Stanley A. McChrystal

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    have a tarnished past. Blanche cannot fulfill that aspiration, though, for Stanley is always an obstacle in her attempts to forge a new path that she can travel on. As he has “something—ape-like about him” (83) and Blanche’s “uncertain manner…suggests a moth” (5), they are natural sworn enemies with warring desires. Blanche shies away from light as much as she can in order to seem demure and hide her reputation, but Stanley insists on people giving him unyielding truths and obsesses over the…

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    Williams continues this theme of mental entrapment with one of his later plays, A Streetcar Named Desire. In like manner to The Glass Menagerie’s Laura, Blanche DuBois remains a prisoner of her own mind as she too cannot let go of her haunting past. Towards the middle of the book, readers learn of the main experience that causes Blanche’s problems when interacting with men. Her ex-husband, Allan Gray, commits suicide after being called disgusting by Blanche as a result from seeing him with…

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    Steven Spielberg is one of the greatest directors of this generation. He has directed countless films and the three that stand out the most are Jurassic Park, Jaws, and Schindler’s List. Steven Spielberg has used many cinematic techniques such as specific color scheme and camera movement. One technique that he is mainly known for is the use of tracking shots. An analysis of these techniques will show how Spielberg uses cinematic techniques to capture his artistic vision. In the film Schindler’s…

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    Williams is a play that displays the theme of “desire” in many scenes but not only in a sexual way. Desire is shown within the play through Stanley’s desire for power and control, Blanche’s desire for security and her desire to live in a fantasy world. Stanley portrays the alpha male where he shows dominance over other characters and takes…

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    Blanche is looking for love and wanting someone to love her since losing her husband. Blanche seeks out her sister Stella who lives in New Orleans Louisiana. Blanche sister is married to a man name Stanley who has control over what her Stella does in life. Blanche being in an emotional state looks to Stanley friend Mitch…

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    Why do common people perform unethical acts? Yale psychologist, Stanley Milgram, researches human behavior and wrote about some of his findings in his article, "The Perils of Obedience." In 1963, Milgram conducted a test using random subjects and actors in a fake electric chair. He gave the subject the power to increase the voltage of the electric chair and "shock" the actor as a form of punishment (Milgram 78). To his surprise, the data showed that nearly all of the subjects administered…

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    The presence of danger or irritability plays a huge impact on the reactions of every individual. According to Stanley Milgram in his novel the “The Perils of Obedience”, he states that authority figures can cause signs of tension and turn people into “lethal intrustuments in the hands of unscrupulous authority” (184). Also in Chapter 4 of Lauren Slaters novel, “Obedience Skinners Box”, states that humans rely on their social cues and see what others to do in reaction to someone in danger by…

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    Stanley Milgram Outline

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    1. Explain and discuss the background events and ideas which led to Milgram’s research. Stanley Milgram (1963) was a American social psychologist who carried out the destructive obedience experiment at Yale University in 1963. He was very interested in how far people would go in a situation where it meant hurting another person under an authority figures orders. If an authority figure affected obedience levels in everyday American men. This idea came about after Adolf Eichmann's trial in…

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    played by Kim Hunter. Stella’s husband, Stanley, played by Marlon Brando, is not too fond of Blanche and throughout the plot, he and Blanche argue constantly. The main difference in the movie when contrasting with the play was in regards to Blanche and Stanley’s relationship being portrayed differently in the film. Blanche and Stanley continuously bickered throughout the play. In the play, Blanche is portrayed as an innocent, helpless women, and Stanley always trying to mess with her head.…

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    Psychological Blow Out

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    This 1981 American classic horror film directed by Brian De Palma. The protagonist of this story Jack is a film sound man from Philadelphia. When recording sound for a low-cost horror film, he accidentally recorded the evidence of a murder of a presidential candidate and got involved in a bizarre political conspiracy. Palma is known as "the Hitchcock of the United States" and "the Master of contemporary Suspense Film". He is also considered as “part of the New Hollywood wave of filmmaking”[…

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