Examines the use of distortion as a technique in William Faulkner's 'The Sound and The Fury', and Samuel Becket's 'Waiting for Godot'.
Analytical Essay # 112215 |
1,610 words (
approx. 6.4 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2009
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Abstract
The paper illustrates the use of distortion in art, literature, and theater using the examples of expressionism in art, William Faulkner's 'The Sound and the Fury' and Samuel Becket's play 'Waiting for Godot', in literature.
The paper highlights that expressionism is an art form that exemplifies exaggerated distortion in an attempt to further understand reality. In the literary world distortion is used in much the same way by representing absurdity and using distortion to explain important deceptions that make up every day life.
From the Paper
"Expressionism was a movement in fine arts that emphasized the expression of inner experience rather than solely realistic portrayal, seeking to depict not objective reality but the subjective emotions and responses that objects and events arouse in the artist. It was an artistic style in which the artist sought to depict not objective reality but rather the subjective emotions and responses that objects and events arouse in him. The artist accomplished this through distortion, exaggeration, primitivism, and fantasy and through the vivid, jarring, violent, or dynamic application of formal elements."
Tags:subjective, personal, old, authoritarian, society, spontaneous, self-expression
An analysis of the distortion of people, dreams and values in "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Book Review # 100297 |
2,143 words (
approx. 8.6 pages ) |
6 sources |
APA | 2007
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$ 40.95
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Abstract
This paper relates that the main character of "The Great Gatsby" is Nick Carraway, who leaves Minnesota to travel to New York, believing that it is in New York where he can make his fortune and live the American Dream. The paper looks at how the values that Nick brought to New York from Minnesota are constantly challenged as Nick wends his way through the maze of relationships and deceit that snares him in his West Egg, New York life. The paper attempts to show that what Nick finds, instead of success and personal satisfaction, is disillusionment with the American Dream and a desire to return to the life that he knew at home.
Outline:
Quality of Distortion
Distorted People
Distorted Dreams
Distorted Values
From the Paper
"Nick has a similar past to that of Jay Gatsby. Like Gatsby, he comes from the Midwest. Like Gatsby, he desires to get ahead in life. And, like Gatsby, Nick believes that going to New York is the way to accomplish that goal. However, unlike Gatsby, Nick makes an attempt to retain his personal values instead of being caught up by the vortex that swept up Gatsby. For a short time, Nick finds himself tempted by the life that Gatsby leads. He briefly flirts with the fast life, enjoying his brief love affair with Jordan Baker. After Gatsby's death, however, Nick decides to return to the more grounded life he once led."
Tags:American, Dream, Nick, Carraway
An analysis of the distortion of mass media information as "entertainment" in "Amusing Ourselves to Death" by Neil Postman.
Analytical Essay # 138589 |
2,500 words (
approx. 10 pages ) |
0 sources |
MLA |
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The paper examines how the arguments provided by Postman reveal the major problems with the mass media through the medium of the television. The paper explains that the central argument for form over content is accepted because of the nature and influence of corporate entities that try and break down and fragment information that best suits an ideology that does not support a critical sense of self. The paper asserts that this problem is reflected in the way that education is affected by various technologies, but Postman is wrong to accede that television as a form of technology is to be solely blamed for its informational value.
Tags:postman, media, myth
A look at the distortion of people, dreams, and values in "The Great Gatsby".
Analytical Essay # 130524 |
2,250 words (
approx. 9 pages ) |
5 sources |
APA |
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$ 41.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer studies the novel "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The writer discusses that when the novel opens, Nick Carraway has a certain set of personal values that he first abandons and then, ultimately reclaims. This set of personal values included a healthy sense of morality. The writer discusses that although this sense of morality is constantly challenged by the Eggian crowd, he eventually tires of their behavior when he sees what happens to Gatsby as a result of their lack of morality.
From the Paper
"The main character of The Great Gatsby is Nick Carraway, who leaves Minnesota to travel to New York, believing that it is in New York in which he can make his fortune and live the American Dream. The values that he brought to New York from Minnesota are constantly challenged as Nick wends his way through the maze of relationships and deceit that snares him in his West Egg, New York life. What he finds, instead of success and personal satisfaction, is disillusionment with the American Dream and a desire to return to the life that he knew at home. Nick has a similar past to that of Jay Gatsby. Like Gatsby, he comes from ..."
