. Stella’s husband, Stanley, finds

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