A leadership analysis of "The Dark Side of Camelot" by Seymour Hersh.
Essay # 42822 |
650 words (
approx. 2.6 pages ) |
1 source |
2002
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Abstract
This paper will present a leadership critique of John F. Kennedy in the book "The Dark Side of Camelot" by Seymour Hersh. By analyzing Kennedey's weaknesses, we can debate on the validity of Hersh's thesis.
An analysis of the book "The Dark Side of Camelot" by Seymour Hersh about the Kennedy family.
Analytical Essay # 63814 |
912 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2006
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$ 19.95
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"The Dark Side of Camelot" is a book that strips away the sanitized versions about the Kennedy administration and replaces it with some harsher truths. It explains that the book demonstrates how, because of the Kennedy family's power, and because of his family's position of wealth and privilege, John F. Kennedy, Jr. did not have to live by the rules and restrictions most people have to live by. He was able to indulge in extensive behaviors such as womanizing without having these behaviors leaked to the public.
From the Paper
"The book also describes how John F. Kennedy, Jr. benefited from his father's and grandfather's political connections. The book suggests that the president's father, Joe Kennedy, used his money and influence to essentially purchase a senate seat for the future senator. This was a pattern he repeated for the 1960 presidential election. By controlling Chicago's politics, Joseph P. Kennedy was able to essentially buy Illinois' Electoral College votes, which tipped the scale for John F. Kennedy, Jr., giving him the presidency."
Tags:JFK, power, family
This paper discusses the connection between diligence and complacency in Alfred Lord Tennyson's "The Lady of Shalott".
Analytical Essay # 50986 |
1,060 words (
approx. 4.2 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2004
$ 22.95
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This paper explains that "The Lady of Shalott" is narrative poetry in the form of a ballad, which displays a central theme of diligence in occupation in opposition to the theme of complacence and relaxation. The author points out that the Lady of Shalott represents a person who is wholly engrossed in her occupation; whereas Lancelot and the people of Camelot represent complacency and relaxation. The paper relates that Tennyson expresses the relationship between diligence and relaxation through his use of imagery, symbolism, and action.
From the Paper
"Imagery plays a crucial role in "The Lady of Shalott." Shalott is an island; singular in its position, The Lady of Shalott is a woman whom is also singular in her position since she is constant in her loom work, and she is isolated like the island itself. The Lady is embowered in "four gray walls and four gray towers" that look upon a field of lilies. The image of gray walls and towers imparts a feeling of a dreary, monotonous routine, and the lilies of purity and a pallid existence. The weaving however, a result of The Lady's occupation, is "a magic web with colors gay." The connection that The Lady has with the outside world, her mirror, presents her with shadows, a perception of only images and shapes, devoid of soul and thought, mere pictures to her."
Tags:occupation, relaxation, lancelot, camelot, imagery
This paper centers on the tragic story of Lancelot and Guinevere.
Essay # 73934 |
675 words (
approx. 2.7 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2004
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$ 14.95
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This paper centers on the tragic story of Lancelot and Guinevere and examines how their love brings about not only their own ruin, but also the disintegration of the kingdom of Camelot. The paper discusses that this meant the end to all the dreams of glory and honor that Arthur and his knights envisioned when they founded the Round Table. The tragedy is a tale of both courtly love and adultery, for as this paper argues, the two concepts were in fact closely entwined with each other.
From the Paper
"Although Romeo and Juliet are probably the couple most associated with tragic love within the canon of English literature, in many ways the story of Lancelot and Guinevere is fare more tragic. Their love after all brings about not only their own ruin but also brings about the disintegration of the kingdom of Camelot and with this all of the dreams of glory and honor that Arthur and his knights envisioned when they founded the Round Table."
Tags:courtly love, Arthur, Camelot
An comparative analysis of the role of female characters in Marie de France's "Sir Lanval" to Thomas Chester's "Sir Launfal".
Comparison Essay # 9703 |
703 words (
approx. 2.8 pages ) |
0 sources |
MLA | 2002
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$ 15.95
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This paper examines the relationship of Sir Lanval/Launfal with women from two different interpretations of the story of Camelot and the Knights of the Round Table. In "Sir Lanval", the female characters have no real substance, they seem to appear merely to help the plot along and increase the trials and triumphs of the protagonist. In "Sir Launfal", Chester gives these important female characters more depth by giving both the fairy princess and the queen names. Neither writer develops these important female characters to their fullest potential.
From the Paper
Many Medieval English works contained tails of the legendary King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Marie de France's Lanval is yet another medieval work set primarily in Camelot and contains the Knights of the Round Table -- As well as Thomas Chester's Sir Launfal, which is influenced greatly by Marie de France's work. Sir Launfal varies slightly from Lanval, but the plot is basically the same.
Tags:arthur, fairy, france, king, medieval, sir, camelot, knights
This paper compares the "The School Boy" by William Blake, "Ode on a Grecian Urn" by John Keats and "The Lady of Shallot" by Alfred Lord Tennyson.
Comparison Essay # 98752 |
1,396 words (
approx. 5.6 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2007
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$ 27.95
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The paper contrasts how the three authors use art in their works to redefine human nature. The paper looks at how Victorian poet Tennyson uses history to paint a romantic and yet disturbing look at the legend of Camelot in "The Lady of Shallot." The paper also illustrates how Blake uses his personal experiences in "The School Boy" to show childish human nature torn between summer and the schoolroom. Finally, the paper shows how Keats speaks of music, heard and unheard, in "Ode on a Grecian Urn".