Tags:values
This paper looks at the different religious distortions and the meaning of how we use and view the world around us based on the movie, Babette's Feast and the book, "For the Life of the World."
Argumentative Essay # 4694 |
2,102 words (
approx. 8.4 pages ) |
2 sources |
MLA | 2002
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$ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the distortions in religion as they appear in the movie, Babette's Feast and the book, "For the Life of the World." The paper explains that there are three ways of practicing religion; religious, secular and sacramental. The paper goes on to explain why the sacramental view is the correct way to act and not the religious or secular views.
From the Paper
"In the film Babette's Feast, a major religious point is being shown to the audience through a fable. This fable consists of several different characters: a pastor and his two daughters, Martina and Philippa, several suitors for these daughters, townspeople, and a French housemaid. The fable deals with the way that the townspeople relate to their God through their extremely pious actions and attitudes, and how these views become changed by the end of the movie through a feast given by the French maid, Babette. The lesson being taught by this movie also deals directly with explanations of the Christian religion by Alexander Schmemann in his book, For the Life of the World. The main lesson being taught deals with the various different ways of leading lives dedicated to God, and how each one in its own way is either right and wrong. These different views are: the Secular, which says that the physical is all there is, so do the most with it, the Religious, in which people try to get closer to God by distancing themselves from material things, and the Sacramental, which says that we should be thankful for the things because they were made by God and know that they are not all that there is, and by doing such we are living in communion with God. The movie shows the audience that the Secular distortion and the Religious distortion are both incorrect, and that the Sacramental view is the correct path through the reactions of the various groups to Babette's feast. "
Tags:distortion, movie, religion, schmemann, babette, feast, sacramental, secular
This paper looks at "The Green Peril to the Third World" and and "Environmentalists Surf Tsunami Tragedy" by Steven Milloy and "Eco-terrorists Recruit 2nd Graders" by Mark Morano.
Article Review # 101552 |
847 words (
approx. 3.4 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2008
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$ 18.95
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The paper examines "The Green Peril to the Third World" and and "Environmentalists Surf Tsunami Tragedy" by Steven Milloy as well as "Eco-terrorists Recruit 2nd Graders" by Mark Morano. The paper shows how environmental groups are often narrow-minded, offer distorted views of significant issues and ignore evidence which opposes their main theses. The paper suggests that mainstream media groups should emphasize both sides of the debate, point out the fallacies in the arguments brought forward by environmentalists and stop ignoring the controversial activities of groups like Rainforest Action Network (RAN).
From the Paper
"The article, "The Green Peril to the Third World," shows how the proposed Kyoto Protocol endangers the economic well-being of developing nations insofar as dramatic reductions in greenhouse emissions will devastate their fledgling economies. The article also points out that there is no definitive proof that climate change is created by humans and a few passages are set aside outlining how environmental groups have established a de facto "veto" power over loans to developing nations which curry their disfavor - the example of Citigroup and its loan program being a good example (Milloy, para.1-13). As author Steven Milloy argues, ""....poor countries need economic development and environmental activists are blocking their way" (para.14)."
Tags:greenhouse, emissions, climate, change, narrow-mindedness, fallacies, agendas
This essay analyzes the mechanicals play-within-the-play. It finds that the play itself is a comical distortion of the Pyramus and Thisbe story that the mechanicals will act out. It also finds tht the players show aspects which the other characters ...
Analytical Essay # 132506 |
2,000 words (
approx. 8 pages ) |
0 sources |
MLA |
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$ 38.95
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This paper analyzes the mechanicals within the play "A Midsummer Night's Dream," focusing on the play-within-the-play. The paper afinds that the play itself is a comical distortion of the Pyramus and Thisbe story that the mechanicals will act out. It also finds tht the players show aspects which the other characters do not, including an awareness on at least some level that they are dealing with emotions that can lead to ends that are tragic rather than comical.
