Tennessee State University

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    is a recurring motif throughout the book and often helps explain why Atticus makes certain choices. Although mockingbirds are not a main plot point, they provide a feature that is essential to the novel. Much like To Kill a Mockingbird, many of Tennessee Williams 's works have influential titles that provide another layer of detail. The Glass Menagerie, Cat on a Hot…

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    Humans tend to create temporary methods of escape to break free from the true reality of life. In “The Glass Menagerie”, by Tennessee Williams, the main characters are trapped in a difficult life during the depression, which leads them to seek mechanisms of escape from the real world. This desire for escape from reality is an underlying message throughout the play. Laura, Amanda, and Tom each explore different methods of breaking away from the confinement, and they try to transcend the reality…

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    evident in both The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams and Lives of the Saints by Nino Ricci. Both authors use, what seem to be, ordinary objects as an avenue to symbolize various reoccurring themes throughout the story. Although the symbols used in each novel differ greatly from each other in a literal sense, figuratively and symbolically, they are equally as powerful in representing the themes common to both stories. Through the use of powerful symbols, Tennessee Williams and Nino Ricci…

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    Merriam Webster defines obsession as “a state in which someone thinks about someone or something constantly or frequently especially in a way that is not normal.” People who seem obsessed can come off as foolish to others but to them they do not realize the things they are doing are drastic. A common obsession of many people is that of their past. It provides an escape from the truth of the present and the pain of reality. The theme of obsession is unmistakable in three short stories: “The Glass…

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    Amelie Analysis

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    Amelie’s Wish In one of the last scenes of Amelie the director conveys Amelie’s internal struggles about accepting or rejecting her feelings for Nino through music and camera movements. The scene begins with the soft playing of piano that is quickly buried under rain -which is imagined by Amelie- but grows as her imagination of Nino purchasing yeast for her continues. The piano reaches its highest point just before her doorbell’s harsh ringing and is abruptly cut off. The softness of the music…

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    as well as the fatherly leader role (Williams). The protagonist Tom and his close relation to the author himself, his major role in the drama, and how he relates to other characters in the work. To begin, the character of Tom Wingfield relates to Tennessee Williams, the author, in his personal life and childhood growing up. Williams was born into a family of his upright mother, a forceful and assertive father, and a delicate older sister who faced some mental illnesses (The Glass Menagerie).…

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    Beckett’s Waiting for Godot perfectly encapsulates all the uncertainties of modernity? Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot belongs to the Theatre of the Absurd. The absence of a meaningful plot, of objective dialogues and of absolute certainty is the state of absurdity. Beckett utilizes absurdity to play around with the concept of existential nullity which saw man trapped in a hostile world. Human life is meaningless and this created a sense of alienation, despair and uncertainty. The play…

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    Glass Menagerie Glass

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    Both glass and people are unique. No two pieces of glass or two people are the same. In the play, The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams, one character Laura collects glass. Laura is twenty three and she has a crippled leg. Because of her crippled leg, she became very shy and lost all confidence. Laura’s glass collection represents Laura in many ways. Like glass, Laura is unique, delicate, and beautiful. Being unique is not being like anyone else, and Laura definitely is not like anyone…

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    In the film, The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams, the three main characters are affected by several problems that create stress in their relationship. Most of the problems are caused by the characters that live in a small apartment in a lower- middle-class St. Louis Tenement during the late 1930s. One of the problems that create stress is the broken relationship that Tom and Amanda have. Tom is forced to work in a shoe warehouse to support the family but dislikes it. The family…

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    The Kings of the Music Industry Two of America’s all time music icons, Elvis Presley “The King of Rock and Roll” and Michael Jackson “The King of Pop” and how they changed the music industry. Elvis Presley was born on Jan 8, 1935 to Gladys and Vernon Presley in East Tupelo, Mississippi. Unfortunately at the time of birth Elvis’s twin brother Jesse was stillborn, and Elvis grew up an only child. While Michael Jackson was born on Aug 29, 1958 to Katherine and Joe Jackson in Gary Indiana.…

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