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    Some art goes slightly glanced at, seen at the surface level as just art rather than what it is and why it’s like that. Most art even finds itself largely taken for granted, being a large part of our lives. We live in a world made up of and by art, for instance, all around us we see paintings, architecture, sculpture, fashion, and even technology. However what is art really? How did it become such a big part of our lives? And what would our lives be without it? This research is to find out…

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    “If a man can only obey and not disobey, he is a slave; if he can only disobey and not obey, he is a rebel” (Fromm 125). Obedience is a trait that parents instill in children to keep them safe and out of trouble. Throughout life, people realize obedience is not always the answer; however, ruling out obeying as a whole is counterproductive. In “Disobedience as a Psychological and Moral Problem”, Erich Fromm claims people fear authority, yet wish to climb the ladder to reach maximum power. In…

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    Society ignoring the problems they create is a common problem on Earth. Whether it be knowingly ignorant or they are unaware of the problem, societies often ignore the unpleasant and focus on the beautiful. At the Paris Climate Change Conference of 2015, large countries ignored the massive problems of death, sinking, and disease on the Pacific Islands caused by their emissions. Meanwhile, in Never Let Me Go society ignores the horrible conditions they let the clones live in. The novel’s…

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    “The Bloody Chamber,” also discusses the limitations of the feminist use of the genre. For instance, the mark made by the key on the forehead of the young bride remains and she lives in shame even after the Marquis is killed, and that too for no fault of hers. It points to the limitations of experimenting with conventionally patriarchal genres. “The Bloody Chamber,” interpreted as a warning to writers of female gothic, also hints at the dangers of being straddled between affirmation and…

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    her hand away from the minister and points out the cowardice he is showing: “Thou wast not bold!--thou wast not true!... Thou wouldst not promise to take my hand, and mother's hand, to-morrow noontide!” (108). Pearl is not afraid to point out the faults she sees in those around her. She and her mother have survived seven years of publicly being shamed, and minister Dimmesdale is not brave enough to publicly admit to his sins and stand with the family he helped create. Pearl is protecting herself…

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    father does apologize but only in a sarcastic way. He just tells them “I’m sorry. There. That’s it. I’ve said it. Now can I go?” (pg 144) which is what they want to hear and the only thing he can say to be set free. All of these traumatic events transform him from a loving, kind, energetic youthful father into a man stiped of his idenity. He has no real identity left and all he has to live by these “masks” of the stereotypical Asian man. In this section the father does not reveal any thing…

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    Although complicated tasks were divided among workers, the workers become more dependent on one another. The division of labor among individuals allowed them to transform land into property, however an unequal distribution of resources emerged as not all individuals held the same talents and abilities as one another. Therefore, the use of resources were unequal since some individuals could benefit by being naturally…

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    brooding, his face wields no signs of hostility, but rather a warm, welcoming countenance make up for his pseudo-menacing features. His mouth resembles a maw with a wide and toothy smile that at first glance seems carnivorous, but after a double take transforms into its true form: a jovial beam that could make even a vagabond clown return a weak smile. He has a birth mark, right under his chin, in the form of a fore-shortened Florida with a big of Georgia added onto it, if looked at from the…

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    of their previous desires, feelings, or status? The love juice, a crucial symbol of love in A Midsummer Night's Dream, is used to describe the vision of fondness as an irrational, inexplicable, and frivolous force that ultimately overwhelms and transforms a person, whether it is desired or not. Inclusion of author and text: William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream Thesis statement: Although this play is meant to be a comedy, the theme of love runs a major line across the story. Love plays…

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    According to Thomas J. Watson, “If we do not take advantage of our opportunity, it is our own fault.” The novel, “Lord of the Flies”, by William Golding, is about the boy’s freedom using many archetypical objects on the island without adults and rules of civilization during World War-II. The author agrees according to looking at human experiences that if given opportunities to start all over again, humans will be the same again. By saying this he means related to novel if boys were given to…

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