Ralph Fiennes

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    How Equality 7-2521 is an Egoist Being an egoist can be defined as having a lot of self pride and self importance that only benefits one’s self being over others. Equality is an egotist because egotists have an habit of talking about themselves in a self promoting fashion that resembles an ad man promoting a products futhermore a egotist has a high level of confidence as well as being self centered and self loving. They are usually difficult people to handle because they easily lose their…

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    Some may argue that people interact with nature in an overall positive way because of the poem titled, “When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer” by Walt Whitman, and how it shows that humans interact with nature in a positive way. However, when people do interact with nature, it is usually in a negative way and they tend to take the Earth and all it has to offer for granted, as shown in “My Life as a Bat” by Margaret Atwood, because people's feelings for bats are almost always negative, as well as…

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    intuition, feelings, and individual acts of heroism. The Transcendental Club, a group of literary leaders, used these ideas to spread transcendentalism through their own writing, and the writing of those they influenced. The members were led by Ralph Waldo Emerson, and questioned the doctrines of churches and business practices, supported the antislavery movement,…

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    There are many pieces of literature and media that embody the idea of transcendentalism and anti-transcendentalism. In this quarter, we have read Bartleby the Scrivener by Herman Melville, “Self-Reliance” by Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Walden by Henry David Thoreau. We have also watched the films Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and Fight Club, all of which refers to transcendentalism and anti-transcendentalism in some way or another. Transcendentalism is the belief that knowledge of reality is derived…

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    Thoreau Metaphors

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    Henry David Thoreau was a transcendentalist thinker who decided to live next to a pond for a while and write a book that most current day high school students despise. However, some of the lessons hidden in his abstract metaphors and confusing similes still hold weight today. One of the main focuses of Walden was to show readers that they can live off of the bare minimum and do not need fancy technology to live. His life at Walden Pond proved this notion. While many people may have read…

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    Imagine dropping everything you had and all you’ve ever lived for to go on a journey that could enable you to reach a lifelong goal you’ve always had. The downside is that it would not be a simple journey, but a journey that would be very difficult, painful, and could even result in your own death! Would you do it? Would you risk your life in order to achieve a single goal? Chris McCandless would do it, and he did. Chris McCandless was a bold character in the book, Into the Wild. McCandless was…

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    Transcendentalism is an idealistic approach to identity, nature, humanity, and divinity. The themes derived from Emerson and Thoreau center on this transcendental view of self-reliance and nature. In Thoreau’s Walden, he uses key points Emerson shows in Self-Reliance. The two men carry a great influential impact on society showing ideas of non-conformity, infancy, identity, the meaning of self-reliance, and an overall connection to nature. Emerson and Thoreau teach what purpose nature has to…

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    Antebellum experienced rapid societal change stemming from the industrialization and rapid urbanization of north, marking the economic transition to capitalism. With the shift to capitalism, individualism developed from the change in the value of individual labor and nostalgia for the frontier. As the increasingly moral middle-class became more solidified, the wage gap increased, and the northerners became increasingly economically different from the south, the reform impulse grew. Reform…

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    Different from all architects at his time, Frank Lloyd Wright, Sullivan's disciple, treated rules as something to be broken when needed. Frank Lloyd Wright’s architecture was rooted in nature; he called it organic. How did he make his organic architecture apply to time, to environment and to man? How did he merge environment to urban and rural buildings with the use of different materials? Wright chose the word organic to describe his architecture and first used the term in a public address in…

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    Essays are a medium of writing often chosen to make ideas that are new, or controversial, or even just more complex, know to an educated audience. Ralph Waldo Emerson, an American author and transcendentalist wrote a collection of essays, one of which was one of his most famous titled, Self-Reliance. Self-Reliance is an essay full of metaphors, parenthetical, cumulative and various other types of syntax structures, as well as personification. All these qualities are consistent through Emerson’s…

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