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Kindle: Learning Guide
Ender's Game
by
Orson Scott Card
Home
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Ender's Game
Analysis
Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory
Intro
Summary
Themes
Quotes
Study Questions
Characters
Analysis
Facts
Quizzes
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Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory
A Short Note Before Starting
Games
Perspective
Fairy Tales
History
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Table of Contents
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Ender's Game Symbolism, Imagery, & Allegory
Sometimes, there’s more to Pop Lit than meets the eye.
A Short Note Before Starting
If you haven’t read Orson Scott Card’s introduction to Ender's Game, you might take a look at it, if only for the part where Card says that he avoided all the literary tricks that make reading...
Games
Here’s where you say, “duh!” That’s what we say, too. Ender’s entire school life is made up of games. But here’s the thing: even when Ender isn’t playing games, people talk about game...
Perspective
How many times does someone say that the enemy’s gate is down in Ender’s Game? Oh, maybe, nine times or so. (Here are a few of them: 7.255, 7.277, 7.281, 10.57, and 14.352.) Well, we could say...
Fairy Tales
Compared to games and perspective, this is a tiny issue, but it comes up in at least two scenes that we think are interesting to bring together. The first is the blink-and-you-missed-it reference t...
History
Peter looks like Alexander the Great (2.14). The children at Battle School “act like – history” (7.10). Peter chooses the pseudonyms Locke and Demosthenes after two big historical figures (9....
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