Community » CP White Pages » Mark Yaeger
Associated Content now provides more ways to promote and distribute content!
Create a custom feed of Mark Yaeger's content here. Create even more feeds here.
SUBSCRIBE
PROMOTE
FAVORITE
COMMENT
RSS
Mark Yaeger

Mark Yaeger

living in Drexel Hill, PA
   
CLOUT INDEX
TOTAL VIEWS: 25,338|PUBLISHED CONTENT: 21|FAVORITED BY: 0|CONTENT PRODUCER SINCE: 10/03/2006

I'm 29 years old from Havertown, PA. I write for fun and occasionally out of boredom. My most favorite written work is john DosPassos' USA trilogy.

Education/Experience: BA in English from Temple University

Interests: Writing, reading, and horticulture

Motto: I love it when a plan comes together

URL
RSS
Mark Yaeger's Favorite Content Producers
Send Mark Yaeger a Message
More about Mark Yaeger
 
Showing Results 1 - 21 of 21
A few non-touristy places to get great beer and food in Philly
Sabbath is currently touring in the U.S., with former singer Ronnie James Dio
South Philly has several Vietnamese restaurants which specialize in this dish
An old-school, classy atmosphere combines with inventive and delicious dishes to provide a magnificent dining experience.
Cannabis is illegal today because it threatened the Hearst and DuPont empires
Through skillful use of imagery, this unknown author has related a large quantity of vivid images and information in the space of a mere nineteen lines.
In this article, Roger L. Slakey makes many thoughtful observations regarding Wordsworth's poem, particularly in regard to its adherence to Samuel Taylor Coleridge's notion of "poetic form as a proceeding".
By showing us the tragic bus accident, and its repercussions, through the eyes of these people, Russell Banks illustrates perfectly that there are at least two sides to every story, and often many more.
A writer's personal, emotional state is often reflected in his or her writing, and nowhere is this more apparent than in the case of Raymond Carver
This play is neither a strict comedy, nor an absolute tragedy; this play is, rather, a fusion of both genres, with the comic movement of the first two acts turned to tragedy in Act III, Scene 1 with the deaths of Mercutio and Tybalt.
The reversal is now complete, as the two lovers have switched positions, with desperate Demetrius chasing after hateful Helen, leaving the two in essentially the same position as before, but with attitudes reversed.
As Thoreau and Melville extol the virtues of reading as a means of personal improvement and intellectual enlightenment, Frederick Douglass presents us with a first person, literal example.
"In world history, those who have helped to build the same culture are not necessarily of one race, and those of the same race have not all participated in one culture" (Benedict).
From the informal lessons of Alvarez' How I Learned to Sweep and Pam Houston's How to Talk to a Hunter, to the formal education or Richard Rodriguez' Aria, we have seen that education takes many forms.
We are introduced to Laura as she is seated at a "delicate ivory chair" (137), polishing her collection of glass objects. Before any dialogue is spoken, we are presented with two images of fragility, the chair and the glass collection.
Beneatha's educated, upper-class boyriend George provides an important reality check for Walter, her eternally scheming and dreaming brother.
Both men share the same general outlook wherein external forces act upon the individual internally, who then externalizes them, in the form of social action or natural selection
Corneill's play begins and follows the pattern of a typical tragedy, but has a cookie-cutter happy comedic ending which has led to the term "Tragicomedy" being used to describe it.
Bulosan's work is analyzed to determine whether it best represents the genre of Realism, valuing individual choice, or Naturalism, holding environment important above all.
Many of Dangerfield's one-liners can be analyzed for humor content using Kempson "do-so" tests to determine vagueness or ambiguity.
The beginning of Operation Desert Storm Iraq War coincides with a personal event that brings home the foolishness of it all to everyone but the characters.