From the Paper
"Comparing these works can be difficult, because they all have such different views of art and human nature. Keats statement, "'Beauty is truth, truth beauty,--that is all / Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know'" (Keats), is pure Romantic - hopeful, positive, and full of future promise. Tennyson, on the other hand, is just the opposite. His poem is not totally depressing, but it certainly has a darker view of humankind. Blake's work falls somewhere in the middle, it is a more realistic look at one small part of human nature, and how to enjoy life to the fullest, one (summer) day at a time."
Tags:music, positivity, negativity, romance, legend, beauty, life, happiness
This paper discusses the Teamsters Union, which the author concludes is one of the worst unions in the nation.
Research Paper # 54651 |
3,000 words (
approx. 12 pages ) |
6 sources |
MLA | 2004
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$ 53.95
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This paper explains that, after more than 100 years of union activity in the United States, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (also known as the Teamsters or Teamsters Union) leadership has harmed both labor relations and the union itself. The author points out that, from 1979 to 1984, a Teamster's official was indicted by federal authorities every eight days, 225 indictments for misdeeds ranging from racketeering to arson to aggravated assault to extortion, bribery, and pension fund embezzlement. The paper relates that, while the Teamsters are taken to task for flouting the law in ways that almost always cause harm to members, such as the continuing pension debacle, and while the leadership serves itself extremely well with salaries and perks, it continues to serve its members badly.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Worst of a Bad Lot
The Branch Doesn't Fall Far from the Tree
What Would Have Changed?
Even Better Full-Time Jobs for Leaders
What's Good for the Goose?
A Brief Glimpse of Camelot
Finest Hour
From the Paper
"In fact, the federal government finally placed the Central States Pension Fund (also known as the mafia bank) in trusteeship because of the Teamsters' leadership spending million in funds supposedly for retirement benefits on Mafia-related loans to Las Vegas casinos. While it is, Waldman admits, likely the Teamsters membership had higher wages, and thus made higher pension contributions, than they would have without the union, the sting of losing a great deal of their expected retirement income was another example of the poor "labor relations" conduct of the leadership."
Tags:kennedy, hoffa, ups, mafia, embezzlement
Examines the impact JFK's presidency had on America's foreign and domestic policies.
Essay # 26900 |
2,505 words (
approx. 10 pages ) |
9 sources |
APA | 2002
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$ 45.95
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy was President of the United States for less than three years, yet in that time he had a major impact on the country and on foreign and domestic policy lasting for a decade or more. Some of his actions produced effects that were beneficial, and others can be seen now as less effective, notably his enmeshing the country in the Vietnam War. This paper examines the "Camelot" myth surrounding the life and death of Kennedy, America's foreign policy under his leadership and the Cuban Missile Crisis.
From the Paper
"The event that tested Kennedy's resolve most dramatically was the Cuban Missile Crisis, a success on the heels of the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. Kennedy's victory over Kruschev is remembered now as a high point for American power, which would have been otherwise for Kennedy had the Bay of Pigs fiasco been all that was remembered. The Bay of Pigs invasion was in April 1961. The Eisenhower Administration broke off relations with Cuba 17 days before Kennedy assumed office (Walton 39). The invasion involved 1400 Cuban exiles under the direction of the CIA. The Cuban militia crushed the invasion in a few days (Miroff 113)."
Tags:Eisenhower, Johnson, Viet, Minh, Bay, of, Pigs
A paper which discusses to what extent Lancelot and his love for Guinevere contributed to the downfall of the Round Table, as seen in different versions of the story throughout history.
Analytical Essay # 7326 |
1,770 words (
approx. 7.1 pages ) |
5 sources |
MLA | 2002
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$ 34.95
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The love story of Lancelot and Guinevere is one of the most tragic love stories in Western literature because their love brings about not only their own ruin but that of the kingdom itself and of all the dreams that Arthur and his knights brought to the founding of the Round Table. This paper examines the role that Lancelot plays in bringing about the downfall of the Round Table. Beyond the specific fates that befall Lancelot, Guinevere, and the other denizens of Camelot, this paper explores to some extent the idea of sexual pollution and the reasons why adultery -- surely a far lesser sin than murder or rape or pillage -- looms so large in this narrative.
From the Paper
"We are most familiar with the story of Lancelot and how his inability to control his sexuality becomes a metaphor for the inability of humans to control their animal natures and so a metaphor for all of the ways in which humans are divorced from divinity through Sir Thomas Malory s Morte Darthur. This telling of the Grail story remains a significant work over 500 years after its publication not only for the clarity of its prose but also because it helped to codify and circulate the Arthurian legend (which is something of a cosmological origin story for the British), as well as for the important role the work had in creating a vernacular tradition of written English literature."
Tags:Mallory, Vulgate, Grail, Sir, Galahad, King, Arthur, British, La, Queste, del, Saint, Graal
This paper examines the themes of morality that characterize Tennyson's epic 'The Idylls of the King.'
Analytical Essay # 39477 |
3,400 words (
approx. 13.6 pages ) |
8 sources |
2002
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$ 57.95
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As a critique of Victorian society and the rampant hypocrisy that marked the upper-class society's moral beliefs and practices, Tennyson portrays the Arthurian legend of Camelot in ways that are specifically familiar to the influence of John Milton's "Paradise Lost" and which comprise an allegorical interpretation of Victorian society. This paper considers the ways Tennyson's epic represent aspects of Victorian society in contexts of gender, social discourse and morality.