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Help With Arts and Theater Papers
Movie Review: Into The West
... dealing with personal loss (letting go of and accepting a loss of something deeply valued), harm done by prejudice (pre-judgement of a person or people, usually unfair and harsh yet baseless), and knowing the boundary and limits of fantasy and reality (being aware and in control of how and why we create fantasy in our lives). The most dominant theme is that of personal loss, and then prejudice & fantasy v. reality, respectively.
Personal loss is something we all will deal with at some point, and probably several points, throughout our lives. Some may be “luckier” than others when it comes to the severity of s ...
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How Do We Evaluate Art?
... be based on a personal experience or knowledge.
Experience and knowledge can only increase in amount. Experience is
personal and independent. Everyone has different experience, no matter what the
experience is: learning experience, sexual experience, entertaining experience
or love experience. Experience is based on a person's life. Does that mean an
older human has greater personal experience? Theoretically, it is. We see that
we usually find an adult's suggestion is much more ideal than a child's. When
we are judging with our experience, we are actually doing comparison. We are
asking ourselves several q ...
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Movie: Dead Poet's Society - The Dead Poet That Killed Himself
... the old world teaching methods of Europe
and Asia. Japan is third is the world in education. The reason is simple.
Although they manufacture most of the world's calculators, not one is used in
the classroom. One really begins to understand math when taught by route
memorization and physical punishment for incorrect answers. Anyone who has been
"rapped on the knuckles" by a nun with a ruler can attest to this fact.
The one thing that a student needs in life is structure. Without this,
he or she cannot function in a school environment. When a bell rings, you must
go to class. When a teacher assigns homework, you d ...
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King Lear: Suffering
... way to experience
pain. The blinding of a person is not only painful, but demeaning and
tormenting as well. Imagine being blinded and having to experience the world
all over again. The frustration of depending on other people and learning how
to navigate your surroundings, with all the grace of a child. This kind of
suffering could lead to suicide, and it would have, except Gloucester was blind
and couldn't see that there was no cliff to throw himself off of. His enemies
didn't want to kill him, but they already did, internally.
The internal death is the final stage of mental suffering, but there are
man ...
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Romeo And Juliet: Summary
... with Roseline and that he only talks about her but when he meets Juliet at the party he totally forgets Roseline and falls in love with Juliet.
Friar Laurence clearly states this to Romeo: "Is Rosaline, whom thou didst love so dear, so soon forsaken? Young men's love then lies not truly in their hearts, but in their eyes".
This is exactly how Romeo behaves. Juliet on the other hand had to marry Count Paris so her love with Romeo is simply a way to get out of it. She never had a relationship with a man and she didn't like to have her first and only relationship with a man her parents arranged for her. She want ...
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The Glass Menagerie: Play Review
... world but , he can’t do that because of the obligations that landed in his hands from his fathers leaving. He is very aggravated at his mother do to her constant nagging, telling him what to do and when to do it but, what she doesn’t realize is that he is staying for her benefit not his.
The next character in the play is the mother, Amanda Wingfield she is extremely overwhelming and pushy, as you know to her son. She is also constantly protecting her daughter from reality at the same time without realizing she was treating her daughter like she was good for nothing.
Then comes lovely Laura Wingfield the inn ...
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Interpretation Of Romeo And Juliet
... they are from enemy families. Their love, of course, brings
down their immediate marriage and Friar Lawrence agrees in hope to stop the
feuding families. Unfortunately, Tybalt and Mercutio are killed and Romeo
gets banished leaving Juliet without a husband or a cousin. "O, I am a
fortune's fool," (Act III, Scene I) explains how Romeo felt at the moment
of Tybalt's death. He felt that he fell into one of fate's many cruel games
and it was too late to get out.
When things are just getting worst, Lord Capulet arranges for Juliet
to marry Paris causing Juliet to panic. She then has to hurry and do
something to s ...
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Hamlet - The "Real" Tragedy
... out plans devised by the king or queen to discover the nature of Hamlet’s madness. Being the king’s Lord Chamberlain, it is his duty to obey the king and queen’s wishes and it is this loyalty that eventually proves to be fatal for him. An example of hoe Polonius’ innocent involvement with the royalty results in his death can be found at the beginning of Act III, scene iv, when Hamlet stabs him while he is hiding behind the arras in Gertude’s room. This shows how Polonius, a man unaware of the true nature of the situation he is in, is killed by a member of the royalty during the execution of ...
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The People Vs Larry Flynt
... that Hustler depicts women in a shameful manner by photographing them with other women and even with Santa Claus. Keating was basically trying to censor Hustler magazine because in his opinion it was too raunchy and in poor taste unlike Playboy or other adult publications. The difference between Flynt's publication and Playboy is that Hustler is more explicitly raw and the pictures aren't touched up.
This is a very controversial issue because it goes against the first amendment. Who is to say that someone doesn’t have the right to view certain materials. Americans don’t want someone else controlling what they c ...
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Review Of Citizen Kane
... reputation as the
champion of the underprivileged, becomes corrupted by a lust for wealth,
power and immortality.
As we take a closer look at the theme that is expressed by Kane’s
ex-wife Susan we learn that things weren’t always what they had seemed.
Thompson meets with Susan at a nightclub and questions her about Kane. She
remembers that Kane "was really interested in my voice. What do you suppose
he built that opera house for? I didn't want it. I didn't want to sing. It
was his idea. Everything was his idea, except my leaving him." Her
flashback tells of ...
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