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Search results 341 - 350 of 368 matching essays
- 341: Psychology: Human Development
- ... of age. The shift in erogenous zones moves from the anal region to the genital organs. This stage is also known as the Oedipal Stage of psychosexual development. This name comes from the legendary king, Oedipus, who killed his father and married his mother. During this stage children take interest in their sexual organs. Soon they notice differences and similarities between themselves and their parents. Each sex wants to be with ...
- 342: A Comparison Of Durkheim And F
- ... a part of the Native American Church in 1918, this faith emphasized responsibilities to the family and love of fellow humans. Freud did not believe in this traditional family happiness. Instead, he believed in the Oedipus Complex, that every boy wants to kill his father and take his mother (Freud). The Peyote Religion emphasizes family closeness and does not condone for family happiness. They also have a doctrine and ethics in ...
- 343: Psychoanalysis
- ... ages three to six, these libidinous drives focus on the parent of the opposite sex and lend an erotic cast to the relation between mother and son or between father and daughter, the so-called Oedipus COMPLEX. However, most societies strongly disapprove of these sexual interests of children. A TABOO on incest rules universally. Parents, therefore, influence children to push such pleasurable sensations and thoughts out of their conscious minds into ...
- 344: ATF
- ... Resistance Education and Training (GREAT) program (which gives children the tools to resist membership in violent gangs), ATF leads and supports law enforcement internationally. In its first quarter-century ATF has had only 4 Directors: Rex Davis, G.R. Dickerson, Stephen Higgins, and John Magaw. The director is appointed by the secretary of the Treasury, and reports to the under secretary (enforcement). ATF headquarters are in Washington, D.C., although most ...
- 345: Dragons
- ... appearance, slaying a dragon was a knight's greatest feat. Most dragons had only four claws on each "foot",although some were said to have five. Their teeth resembled those of our prehistoric inhabitant Tyrannosaurus Rex, which made it a very dangerous predator. Some researchers also say that the dragon survived from the prehistoric era, like the alligator. Articulary system: To pump blood through it's body, the dragon needed aarticulary ...
- 346: Antigone: Who Is The Strongest Tragic Figure?
- ... made the decision to leave the body of Polynecies for the animals, he can not let the people of the kingdom believe his mind can be swayed even by the daughter of the late king, Oedipus-he must act as a strong king. This is where his hubris comes into play which later leads to his error in judgment with Teresias and finally, the realization of his downfall. Creons excessive ...
- 347: Freud's Oz: Freudian Views in The Wizard of Oz
- ... into the phallic stage. Freud describes the phallic stage as a period when the "sexual impulses and object relations of a child's early years become reanimated, and amongst them the emotional ties of its Oedipus Complex"( An Autobiographical Study 23). Dorothy now switches her focus from the mother to father. By killing the witch and giving the broomstick to the Wizard, Dorothy is enstilled with a new sense of power ...
- 348: Antigone: Changing Views of The Chorus
- ... These lines are utilized by Sophocles as a suspenseful introduction to Creon's orders concerning the body of Polynices. The chorus's next appearance blatantly shows their biased attitudes against Antigone and her exiled father Oedipus. At this point they still sing praise for King Creon and his unwavering decisions concerning the law which was placed upon the city regarding the body of Polynices: When he weaves in the laws of ...
- 349: Creon And Achilles
- ... the phenomenon. Tiresias explains And it is you/ your high resolve that sets this plague on Thebes./ The public altars and sacred hearths are fouled/ .....with carrion/ torn from the corpse, the doomstruck son of Oedipus! (XXIV-1122). When Achilles is placed in a similar situation when he is faced with the message from Zeus that his mother relays. Thetis tells Achilles he says the gods are angry with you now ...
- 350: Tragedy and the Common Man
- ... for tragedy in its highest sense as kings were. On the face of it this ought to be obvious in the light of modern psychiatry, which bases its analysis upon classic formulations, such as the Oedipus and Orestes complexes, for instances, which were enacted by royal beings, but which apply to everyone in similar emotional situations. Not Exclusive More simply, when the question of tragedy in art is not at issue ...
Search results 341 - 350 of 368 matching essays
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