Black Cat Essay

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    Poe “Black Cat” On the eve of his death, the man becomes very drunk and lashes out on all his animals which he loves dearly, but mostly a cat named Pluto, which eventually he cuts out the cat’s eye, and the next morning he feels remorse, and is overwhelmed by the spirit of Perverseness. And hangs the cat on a limb of a tree the next morning. The man’s house burns down. And one night while completely drunk, he found a new cat resembling Pluto, but its fur white as snow. He brought the cat home

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    presentation that I chose to do is the “The Black Cat” by Edgar Allan Poe. It is a combination of a two-dimensional and three-dimensional artwork. Different types of materials were used such as wood, Styrofoam, cardboards, pom poms, etc. to enhance the visual presentation of the story. Since the black cat is the major character in the story, I chose the color black, white, gray as the majority colors of the presentation. These colors really blend well with the black cat. I also think that the story involves

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    The Black Cat Analysis

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    The Tale of Two Cats The title of Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Black Cat” leads the reader to believe the short story is about one black cat. However, almost in the middle of the story a second cat emerges. Are the second cat one of the nine lives of the first cat? The narrator seems to be struggling with this question and considering the genre is horror, I as the reader also struggles with this question. Since the narrator hints the second cat may be the same as the first, the reader must look at

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    The Black Cat Thesis

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    The Black Cat by Edgar Allen Poe is a horror story about a man who loses everything he once had due to his alcohol use/abuse. The story begins when the narrator confesses his love for animals. The narrator marries a woman and introduces her to a black cat, named Pluto. The narrator begins to suffer from violent and uncontrollable mood swings, caused from influence of alcohol. After coming home drunk one night the narrator lashes out at Pluto, he quickly tries to grab the cat, only to be bitten.

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    Black cats, animal abuse, schizophrenia, a fire and murder, Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Black Cat” checks all the boxes for a dark romantic piece of literature. The focus is taken off of the grotesque details of abuse and murder but shifted towards the narrator’s inner conflict. Poe’s obsession with exploring the human psyche is prevalent in this short story. Readers struggle to understand the logic, if any, behind the actions of the unreliable narrator as he grapples with his own mind, or a supernatural

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    nineteenth-century America,” according to newworldencyclopedia.org.” “The Black Cat” by Edgar Allan Poe is a dark short story about a man struggling with guilt over his beloved cat. “The Black Cat” belongs to dark romanticism because of its negative word choice, dark imagery, and gory events that happen throughout the story. This gruesome story is connected with dark romanticism because of its negative word choice. The narrator just injured his cat and is explaining what he did to deal with the memory of it

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    Schizophrenia in “The Black Cat” First published in 1843, Edgar Allen Poe’s short story, “The Black Cat”, has many unidentifiable motives to a healthy mind. However, many actions in the story directly correlate with modern day schizophrenia. Recent studies have shown alcoholism, as well as cat ownership, go hand in hand with schizophrenia. "The Black Cat" took readers into the mind, understanding the thoughts and actions of what is assumably a schizophrenic person. Poe describes himself as becoming

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    7 The Black Cat

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    In the story “7 The Black Cat” the author Edgar Allan Poe whites all the horror and terrible things he had done. At a young age this man was even troubled a little and it progressed into something much worse. In this story he writes down all the terrible things he’s done to animals and people because of the monster inside him. After every time he did harm to something he would talk about how it would not hurt his heart. In this story the author does a really good job at showering common elements

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    In “The Black Cat”, the use of foreshadowing serves to emphasize the theme that sinners will be punished by justice. For example, when the narrator visits the ruins of his house, he sees on a wall "the figure of a gigantic cat [with] a rope about the animal's neck", foreshadowing how the narrator will be put to death for murder. Moreover, he describes the form of white hair on his second cat's chest as "the representation […] of the GALLOWS! ‒ oh, mournful and terrible engine of Horror and of Crime

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    Black Cat Consequences

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    The Consequences Behind Bloodshed In his short story “The Black Cat,” Edgar Allan Poe uses the drastic changes in one’s mind by drinking alcohol and the pressure of guilt to create an unreliable narrator, because it can easily modify the narrator’s judgement towards his cat, Pluto. Before the narrator starts drinking, he loves animals and contain a variety of them in his house. Right after the addiction of alcohol, the narrator physically and verbally abuses his pets, which causes “one night, returning

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