An analysis of the important role that Davy Crockett played as a frontiersman.
Term Paper # 96047 |
1,455 words (
approx. 5.8 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2007
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$ 28.95
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Abstract
This paper describes Davy Crockett and his role in American history. It specifically describes his roles as frontiersman, when he played an important role in the westward expansion of the American west. It looks at his role as politician for the state of Tennessee and finally it discusses his most famous role as a soldier, when he died defending the Alamo.
From the Paper
"Crockett, his family, and three companions, William Patton, Abner Burgin, and Lindsey Tinkle set out for Texas. Not all of them reached Texas; Burgin and Tinkle returned to Tennessee, but Crockett and Patton signed the oath of allegiance to Texas. However, even this action bore the mark of Crockett's unique personality; he refused to sign the oath of allegiance until the word republican was inserted in the document. (Lofaro). Therefore, Crockett and Patton "swore their allegiance to the 'Provisional Government of Texas or any future republican Government that may be hereafter declared.' Crockett had balked at the possibility that he would be obliged to support some future government that might prove despotic." (Lofaro)."
Tags:allegiance, Texas, Alamo
This is an essay with two purposes. It is an exercise in using evidence to make a point. This is also a comparison of the leadership styles Abraham Lincoln, American president, and Jefferson Davis, Confederate president. Briefly, why was Lincoln more ...
Essay # 137708 |
750 words (
approx. 3 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA |
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$ 16.95
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This is an essay with two purposes. It is an exercise in using evidence to make a point. This is also a comparison of the leadership styles Abraham Lincoln, American president, and Jefferson Davis, Confederate president. Briefly, why was Lincoln more successful. This paper argues that he had superior political skills, based on his background in a tougher political environment.
From the Paper
C20838 Compare and Contrast: Abraham Lincoln versus Jefferson Davis Abraham Lincoln was a superior politician to Jefferson Davis. The industrial and population disparity between both sides may have made it impossible for the South to win the American Civil War. However, Lincoln's superior political ability was a definite advantage to the North. The two men had surprisingly similar backgrounds, being born 100 miles apart in Kentucky, less than a year apart, both the sons of struggling farmers. Davis' family, however, moved to Mississippi. By the time he went
Tags:lincoln, davis, leadership
A look at the life and career of women's rights advocate, Paulina Wright Davis.
Essay # 68418 |
1,243 words (
approx. 5 pages ) |
4 sources |
MLA | 2006
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$ 25.95
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This paper describes the life, career and accomplishments of Paulina Kellogg Wright Davis, a women's rights advocate, social reformer, educator and author. The paper describes her support and active involvement in temperance, abolition, women's rights and other reform movements and the reforms she was able to help advance as a result her involvement in these movements.
From the Paper
"Paulina Kellog was born August 7, 1816 in Bloomfield, New York, on the very day that Captain Hall "delivered up the fort at Detroit" (Paulina1 pp). Her father was a volunteer in the army and her grandfather, Saxton, was a colonel in the Revolution and belonged to Lafayette's staff (Paulina1 pp). Paulina was orphaned at the age of seven and adopted and raised by her strict and religious aunt and moved to LeRoy, New York (Paulina pp)."
Tags:missionary, francis, antislavery, convention, thomas, davis, jewelry, maker, national, rights
A study of the life and work of Miles Davis.
Analytical Essay # 126609 |
1,500 words (
approx. 6 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2008
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$ 29.95
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In this article, the writer summarizes the autobiography of Miles Davis and also touches on two recordings and their importance.
From the Paper
"Music as an art form holds one of the most complex relationships from artist to audience. When a painter completes a work it stands complete and unaltered for as long as it survives. The same is true of a sculpture. A piece of music however is subject to repeated interpretation and evaluation. Even when a musical piece is performed by the same person or group of people such as in a jazz group each live performance is different from any ..."
Tags:miles davis, music, quincy troupe
A look at the life and qualities of Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States of America.
Term Paper # 108089 |
1,313 words (
approx. 5.3 pages ) |
3 sources |
APA | 2008
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$ 26.95
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The paper describes Jefferson Davis' background and his positions as U.S. senator, Congressman and President of the Confederacy. The paper looks at a work he authored and goes on to depict how Davis was captured and imprisoned after the surrender of General Lee. The paper discusses his last years and his funeral and provides a quote from a tribute by a Reverend Gallaher.
