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Search results 6541 - 6550 of 6744 matching essays
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6541: “The Need for Entertainment at the Woman’s Expense”
... the three vampire women are portrayed as mere objects of Jonathan Harker’s sexual fantasy. The second scene in the movie in which an elaboration was used was when Dracula lured Lucy Westenra from her house at night. In the novel, Lucy is known to be a frequent sleepwalker who at night is needed to be watched by her friend and Jonathan’s wife to be, Mina. The novel describes this ...
6542: Freud's Oz: Freudian Views in The Wizard of Oz
... which is part of the primal scene." The question then becomes, where did this primal scene take place? In the movie Dorothy has her own room, but in the book she shares a one-room house with Aunt Em and Uncle Henry. Understanding this background, Freudians believe that viewers subconsciously understand the cinematic setting as an appropriate one for the primal scene. Dorothy is then taken away by the tornado, a ...
6543: Analysis of the Ending of "Death of a Salesman"
... dead, retired." [6] p.101 "To hell with whose fault it is or anything like that. Let's just wrap it up, heh?" [7] p.103 "May you rot in hell if you leave this house!"
6544: Bugs Bunny and the Marlboro Man
... Take Rosanne, for instance; the opening scene shows her sitting around a table playing poker, while her husband smokes a cigar and drinks a beer. In Married With Children, another show, Al sits around the house reading pornographic material, and while working he ogles the women shopping in his store. Both of these portray a family that does not care about each other. The kids run wild, while the parents argue ...
6545: Romeo and Juliet: The Betrayal of the Adults to Juliet
... betray Juliet. The first to betray Juliet is her parents, Capulet and Lady Capulet. Capulet decides to marry Juliet to Paris. When Juliet refuses to do so Capulet threatens to disown her. "...you shall not house with me." (III, v, 200) he states. Capulet will only forgive her if she will consent to her father's decision "...I'll give you to my friend./An you be not hang, beg, starve ...
6546: Time and Fate in Romeo and Juliet
... deliver the letter to Romeo. Friar John informs Friar Laurence that he was seeking another Franciscan, who was visiting the sick, to accompany him to Mantua. He says, "Suspecting that we both were in a house/ Where the infectious pestilence did reingn,/ Seal'd up the doors, and would not let us forth;/" (V, ii, l 9-11) Friar John tells that he could find no one to deliver the letter ...
6547: Julius Caesar: The Use of Suspense
... is "on the edge of his seat" finding that he cannot wait to find out what this dream foreshadows. Calpurnia was so frightened by these strange occurrences that she begged Caesar not to leave the house. Shakespeare created suspense by having Caesar speak these words: "and these does she apply for warnings and portents / and evils imminent, and on her knee / hath begged that I will stay at home today." These ...
6548: Macbeth: Not All Men Are Heroic
... of Macbeth is again revealed during this scene when he spoke his last two verses. I hear it by the way;but I will send. There's not a one of them, but in this house I keep a servant feed. I will tomorrow (And betimes I will) to the weird Sisters More shall they speak; for know I am bent to know By the worst means the worst. For mine ...
6549: Shakespeare's Use of Trickery and Disguise In His Plays
... Practice. Shakespearean Comedy. Ed. Maurice Charney. New York: New York Literary Forum, 1980. 175-184. Rossiter, A.P. Much Ado About Nothing. William Shakespeare: Modern Critical Views: Comedies & Romances. Ed. Harlod Bloom. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1986. 163-176. Shakespeare, William. The Merchant of Venice. Baltimore: Penguin, 1959. Shakespeare, William. Much Ado About Nothing. New York: Washington Square Press, 1964.
6550: The Merchant of Venice: Shylock - Victim or Villain
... while he is away. He knows that there will be a parade, and since he will be with Antonio, sealing the bond, he tells Jessica to "lock up my doors" (II. vi. 30.), "stop my house's ears, I mean my casements" (II. vi. 35.). Shakespeare has effectively labeled Shylock as the villain. However, Shakespeare continue to feed his cast with anti-semitic remarks. He has Solanio call Shylock "The villain ...


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