mstultz72
mstultz72
Male
July 30, 2009
Teacher
High School - 12th Grade
English / Literature / Writing
William Henry Harrison High School - Evansville, IN, US (1986 - 1990)
Ball State University - Muncie, IN, US (1990 - 1994)
Indiana University-Purdue University-Indianapolis - Indianapolis, IN, US (1998 - 2001)
Butler University - Indianapolis, IN, US (2002 - 2005)
Cormac McCarthy, Flannery O'Connor, William Shakespeare, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Albert Camus, Emily Dickinson, William Faulkner, Leo Tolstoy, Pablo Neruda, Robert Frost, Homer
Biography
English teacher: 16 years; Semi-pro cyclist: 16 years; Father of three
New Activity for mstultz72
Answered a Question in Othello
In Othello, there is grotesque sexual and animalistic imagery, which...
Answered a Question in A Rose for Emily
The main symbols in Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" are: Miss Emily...
Answered a Question in The Great Gatsby
At the beginning of Chapter 4 of The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald uses language...
Answered a Question in Macbeth
Macbeth and Brave New World have the following in common:...
Answered a Question in The Stranger
In The Stranger, Meursault is Camus' absurdist (similar to...
Answered a Question in Oedipus Rex
In Antigone, Sophocles introduces us to the first great feminist...
Answered a Question in Guide to Literary Terms
The answer to this question depends on if the play is being read or if it's being...
Answered a Question in The Catcher in the Rye
In The Catcher in the Rye, J. D. Salinger, through Holden Caufield, uses the...
Answered a Question in Macbeth
In Macbeth, the witches' equivocal language is a duality, a riddle, a kind of...
Answered a Question in Trifles
Dramatic Irony: a state of affairs in which the audience and a few characters...
Answered a Question in Much Ado About Nothing
In Act II, scene iii of Much Ado About Nothing, Benedick says in his soliloquy:...
Answered a Question in Essay Lab
Hi, I can only answer the first question; try asking the second one another day....
Answered a Question in Hamlet
In Hamlet, Hamlet must decide if his taking personal revenge against Claudius is...
Answered a Question in Macbeth
In Act I Macbeth, Shakespeare shows the hero and villain conjoined. Unlike other...
Answered a Question in Hamlet
In addition to the above answer, I would add the following points: 1. In...
Answered a Question in The Great Gatsby
In The Great Gatsby, we have a(n): Unreliable narrator: Nick...
Answered a Question in Macbeth
In Act I, scene i of Macbeth the witches are archetypal symbols of: Chaos:...
Answered a Question in Things Fall Apart
In Chapter 2 of Things Fall Apart, the women of Umuofia have little influence in...
Answered a Question in Othello
Othello is full of geographical symbolism. The play takes place in two...
Answered a Question in Things Fall Apart
Hi, hamada: I don't exactly know your specific topic or thesis, but here's what I...
Answered a Question in High Fidelity
In High Fidelity, Dick, Barry, and Rob are like one of their friends says,...
Followed a Topic
Answered a Question in Waiting for Godot
Both Waiting for Godot and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? are examples of...
Followed a Topic
Answered a Question in The Catcher in the Rye
I don't exactly see too many connections between Catcher in the Rye and Iron...
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