Outline:
Introduction
Davis: Senator, Congressman and Confederate President
Davis: The Author
Davis: The Surrender
Davis: The Last Years
From the Paper
"Jefferson Davis was born on June 3, 1808 in Kentucky in Todd County, formerly Christian County, Kentucky. Davis was educated at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky and attended the U.S. Military Academy graduating in 1828. David fought in the Mexican War at Monterrey and Buena Visa and was wounded. David retired from the army in 1835 due to health problems. In the same year Jefferson Davis married Miss Sallie Taylor whose father was Zachary Taylor however, Sally died only three months following their wedding. (Alward, nd) After Sallie died, David purchased a cotton plantation complete with slaves working the field and was a successful plantation cotton farmer. In 1845, David married again, this time to Miss Varina Howell. (Alward, nd) Davis was both a devoted father and husband."
Tags:Confederacy, slavery, Mississippi
An overview of this biography about jazz trumpeter Miles Davis by Ian Carr.
Analytical Essay # 67215 |
1,200 words (
approx. 4.8 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2005
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$ 24.95
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Jazz is the dynamic tension between the expected and the improvised. Miles Davis was brought up torn between his well-to-do white-emulating upbringing and his black heritage. Davis not only bridged this gap but helped create entire new musical vocabularies throughout his long and varied career as a jazz trumpeter. This report shows his evolution and his continuing influence on other musicians, as described in his biography, "Miles Davis: A Biography," written by Ian Carr.
Paper Outline:
Abstract
Introduction
Childhood
Further Development
Evolution, Addiction, & Resurrection
His Influence on Music Today
Concluding Remarks
References
From the Paper
"He worked with and was a catalyst for Tony Williams, Jack DeJohnette, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, and countless others(p234). Many times in his career it had been declared that he already "peaked" and was a remnant of the 50's, of bebop, of cool jazz, of fusion jazz. But he never let himself grow complacent and become an icon of the past. By not producing unless he had something new to say, he was able to continually stay relevant, and re-invent himself every few years (p183). "
Tags:African, American, blues, musician, bebop
A review of the book, "Blues, Legacy and Black Feminism", by Angela Davis.
Book Review # 55315 |
843 words (
approx. 3.4 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2004
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$ 18.95
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Angela Y. Davis was one of the founding mothers of the radical black feminist and civil rights movement. Her participation in these movements was not simply vocal and intellectual, but profoundly political as well. In particular, it examines how a different, more artistic side of her political interests comes to light regarding Davis' works in "Blues, Legacy and Black Feminism", in which she shows an interest in black feminist works beyond that of the purely verbal and prosaic.
From the Paper
"Perhaps inevitably, the second half of the work and its project falls a bit short. The main problem with the methodology of emphasizing lyrics is that it tends to bring "the word" or a literary rather than a musical perspective to the forefront in understanding these performance artists. This bias may be inevitable, given Professor Davis' own background. But these women were not of the academy "their music was performed as a living text. However, although the inclusions of the lyrics and the lyrical analysis is not as strong as the first more historically oriented part of the book that seems to be more in line with Davis' abilities as an historian, the analysis of the lyrics does reveal that these artists did discuss issues of domestic violence and transgressing lesbian love in a way that is seldom given credit."
Tags:blues, jazz, consciousness
An analysis of "The Angela Y. Davis Reader" by Angela Davis.
Essay # 46806 |
987 words (
approx. 3.9 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2004
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$ 21.95
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A review of "The Angela Y. David Reader", edited by Joy James. It explains how these writings cover Davis's academic and political life from the 1960s to the present and serve to show young black women one path to achieving more for their people and for themselves.
From the Paper
"The introduction by Joy James tells much of Davis's story and relates it to the political currents of the 1960s and after, including the many efforts by different governmental leaders to put down various movements seeking greater freedom of speech and other rights as promised in the Constitution yet denied to many, including blacks. The efforts by the government included a number of questionable and outright illegal actions to gather and keep intelligence on American citizens who dissented from the accepted political order of the time. Davis clearly fell into this group and was investigated for practicing her rights of political association and speech."
Tags:civil, rights, action, social
An Analysis Miles Davies' influence on Jazz.
Essay # 43204 |
1,650 words (
approx. 6.6 pages ) |
7 sources |
2002
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$ 32.95
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This seven-page undergraduate paper examines the influence of Miles Davis on Jazz in the United States. The author discusses how Jazz emerged as a combination of Blues, marching band, and Ragtime music, and focuses upon the influence of Jazz greats such as Miles Davis.
This paper discusses art and realism in Rebecca Harding Davis's "Life in the Iron Mills".
Analytical Essay # 33170 |
1,150 words (
approx. 4.6 pages ) |
1 source |
2002
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$ 23.95
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This paper compares the themes of realism and art in Rebecca Harding Davis's "Life in the Iron Mills" by arguing that Deb and Hugh are symbolic characters. The author believes that Davis's work breaks down the traditional boundaries between art and realism by suggesting that realism has supplanted the more traditional understanding of art as a way of seeing the world.