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In The Movie "Tombstone", Friendship Comes In Different Forms
... example of the friendship between Wyatt and Holiday was
when the Dalton gang had come into town with their guns and went into the
O.K. Corral. They were going to get Wyatt for killing one for their
brothers. Doc knew that Wyatt might of been killed if he went there on his
own. So again, even though not in the best of health, Doc went to help
Wyatt out.
Another type of friendship is the one that came between John
Oakhurst and young Tom Simson in the story of The Outcast of Poker Flat. In
this camaraderie the two men were in a poker game and young Simson lost all
of his money to Oakhurst. After the game Oakhurst pulled him aside and gave
him his money back ...
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King Lear: Conspiracy In Nakedness And Dress
... the bottom of the abyss he enters when he, a fool, a beggar, and a madman
have taken shelter in a hut from a storm. For Lear to be in the company such as
this, his status is near nothing. In order to show this degeneration from high
to low, Lear strips off all his clothing, showing he is now at the very bottom
of the social order. To have some clothes is to be someone, to have none is to
be nobody.
Edgar, legitimate son to the Earl of Gloucester, is well dressed, not as
much as Lear, but still above commoners. Edgar is believed to be plotting to
annihilate his own father. So every one is after someone named "Edgar", who is
a well dressed noble. ...
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Hamlet: An Instrument Of Life - Hamlet's Contribution To The Play
... It's stability in his life is questionable, but his
contemplation of madness has left him vulnerable to its control. This control
has led Hamlet to act outside of character and in an extremely peculiar fashion.
Hamlet is an instrument of his father, his own self, and of sanity.
The appearances of the Ghost, although sporadic, do not come without
meaning. Hamlet Senior, arguably, is one of Shakespeare's finest creations. The
character was molded using the Elizabethan view on death and apparitions. Such
belief stated hauntings had a communication value that was used to seek resolve
in unfinished business. The basis for Hamlet Senior's untimely visits should be
so ...
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A Midsummer Night's Dream: Women In Elizabethian England
... sound like choices to Hermia.
Woman, especially daughters, were to do what men commanded.
Another example of how woman were seen as second class citizens is how
they were supposed to treat men. Theseus proclaims to Hermia that she should
see her father as a God for he alone is responsible for her being. No mention
is made of Hermia's mother. It seemed to be the view at this time that men were
wholly responsible for the creation of children and woman were just a vessel for
the birthing. Which is curious because one would expect woman to hold a higher
place for giving birth to children, the lifeline to the future.
During the Shakespearean era woman were seen ...
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The Painting Of Pygmalion And Galatea: A Sensual Embrace
... by a second dias, she has reached over to her creator and they are locked in an embrace. This warm and sensual embrace signifies the ultimate moment for the sculptor as he realizes that his creation has finally responded to his love. The telltale mallet that is lying in the foreground with bits of marble scattered close by indicates that the artist was working on his delicate sculpture when suddenly he felt her flesh tremble. Gérôme's illustration suggests that Pygmalion, after realizing Galatea was no longer a lifeless slab of stone, dropped the mallet and rushed to her side, instantaneously taking her into his arms.
It is evident that Galatea's form is ...
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Televised Violence Is Here To Stay
... world. It teaches that the world is a violent and
untrustworthy place (Bennett 168). It reports on how the world really works.
Televised violence cultivates dominant assumptions about how conflict and power
work in the world.
Violence is an important fact of life (Howitt 17). It is very much part
of the human condition. The media cannot pretend that violence does not exist.
Televised violence orients people to their environment. It helps them
understand their world. It serves as a mirror in which people examine themselves,
their institutions, and their values (Comstock 357).
The exposure of children to televised violence is functional to the
extent that it prepa ...
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The National Endowment For The Arts
... known as (NEA), art programs, education, and institutions would soon diminish in quality. Some things would possibly die out completely. Unfortunately, most of those opposed to the NEA have been supplied with misinformation that alters their perception of the issue. However, if given the facts about how the NEA can benefit not only the artisans, but also the whole nation, those opposers might change their mind in support of the arts program.
One of the biggest arguments against federal funding for the arts is that it costs too much money and that the government is already in debt too severely to provide for something as unnecessary as art. True, the governm ...
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The Walkabout
... when they were lost in the desert. The characters seemed so tiny in the outback of Australia.
I felt that the music attributed to the movie greatly. The film at times was almost easier to understand with the music. I especially thought that when the Aborigine did his ritual dancing that the music was really neat.
Some things in the film were just unexplainable. I did not understand why the father in the beginning did anything that he did. Having a picnic in the desert, shooting at the kids, committing suicide and then blowing up the car. I also thought that the oasis was quite odd. The water and fruit were there and disappeared as mysteriously as ...
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Hamlet's Treatment Of Ophelia And Gertrude
... Hamlet, he is angry and upset at Queen
Gertrude, his mother, for remarrying his uncle so soon after the death of his
father. In his first soliloquy he comments on the speed of her remarriage
Within a month,
Ere yet the salt of most unrighteous tears
Had left the flushing in her galled eyes,
She married. O, most wicked speed, to post
With such dexterity to incestuous sheets!
It is not, nor it cannot come to good. (Hoy, 11)
It is understandable Hamlet is upset with his mother for forgetting about his
father and marrying his uncle, Claudius. In Hamlet's eyes, his father deserves
more than one month of mourning and by remarrying so quickly, the quee ...
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Hamlet
... to avenge his father. Hamlet first
decides to act abnormal which does not accomplish much besides warning his
uncle that he might know he killed his father. Later in the play a troop
of actors come to act out a play, and Hamlet has them reenact the murder
of is father in front of his uncle Claudius. The actors murder scene also
make Hamlet question himself about the fact that he has done nothing yet
to avenge his father. Hamlet says " But am I Pigeon-livered and lack gall
/ To make oppression bitter, or ere this / I should ha' fatted all the
region kites / With this slave's offal. Bloody, bawdy villain! ( Act II
scene 2 page 84 line 577- 580 ). During the play ...
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