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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper that presents a critical analysis and discussion of the major theme and primary idea presented in Ray Bradbury's 1943 short story The Crowd. This discussion includes a brief history of Bradbury's writing career and examines how the writer's life experiences and observations are reflected in The Crowd as well as in the majority of his works. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_LCCrowd.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
well as in the majority of his works. Bibliography lists 6 sources. LCCrowd.doc The Face of Ray Bradburys Crowd Written by Linda
Canada 06/2000 Please "The crowd came running. Faintly, where he lay, he heard them running. He could tell their
ages and their sizes by the sound of their numerous feet over the summer grass and on the lined pavement, and over the asphalt street; and picking through the cluttered
bricks to where his car hung half into the night sky, still spinning its wheels with a senseless centrifuge" (Bradbury, 1980; p. 47). And so Spallner, directly following his
first vehicular collision, is introduced to the crowd of strangers that seem to magically appear on the scene in the first few seconds directly following an accident. And so
readers of the tales of Ray Bradbury, celebrated writer and master creator of both Spallner and the short story entitled The Crowd in which he exists, are given their first
introduction to the vague, shadowy face of Bradburys crowd and the spinning symbolism that marks their coming. In terms of the slithering symbolism and macabre metaphors that mark the
works of Ray Bradbury, the face of the crowd is death, the death of a more spacious, easier-paced world that has been sacrificed to the ceaselessly spinning wheels of progress.
Much of Bradburys work stems from experiences that impressed him as a child growing up in that elusive and easier-paced world, the world of early twentieth century Waukegan, Illinois.
It was there, in the simpler and less mechanically complicated setting of small town America in the 1920s and 1930s, that the boy who Bradbury once was, and still claims
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