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Search results 231 - 240 of 332 matching essays
- 231: A Rhetoric Of Outcasts In The
- ... drama, the Donaldson Award, and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award in the same year. Although Williams's first professionally produced play, Battle of Angels, closed in 1940 because of poor reviews1 and a censorship controversy (Roudane xvii), his early amateur productions of Candles to the Sun and Fugitive Kind were well received by audiences in St. Louis. By 1945 he had completed and opened on Broadway The Glass Menagerie ...
- 232: Capitalism In Mass Media
- ... 1986:3) Through the ownership of media empires, sponsorship and advertising, there is little the public is able to do (at least on a large scale). Even those working within the industry are subject to censorship from above. Chomsky (1988a) and Parenti (1986) both discuss journalists and reporters presenting current issues without outside influence in the news media, but ultimately, the media owner has control. Because of the expendability of the ...
- 233: Catcher In The Rye 8
- Catcher in the Rye "There s far more to the censorship issue than a ban on sex and four-letter words. I sometimes think that those of us who need to be the most clearheaded about these matters are planting the very trees that obscure our ...
- 234: Irish Literature And Rebellion
- ... quote of Yeats’ “Easter 1916,” “Too long a sacrifice / Can make a stone of the heart” (Yeats, 54). Joyce believed that to envelop oneself in the politics of the “Irish Question” would only allow for censorship by both the Roman Catholic Church and the British government, and the eventual death of literature, so he exiled himself to the continent and continued his writings there. “When asked near the end of his ...
- 235: A Rhetoric Of Outcasts In The
- ... drama, the Donaldson Award, and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award in the same year. Although Williams's first professionally produced play, Battle of Angels, closed in 1940 because of poor reviews1 and a censorship controversy (Roudane xvii), his early amateur productions of Candles to the Sun and Fugitive Kind were well received by audiences in St. Louis. By 1945 he had completed and opened on Broadway The Glass Menagerie ...
- 236: Tennessee Williams - Outcasts In His Plays
- ... drama, the Donaldson Award, and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award in the same year. Although Williams's first professionally produced play, Battle of Angels, closed in 1940 because of poor reviews1 and a censorship controversy (Roudane xvii), his early amateur productions of Candles to the Sun and Fugitive Kind were well received by audiences in St. Louis. By 1945 he had completed and opened on Broadway The Glass Menagerie ...
- 237: Hans Christian Andersen
- ... entertainment. A specific group that may favor this novel is the women activists of the 1960's and 1970's. This group, in which Offred's mother would be a member, is sensitive to the censorship that women once faced and would show interest to the "possible future" that could result. Offred is symbolic of "every woman". She was conventional in prior times, married with one daughter, a husband and a ...
- 238: Global Broadcasting Systems
- ... put strict limits on what the public is allowed to know. For example, China uses the media to support the government's economic and political goals. Some countries, such as in the Middle East, use censorship to keep objectionable material out of their country. Chapter Seven is titled "External Services and Organizations." External services in radio are mostly government-funded and operated short wave radio stations. There are also some religious ...
- 239: Catcher In The Rye
- Innocence, Compassion, and some ‘Crazy’ Cliff A novel, which has gained literary recognition worldwide, scrutiny to the point of censorship and has established a following among adolescents, The Catcher in the Rye is in its entirety a unique connotation of the preservation of innocence and the pursuit of compassion. With certain elegance the writer J ...
- 240: Huckleberry Finn - Racism Deba
- ... of the seemingly racist ideas expressed by Mark Twain in Huckleberry Finn. In some extreme cases the novel has even been banned by public school systems and censored by public libraries. The basis for these censorship campaigns has been the depiction of one of the main characters in Huckleberry Finn, Jim, a black slave. Jim, is a "typical" black slave who runs away from his "owner" Miss Watson. At several points ...
Search results 231 - 240 of 332 matching essays
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