Glass transition

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    Summary: The Glass Ceiling

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    1964 The Glass Ceiling is defined as “an unofficially acknowledged barrier to advancement in a profession, especially affecting women and members of minorities.” (google.com) although, referencing glass, this barrier is transparent. This transparency creates the illusion that American women, regardless of race or other factors, hold economic and professional equality to men. However, statistics shall prove this is not the current, and past trend in the United States of America. Systematic glass…

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    living off of it. Upon arrival to the Museum of Glass in Tacoma, I realized that this art form has artists that are both doing this for a living and doing this for a hobby. Glassblowing is an art that everyone should know about but many people have never actually witnessed it. I had the honor of observing and interviewing Lino Tagliapietra, who is considered by most to be the greatest living glass blower in the world. He changed the history of glass blowing and impacted people's styles that…

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    The Chartres has left a lasting impression on experimental and transitional architecture trough it’s structure, interior, and certainly exterior. The labyrinth still offers a sense of security and sculptures continue to stand together. The deep blue glass stained windows are still shining, strongly representing Mary and Jesus. And finally the Chartres continues to be the perfect cathedral to feel warm in and allow oneself to immerse in the power of Christ and the Virgin…

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    artistic skills, and his beautiful creations of glass art work. Chihul’s life is well marked by his wonderful glassblowing capabilities. Chihuly is having a wonderful life, even though early on in life he had a rough, miserable, and a grief filled childhood after losing both his brother then his father within two years. Chihuly also quit high school, and later on gained inspiration to go back and get a degree, then start work, and begins his life of glass art. Dale Chihuly was born on 20th…

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    only two singers remain, both showing impeccable singing talents, where the audience is faced with a difficult decision of who they want to win. Just as the audience is faced with the decision to choose a winner, in Tennessee William’s play, The Glass Menagerie, the three central characters all exhibit elaborate characteristics, making each one of them eligible for the protagonist role. Laura Wingfield, the youngest of the family and influence for the name of the play’s title, develops…

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    analyses how childhood innocence and the lack of responsibility can be irresistible. For some, transitioning from the simplicity of youth to the daunting reality of adulthood can be a demanding task. Holden Caufield in The Catcher in the Rye and Seymour Glass in “A Perfect Day for Bananafish” are two such people. As he lives out his secluded lifestyle in New Hampshire, JD Salinger studies the challenges that people take on as their innocence starts to fade. Salinger proves that every individual…

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    The Glass Castle Moving

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    In The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, the family endures a lot of hardships, one of which includes moving from place to place. They hardly stayed anywhere for more than a week, and moved more times than they could count to avoid the law and payments. Jeannette usually had a hard time making friends, so it would have been difficult for her. They eventually stopped the constant relocating, and settled in Welch, West Virginia. Moving was always one of the hardest things for me to do as I was…

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    9, The Glass Castle) is Jeannette’s child-like phrase she uses to describe how they were running from “FBI agents who were after [Rex]” (pg. 9, The Glass Castle), but the audience learns that the father did not pay taxes, and used that as an excuse to constantly move and not be tied down. The lack of stability in Jeannette’s life…

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    Being that there were only four characters in the play (Such as in Glass Menagerie), Each character had a significant amount of lines that needed to be memorised. Unlike Glass Menagerie, however, it was clear to tell that the characters had their lines memorised cleanly and had time after memorization to characterise better. The actors had put work into the production and…

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    courage to take charge of her life, to maximize her potential. Without Walls’ courage she would not have the ability to be who she is today. She had the courage to make her own way out of poverty. Although some of the events that take place in The Glass Castle might seem just a series of events that shape her and her family, I believe the core identity of Jeannette’s book was courage. This is what sets her apart from those who started and remain in poverty to those who turn their situation…

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