From the Paper
"In A Midsummer Night's Dream, William Shakespeare presents a remarkably complicated plot. It involves stories of four couples: Theseus and Hippolyta, Athenian nobles; Lysander and Hermia, and Helena and Demetrius, upper class Athenians; and Oberon and Titania, the fairy king and queen. Caught amid them is the tale of the mechanicals or craftsmen. The mechanics have retreated to the woods outside Athens to rehearse the play that they intend to present at the wedding of Theseus and Hippolyta. The play is the classical story of Pyramus and Thisbe. These were two young lovers, living in houses that shared a common wall, whose parents ..."
Tags:Ovid, Oberon, Titania, Theseus, Greek
A look at the influence of television news media on teenagers on issues such as violence and .body image distortion
Essay # 34012 |
1,150 words (
approx. 4.6 pages ) |
6 sources |
2002
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$ 23.95
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This essay discusses the significant influence that television news media has on teenagers. Evidence suggests that law-breaking and acts of hooliganism by teenagers are on the rise and that this phenomenon is connected to the news as well as to the influence of the media in general. News media also influences ideal body image distortion among teenage girls.
An examination of how media can distort the truth by analyzing how three newspapers reported about the historical U.S.-China standoff.
Essay # 56087 |
2,544 words (
approx. 10.2 pages ) |
2 sources |
MLA | 2005
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$ 46.95
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This case study examines the U.S.-China standoff from the perspective of three newspapers: the privately-owned "Washington Post" and "USA Today" in the United States; and the state-controlled "People?s Daily in the People's Republic of China".
From the Paper
"An event is a fact. It happens. People witness it. People talk about it. People report it. In today's world, the event may be recorded for posterity in a variety of ways. It may be capture on videotape. It may be captured in the voice recordings of an airplane's "black box." It may be tracked line by line through a printed transcript that contains the exact words of the participants. Recorded. Exact. Fact. We associate these words with what we read in newspapers, hear on the radio, or see on television. We assume that the news, as it is reported, is wholly truthful and accurate, but is it? Is the reportage of real-world events by the "unbiased" media free from the filters through which we all observe and analyze the world around us? Children play a game called "telephone." In this game, a group of children sit in a circle. One child goes first, whispering a message to one of the children alongside him. This child in turn whispers the same message to the child next in the circle, and he to the next, and so on, and on, until at length, the very last child to receive the message repeats it aloud to the entire group. The final result of this children's game is almost always uncontrollable laughter. Why? Because the message that is repeated aloud at the end of the game is almost always entirely different from the original message. Somewhere along the line, that message was changed. Whether intentionally, or accidentally, a fact " in this case the original message " was completely distorted by passing through the "filter" of different individuals. It is the same with events of world importance. The media and their governments present the news in ways that reflect their relative points of view. They fine-tune their representations in order to shape public opinion, carefully guiding it into the desired channels."
Tags:public, news, journalism, washington, post, usa, today, china
This paper discusses the distortion of crime coverage on television news.
Essay # 54638 |
1,115 words (
approx. 4.5 pages ) |
4 sources |
MLA | 2004
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$ 23.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that sensationalism often replaces real news within the American media; thus, if a story, on the surface, seems banal and uneventful, the story will often be "tweaked" in such a manner as to provide viewers with a more dynamic and exaggerated sense of dramatics. The author points out that the proliferation of news bias often distorts consumer's views of what is actually occurring in the world because major world events typically are blown out of proportion in an effort to entertain and captivate viewers. The paper relates that, rather than focus on bland subject material, news reporters more often highlight news stories that entail criminal activity, death, and violence; this type of subject matter is much more dynamic and often causes viewers to tune in and stay actively involved in news broadcasts.
From the Paper
"Glassner also points out that Americans view television as reality, which is a crime in and of itself. People don't necessarily "reap an impression from television but rather take what is presented on TV as reality". Glassner also argues that media moguls won't cover legitimate news issues such as the prevalence of uninsured Americans, because broadcast agents claim their would be no public interest in such matters. Rather, media agents create interest around such topics as violence and raw passion."
Tags:sensationalism, exaggeration, exploitative, entertain, distortion