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Search results 941 - 950 of 1751 matching essays
- 941: Street Car Named Desire
- ... study journalism. His father, angry that Hazel Kramer, Williams's childhood sweetheart had also enrolled there, threatened to withdraw him. The romance soon ended, and Williams, deeply depressed, dropped out of school. He survived his depression for awhile through his poetry, plays, and stories, but the strain soon resulted in a nervous breakdown. "Why did I write? Because I found life unsatisfactory" Williams once said. Tennessee used his stories to express ...
- 942: Hamlet
- Hamlet Disillusionment. Depression. Despair. These are the burning emotions churning in young Hamlet's soul as he attempts to come to terms with his father's death and his mother's incestuous, illicit marriage. While Hamlet tries to ...
- 943: Jimi
- ... Experience's music, sounds heavy no matter how many times you listen to it. In actuality, the stony "Purple Haze" is about as close as they ever come to hard rock. The next song, "Manic Depression" comes in strong with the opening chords and then reveals Mitch Mitchell's trademark rolling drums. It also contains another of Jimi's solos worth listening to by any new or Experienced fan. Chas Chandler ...
- 944: Jazz
- ... less collective improvisation and more solo improvisation, and the amount of improvisation in most swing era hits was small. The construction of improvised solos in most hits were melodically conservative. The onset of the Great Depression had a chilling effect on the jazz world, as it did the whole entertainment industry. The ambiance of jazz culture were demystified in the process. During this period, the growing popularity of talking movies led ...
- 945: Generation Ecstacy
- ... 80s, to Scotland, Holland, and Germany. The story starts with the initial, utopic discovery of Ecstasy and its boundary-lowering qualities, and ends, with varying degrees of speed, with the descent into polydrug abuse and depression. Resisting easy moralizing, Reynolds analysis of the dialectic remains admirably balanced, sensitive to both the consciousness-expansion which can inspire insights that carry over into everyday life, and the tunnel-vision nihilism which is usually ...
- 946: Film Review-rainbow Trout
- ... TV news, and complain about not being able to use modern conveniences such as the car and cellular phone. In a sense, this is understandable as they are unfit for the place and experience emotional depression. However, the people around the fish farm are no better than the city people. They are unable to exercise self-control and always try to have their own way in everything. The two groups conflict ...
- 947: Film Review Of Do The Right Thing
- ... we see Tina dancing furiously, or the Latin music as Radio Raheem and the Latinos have a sound off with their boom boxes. Blues music is also important and noted throughout the film as the depression of the neighborhood set in. Almost all of Spike Lees films have to do with a play on black morality. He tells the truth to the African-American audience, but doing it in his ...
- 948: To Kill A Mockingbird Injustic
- ... to suffer any kind of injustice. A group of characters that may not be seen as victims of injustice, the Cunninghams, suffered economical injustice. The Cunninghams tried to live like honest farmers but The Great Depression hit them hard financially. Much like Tom Robinson and Boo Radley, the Cunninghams did not do anything wrong, but now they have absolutely no money at all. The Cunninghams felt that they could deal with ...
- 949: Cinematography Everything You Need To Know
- ... fast-thinking, and, above all, fast-talking men and women.^The issue of artistic freedom versus censorship raised by the movies came to the fore again with the advent of talking pictures. Spurred by the depression that hit the industry in 1933 and by the threat of an economic boycott by the newly formed Catholic Legion of Decency, the motion picture industry adopted an official Production Code in 1934. Written in ...
- 950: Beethoven 2
- ... human expressiveness in sound. Early in the 19th century, as his career was reaching its zenith, Beethoven began to realize that he was growing deaf. This woeful affliction advanced quickly, throwing the composer into deep depression and making him increasingly unable to conduct and perform his works. He curtailed his public appearances and communication, eventually resorting to a notebook to communicate with his inner circle of friends and colleagues. His desperately ...
Search results 941 - 950 of 1751 matching essays
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