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Search results 1181 - 1190 of 1419 matching essays
- 1181: Charlie Chaplin
- ... introducing characterization, mime, and comedy throughout silence. Thanks to Chaplin, comedy began to be centered on the performer as opposed to the events, which befell him. People couldn't wait to get home from the stress and hardship of reality to sit and watch his shows. In conclusion, Charlie Chaplin was a person who lived in poverty and had to struggle during his early life. His childhood was rough and unstable ...
- 1182: Nicholas Romanov
- ... and dominated by religious mysticism was firmly implanted in the community . Ultimately the principle forces of the revolution were the rapid industrialisation of the period and the first world war. Inevitably the industrialisation process put stress and pressure on Russian society especially those who had to pay for industrial growth, such as peasants and workers from factories. The war affected the Russian economy as it would any other country although due ...
- 1183: Youth Violence
- ... June 10, 1992, edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr. Brandon Centerwall states, every violent act is the result of an array of forces coming together--poverty, crime, alcohol and drug abuse, stress--of which childhood exposure to television is just one, (18). Nevertheless, the evidence indicates that if, hypothetically, television technology had never been developed, there would be ten thousand fewer homicides each year in the United ...
- 1184: The Crucible 3
- ... loss of religious fervor that was so important when the colony was founded. Unfortunately for the Puritans, they were misfounded in their faith, for clearly the devil was not among them. It was their internal stress that provoked them to look for evil in their town, the class resentment present in New England was powerful, and was only multiplied by the events of the witchcraft hysteria. Furthermore, when the public began ...
- 1185: Themes Of Death And Desire In
- ... Williams he said,' No, in her mind she has become Allan. She acts out her fantasy of how Alan would have approached a young boy.'"9 Either way, at this point it is important to stress how past events in Blanche's life, which are symbols of 'desire leading to death', have caused Blanche to develop desires of her own, which are not tempered by reason. It is these desires, present ...
- 1186: The Truth About The Big Two He
- ... describe how Nick Adams is moving on with his life and putting the war behind. Nick has a lot of emotional problems that he has to contend with: his friend Hopkins being killed and the stress that Nick went through while he was fighting in the war. Hemingway uses nature as a way for Nick to heal his soul and to move on happily with his life. The trout that were ...
- 1187: The Adventures Of Sherlock Hol
- ... sister died one night two years before, after talking of hearing odd whistling in the night. Watson describes her, when she lifts her veil, as being haggard, only around thirty but looking much older with stress and fear. She is startled by Holmes' ability to deduce things from her appearance, but tells her frightening story carefully, paying attention to details. She is a little melodramatic, though what she has been through ...
- 1188: Terrors Of The Night
- ... nightmare are influenced very easily. From the data, 70% of the people who have nightmares had to go psychotherapy and 15% went to mental hospital. Actually, nightmares are difficult to treat because they come from stress or so on. However, there are some ways to treat nightmare. For example, "face and conquer" approaches, in which are psychological approach and " dream friend" which is for children and the replaying the nightmare by ...
- 1189: Taronga - Victor Kelleher
- ... believe that men have been put into a difficult situation as when men are small boys they are taught that crying is a sign of weakness. I believe this is why men have so many stress related illnesses - such as heart attacks, strokes etc. I believe that men resolve problems by fixing or doing, whereas women resolve problems by talking them through. Therefore, when a problem can't be fixed, a ...
- 1190: The Crossing
- ... the narrator had: one of total mental exasperation and exhaustion. When discussing the wolf, the author uses run-ons to string together ideas in much the same way a person under intense mental or emotional stress would. Also, the repetition of the word and mimics a child. The failure to pause to form the sentences correctly gives the impression of a child telling a story; not so much worried about the ...
Search results 1181 - 1190 of 1419 matching essays
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