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Search results 1891 - 1900 of 5332 matching essays
- 1891: Dulce Et Decorum Est
- ... a green sea, I saw him drowning. The way Owen describes a comrade watching as a lone soldier is struggling to get his mask fastened awakens the minds of the readers to see the psychological effect that this had on the soldiers. Making the reader see that war is cruel and unjust. In the third stanza Owen is describing the dead soldier. This allows the reader to view war in its ...
- 1892: Blaxploitation
- ... techniques, to silent film. Toms presence, and the appearance of the four negro archetypes which were to follow, served the same purpose: to entertain by stressing negro inferiority.(Boggle, 4) Although having no positive effect on the status of Black people in America socially, the tom character opened the door for Black actors in cinema. Sam Lucas became the first black man to be cast in a leading role as ...
- 1893: Beatlemania In The 1960s
- ... the soft, middle class south of England, which has controlled popular culture for so long." Beatlemania has touched all corners of English and American life and all types of people. Obviously , it had an enormous effect on America. The proof can be shown in the millions upon millions of records they have sold in the last 32 years that they have been making records (in the present tense because they are ...
- 1894: Lack of Love and Frankenstein
- ... of this lack of nurture and parental attention was bound to result in tragedy, from which an additional meaning emerges if we take the violence in the novel to constitute a language of protest, the effect of which is to expose the wrongs done to children in the name of domestic affection (220, Kate Ellis).The creature discovered the feeling of vengeance and destroyed any source that brought his creator happiness ...
- 1895: Cyril Falls, "The Great War"
- ... were dying at the front. Also at the Central Powers not enough food could get produced so that people really suffered from the Britishblockade and they died, because they had no food. But the main effect was the moral one, f.ex. casualties that were published from the Sommerbattle shocked the whole British country (first day 57,240, 20,000 killed). But all countries fought to the end and the Entendepowers ...
- 1896: The Catcher in the Rye: Now and Then
- ... published, society has changed drastically, and yet many things have remained the same. J.D. Salinger wrote a timeless novel when he wrote The Catcher in the Rye, whether he fully understood the long lasting effect of his work or not may never be known; but the book has affected posterity. Holden Caulfield was not the average sixteen year old in the forties, and he is not the average sixteen year ...
- 1897: Catcher In The Rye: Holden A Victim of Society
- ... with the psychoanalyst; the treatment bequeathed to Holden consists of a "rest cure". Even after the inquiry and the treatment, the questions remain unanswered, and Holden invariably suffers from lack of love. Regular daily occurrences effect each distinct person with diverse emotions. In The Catcher in the Rye, the pessimistic Holden Caulfield views all incidents as a result of the ignorance from the "phonies". The basis of the theme derives from ...
- 1898: The Battle For Your Mind: Persuasion & Brainwashing Techniques Being Used On The Public
- ... or it may sound as though he were emphasizing every word in a monotonous, patterned style. The words will usually be delivered at the rate of 45 to 60 beats per minute, maximizing the hypnotic effect. Now the assistant pastor begins the "build-up" process. He induces an altered state of consciousness and/or begins to generate the excitement and the expectations of the audience. Next, a group of young women ...
- 1899: The Fountain Head: Individualism
- ... out the years. Many examples of this type of movement are shown by the actions taken by Roark during his career as an architect. All of the actions taken by Roark had a deep profound effect on one key player in the novel, Toohey. Toohey with all the power he had with the public and through the newspaper, was not able to manipulate Howard into his way of thinking. The general ...
- 1900: Fanon's Three Stages Related to the Indigenous People of Chiapas
- ... to have greater brute force, but it took the white man to the level of the gods in the eyes of the natives. The colonizers could easily take advantage of this reverence. Fanon states "The effect consciously sought by colonialism was to drive into the natives' heads the idea that if the settlers were to leave, they would at once fall back into barbarism, degradation, and bestiality."(Fanon 211) The colonizers ...
Search results 1891 - 1900 of 5332 matching essays
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