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Jewish Art
[ view this term paper ]Words: 490 | Pages: 2

... she was very cool and really did a good job of expressing her feelings toward her art. One important aspect of her art was that for her seeing her pieces come out of a fire was a reward in itself. She was not in it for the mmoney or material rewards. I think a lot of times people are only in it for material reward and it gets in the way of great art. It seems to me that this helped her to become such a good artist Her focus was mainly on very well known Jewish objects. Some of these include Menorahs, Sadaka boxes, and Mezuzahs. These where very evident part of her slide show. All of them were very obscure a ...




Death Of A Salesman: Society's Alienation Of Willy Loman
[ view this term paper ]Words: 888 | Pages: 4

... the loss of his job. All he had ever been in life was a salesman, therefore it was the only trade that he was any good at. When he had the conference with Howard, he had his hopes up. Willy had regained his confidence in himself and was ready to take control of his life at a very crucial time. However, Howard crushed all of that by firing Willy, simply because he thought Willy, "needed some rest." Actually, Howard never intended to give Willy his job back. He was merely trying to take Willy's position because he didn't believe Willy could hack it anymore. This is a reflection of society's present day treatment o ...




Aristotle’s Theory Of Tragedy As Seen In Euripides’ Electra
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1310 | Pages: 5

... leads to a cleansing catharsis, leaving the audience emotionally refreshed. In Electra, Euripides tells the story of two noble children who wish to avenge their murdered father and in doing so cause their own exile. Orestes and Electra’s hamartia of matricide lead them to discover their action was wrong and they come to regret what they have done. However, Electra lacks a true fall from happiness into misery for either children, a profound sense of tragic suffering, and a strong catharsis of pity and fear. In Electra, both Orestes and Electra can be viewed as tragic figures, however Orestes is the better choice ...




C-SPAN, The Cable TV Channel
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1280 | Pages: 5

... homes was Brian Lamb, who in addition to being the chairman and CEO of C-SPAN, is also a host on many of C-SPAN's programs. Brian's primary belief is that people should be able to see government in action without soundbites, computer maps, models, images, music, and news anchor commentary. Brian feels that if people can see government in action without the normal clutter, then they can more easily make decisions for themselves about politics and the workings of their government. In addition to C-SPAN, a second channel, C-SPAN2 has also been created. C-SPAN2 is committed to providing live and uncut coverage of th ...




Hamlet: An Review And Summary
[ view this term paper ]Words: 778 | Pages: 3

... perfectly. The character of Hamlet is one just like ourselves, whom we can identify with. Even though he truly begins the play as a hero, and also ends as one, he and the people he comes into contact with during the entire play experience tragic losses and deaths. The play begins outside, on a very cold, foggy, dark night. The guards are watching the castle for fear that it may be attacked. This is to set the perfect mood for the tragedy that is about to unfold later in the story. Also, with lines like “Who’s there?” and “I am sick at heart”, the audience is already, in the first scene, given an ind ...




David Williamson's "The Club" And "The Removalists"
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1935 | Pages: 8

... For example, Laurie (the coach) blames an old Club tradition for his failure to win a premiership, "You and your cronies wouldn't let me buy players." Jock (the vice-president) replies, "We were upholding an old tradition. It was wrong, but we believed in it." Then in the next line, Laurie accuses Jock of supporting the rest of the committee in upholding the tradition not because he believed in it himself, but because he didn't want Laurie to succeed, "They might have believed in it but the reason why you wouldn't let the Club buy players was to stop me winning a flag." However, Jock does support and ...




Summary Of Oedipus
[ view this term paper ]Words: 931 | Pages: 4

... be forced to learn of his unimagined shame. Bearing his burden to the end, Laius' murderer will eventually see the truth. Oedipus delivers a proclamation to pursue the truth. Tiresias, the blind prophet, comes to convict Oedipus: “I charge you to obey the decree that you yourself have made. You are the differ of this land.” He tells of the plague not leaving until the murderer is found. Tiresias, being a great prophet, knows all but will not tell: “I will speak no further. Rage if you have a mind to.” Only after Oedipus persists does the prophet say Oedipus is the murderer: “I say that you are the ...




Sonnet 64
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1185 | Pages: 5

... chiasmus, and enjambement, Shakespeare reveals that time, destroying all tangible seemingly indestructible creations, will ultimately take "love away." To reveal the passage of time Shakespeare divides his sonnet into three quatrains with each quatrain creating a specific thought. The opening quatrain begins with the forceful image of the personification of time, with the use of a capital; "Time." Like one's "hand," time is capable of destroying the seemingly indestructible "lofty towers" and "brass". Man is an "eternal slave" to time. In these opening lines Shakespeare is revealing that our ambitions dri ...




Irony In Othello
[ view this term paper ]Words: 732 | Pages: 3

... Iago killed his wife because she was working against his plan. Othello killed his wife because he thought she cheated on him when she really didn't. Before he killed her, Iago used his wife in a way that helped him to betray Othello. She was a good friend of Desdemona's and she worked against her friend without knowing it. She took Desdemona's handkerchief because Iago said he wanted it. Iago then placed the handkerchief in Cassio's room to make him look guilty. Also, throughout the play, it seemed that Othello was the only one who didn't know the truth. Shakespeare uses situational irony well to ma ...




Summary Of: Mad About You
[ view this term paper ]Words: 401 | Pages: 2

... likely to experience deep concern about sexual jealousy rather that emotional jealousy. Women were more likely to express concern about the emotional jealousy. This survey taken in study number one is the soft measure because it is subjective. Study number two was on physiological arousal. Objective measures were taken to prove the findings that men are prone to sexual jealousy. The 55 male and female participants were hooked up to machines that could sense their feelings of jealousy without the people verbally expressing them. Electrodermal activity, pulse rate, and electromyographic activity were the me ...




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