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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 14 page report discusses the Asian economic crisis that “officially” began in 1997 and that has had a major impact on Asian nations ever since. There was clearly an interwoven set of strengths and weaknesses in both the economic and political systems of the nations involved. The collapse of the different currencies in Asia meant that hugs existing foreign loans could not be efficiently or easily financed by local banks which then resulted in foreign investors withdrawing their funds from Asia in enormous numbers which then exacerbated the problems. A particular focus is presented on Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, and Hong Kong. Bibliography lists 11 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWtiger.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
properly! Introduction Angela Carters 1979 short story, "The Tigers Bride," is the type of work that foils the efforts of literary analysts and critics to neatly assign it to
one category or another. Instead, it serves as a remarkable chronicle of a beauty-and-the-beast-fairy-tale-morality-play or an enticing example of the potentially mystical framework that exists within any framework in
which magical realism plays as much of a role as any character. Carter turns the classic beauty-and-the-beast story inside out in "The Tigers Bride" and, in the process, the
reader sees a critical review of the social institution of marriage, as well as a deconstruction of traditional gender roles. In fact, there is a particular feminist mode within
Carters larger textual representation of "The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories" that includes issues that relate to either folktales or pornography, depending on the individual readers framework for interpretation (Benson
MarvelsHome/v12n1.html). Transformation of a Child It is valuable to see Carters story from a larger and more universal perspective than simply that of a fairy tale. Just as
the story of the "Tigers Bride" is directly related to the well-known "Beauty and the Beast," Carter bends the barrier between the fantastic and the plausible while making a point
with her telling of a classic yet not cliched story. The reader comes to understand that the sexuality Carter presents is neither the ethereal and coy suggestion of a
Victorian fairy tale or the happily-ever-after of the princess and her beloved. Instead, the heroine of "TheTiger Bride" discovers the satisfaction and liberating power of the repressed animal aspect
of her sexuality. As a result, the reader gains a greater understanding of both the protagonists sexual desire, as well as darker realm of erotic exploration and experience.
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