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» Movies and Arts Essays and Papers
Summary Of: Mad About You
<view this essay>.... data was analyzed,
it showed that men were more likely to experience deep concern about sexual
jealousy rather that emotional jealousy. Women were more likely to express
concern about the emotional jealousy. This survey taken in study number one
is the soft measure because it is subjective.
Study number two was on physiological arousal. Objective
measures were taken to prove the findings that men are prone to sexual
jealousy. The 55 male and female participants were hooked up to machines
that could sense their feelings of jealousy without the people verbally
expressing them. Electrodermal activity, pulse rate, and electromyographic
activity were t .....
Number of words: 401 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Julius Caesar: Marcus Brutus Character Analysis
<view this essay>.... way for someone to get
close to a person of high rank is if he/she is close to him/her. In many points
of the play, Brutus was talking and next to Caesar. Brutus also loves Caesar but
fears his power. In the early acts of the play, Brutus says to Cassius, "What
means this shouting? I do fear the people do choose Caesar for their king…yet I
love him well."(act 1, scene 2, ll.85-89), as he is speaking to Cassius. Brutus
loves Caesar, but would not allow him to "climber-upward…He then unto the ladder
turns his back…"(act 2, scene 1, ll.24,26). As the quote says, Brutus would not
allow Caesar to rise to power and then turn his back onto the people of Rome.
After .....
Number of words: 841 | Number of pages: 4 |
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King Lear: Themes
<view this essay>.... from the perspective of King Lear,
Gloucester, and Edgar.
When reading King Lear, it is helpful to understand the Elizabethan "Chain
of Being" in which nature is viewed as order. Rosenblatt (1984) states that
there was a belief in an established hierarchy within the universe. Everything
had its own relative position beginning with Heaven, the Divine Being, and the
stars and planets which are all above. On earth the king is next, then the
nobles, on down to the peasantry. Holding the lowest position were the beggars
and lunatics and finally, the animals. Interrupting this order is unnatural.
King Lear's sin was that he disrupted this chain .....
Number of words: 1601 | Number of pages: 6 |
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Oedipus: Fate Is Unavoidable
<view this essay>.... knowledge that was constantly rejected. Oedipus, the
main character, struggled to dominate his own destiny, but ironically fell back
into his bizarre misfortune that was in the end, inevitable.
Misfortune, false realities, deception: all a result of Oedipus knowing
too much and at the same time too little of his true lot in life. Knowledge was
what nurtured him into false pretenses. Knowledge was a false pretense. By
knowing that his parents were out of harms way, namely his, he knew that his
prophecy would not come true. He knew that as long as his father was still
alive and he was married to a woman not even related to his mother, he would not
bear t .....
Number of words: 490 | Number of pages: 2 |
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How Do The Past And Present Effect Sexuality On Television And The Adolescent Mind?
<view this essay>.... in the way network television handles human sexuality? What lessons can be learned the way that the American adolescence viewed sexuality ten to fifteen years ago? What can we learn now about the American adolescence and sexuality on network television? How will sexuality on network television effect adolescence for the future. What role does cable television play in the new sexual revolution of television. Is sexuality on television really a problem or is it just hype brought on by other outlets of the media and family groups? I will attempt to explore all these paths in the research paper.
In 1985, every hour of every day an average of two to three .....
Number of words: 899 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Julius Caesar: Roman Life During The First Triumvirate
<view this essay>.... able to bear more. It is also a supposed time of sexual glorification and happiness. Other scenes depict how throughout Rome, roaming the streets are mysterious sooth-sayers, who are supposedly given the power to predict the future. Dictating what is to come through terse tidbits, these people may also be looked upon as superstitious. In the opening scene, one sooth-sayer, old in his years, warns Caesar to "Beware the Ides of March," an admonition of Caesar's impending death. Although sooth-sayers are looked upon by many as insane out of touch lower-classmen, a good deal of them, obviously including the sayer Caesar encountered, are indeed right on the mark. .....
Number of words: 743 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Cinematography: Everything You Need To Know
<view this essay>.... is projected onto the screen by
illuminating it with a beam of light. The period of time between the
projection of each still image when no image is projected is normally not
noticed by the viewer.
Two perceptual phenomena--persistence of vision and the critical flicker
frequency--cause a continuous image. Persistence of a vision is the
ability of the viewer to retain or in some way remember the impression of
an image after it has been withdrawn from view. The critical flicker
frequency is the minimum rate of interruption of the projected light beam
that will not cause the motion picture to appear to flicker. A frequency
above about 48 interruptions a se .....
Number of words: 31887 | Number of pages: 116 |
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Hamlet: Video Comparison
<view this essay>.... 3 Scene 1, this
one was my favourite. When Hamlet and Ophelia meet in the room and begin to
talk, they seem as though they where once very much in love, and that their
relationship would have blossomed if it wasn't for the recent interference.
Their conversation remains about their love for each other and then they kiss.
It seems as though after the kiss, Hamlet realizes what might be going on and
asks where Polonius is. Hamlet then realizes that he is in the room and
continues his charade of acting mad. I think that this interpretation is the
best one because it reflects my view of this scene as well as what I think
Shakespeare's intentions were.
Another .....
Number of words: 548 | Number of pages: 2 |
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