Les Miserables Essay

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    concept is a personal achievement in which the beneficiaries themselves must recognize their newly attained salvation. In Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables, multiple characters minister to the redemption of others, while many experience their own restoration from indulging crime, peerless poverty, or malicious lifestyles. Written in the nineteenth century, Les Misérables displays the notable impacts of both Romanticism and Neoclassicism, staple social movements of the time, on not only these individuals’

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    The film Les Miserables is based on the musical and book with the same title. The film tells the story of a convict named Jean Valjean. At the beginning of the film, Valjean is shown working in a port with other inmates. Valjean and the other convicts sing the “Work Song.” The song talks about the pains of the prisoners – they are forced to work in extreme conditions, they are forgotten by their loved ones, and they are destined to die in the prison. The song also introduces the two main characters

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    Victor Hugo is well known for his very descriptive, fascinating, and well-written book, Les Miserables. Throughout the book of Les Miserables, Hugo uses first rate examples of figurative language to give the reader a deeper insight into the novel and what the characters are struggling with internally. For instance, ''It was inhabited place where there was nobody, it was a desert place where there was somebody; it was a boulevard of the great city, a street of Paris, wilder, at, night

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    Les Miserables is a movie about people with miserable lives. Each of them has a unique story that portrays why their lives are miserable. The sacrifices and pains of the lead characters in this movie are intense and breathtaking. Jean Valjean is a convict in a French prison. He’s been serving his sentence for 19 years for stealing a loaf of bread for the daughter of his sister that was starving to death and trying to escape prison as well. Javert a police inspector is keen enough to hover over prisoner

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    The Life of Victor Hugo in his Novel “Les Miserables” INTRODUCTION: What are the personal experiences of Hugo in the French Revolution that inspired him to write Les Miserables? How do his beliefs affect his work Les Miserables? Do you also believe that good always triumph over evil? Victor Hugo was a keen poet, novelist, dramatist, essayist, pamphleteer, diarist, politician and moralist of French romance. In 1862 Hugo published his masterwork Les Miserables, which gained an international success

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    the audience. So many stories are written today with the typical love story, girl falls in love with guy or vice versa. Others are action packed with a climax and a predictable ending. Victor Hugo took a different stance while writing his book Les Miserables. Hugo's idea of action is presented through Jean Valjean who is held in prison for four years because he stole a loaf of bread. He includes unique love stories unlike the typical ones that we read about. Hugo's main purpose is to challenge people

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    In the novel Les Miserables, Victor Hugo utilizes various redemptive acts to prove that redemption impacts both the redeemed and the redeemer. The theme of redemption appears countless times in the novel to emphasize the freedom, relief, and healthy change that occurs when a person is redeemed. In the novel, Jean Valjean redeems Javert by letting him go free from the barricade instead of killing him. Javert, the determined policeman who is out to get Jean Valjean becomes overwhelmed by the generosity

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    For both Cosette and Jean Valjean the novel Les Miserables shows their journey from a life of struggle and misfortune to becoming better individuals. Jean Valjean an ex-convict gets a chance at individual redemption after opening his heart and learns to care for himself but also others. Cosette, although she never did wrong herself, had a chance at redemption by being saved form the poor life she would’ve lived with her adopted family. Many of the characters throughout the novel had a chance and

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    A single quiet splash heard by no one signaled the end of Javert, a man of the law in Victor Hugo’s novel Les Miserables. He chases after Jean Valjean for years without rest or relenting, simply because Valjean broke parole. Given an opportunity to capture him, Javert would show no hesitation or mercy to the man who stole a loaf of bread. His resolve in this goal is shattered when Valjean, given the chance to the man pursuing him, instead saves Javert’s life. The conflicting examples of a galley

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    3) In the musical Les Miserables, the major conflict with Jean Valjean can be compared to of the book Legend, and Day’s conflict. Both characters in each story, have been running away for their lives so they don’t get caught by authorities. In the movie Les Miserables, Jean Valjean starts out as a jailed, working in poor conditions, just because he stole a piece of bread. As he is released from prison Javert, the policeman, says that “Once a criminal, always a criminal” and tells him how shall be

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