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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. Literary history is replete with myriad life lessons amidst the cultured boundaries of its collective texts. To glean these pearls of wisdom is to not only take away a given story's obvious meaning but also scratch beyond the surface to expose an even greater interpretation. "The Epic of Gilgamesh" and "Oresteia" represent two of many classic pieces of literature that bestow a number of life's lessons upon their readership, not the least of which addresses divine judgment and human guilt. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCGlgmsh.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
take away a given storys obvious meaning but also scratch beyond the surface to expose an even greater interpretation. The Epic of Gilgamesh and Oresteia represent two of many
classic pieces of literature that bestow a number of lifes lessons upon their readership, not the least of which addresses divine judgment and human guilt.
As Aeschylus tragic hero, Orestes is forced to come face to face with his own shortcomings, which ultimately cast upon him the tragic flaw that eventually leads to
his downfall. Facing opposition from within his own being is part of the inner struggle that Orestes must addresses throughout the dialogue with his mother, Clytemnestra. The fate
that governs her life also controls the actions associated with her troubled existence; being both underhanded and manipulative, Clytemnestra never dreams she would need to call upon the very depths
of her heart in order to plead for her own life. However, as time progresses, Orestes inevitably learns that he, too, possesses a significant flaw and ultimately succumbs to
the burdens of emotion that fate has already provided for him. Electras father, Agamemnon, is her source of motivation for all life.
Her dedication to him surpasses no other, whether it plays a part in family rituals or just the basic interaction between a father and daughter. After his death, Electra
experiences severe emotional disturbances caused by her sudden displacement and the imprisonment she is forced to endure at the hands of her mother, Clytemnestra. It is the awful separation
from everything Electra has come to know and love, coupled with the devastating loss of her father, that establishes the significant psychological and emotional loss she withstands. It ultimately
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