SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 77
Download to read offline
Perception In The Truman Show
The film The Truman Show portrays an array of the ways of knowing continuously throughout. One
of these ways can easily be deciphered as intuition. The essential gut feeling can swallow up any
other reliable source solely because of a certain unexplainable phenomena pulling the heart and
mind in polar directions. Initially, it is Truman's intuition that over powers his refuting thoughts and
this is demonstrated when Truman explains his theory to Marlon, who then proceeds to invalidate it.
This leaves Truman empty handed and with a lack of reliable sources, except his intuition. The
memory of Sylvia's statement was the bases of Truman's instinctiveness and other events such as the
sight of his dead father further developed this gut feeling. The authenticity of these events cannot ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
At the start of the film, Truman believes that he has a clear understanding of the reality in which he
is presented, but only through his mere sight. Eyes have a tendency to be deceiving, therefore, it
should take more than one out of the five senses to be reassured of a particular belief. The film
follows Truman as he soon begins to become skeptical of his surroundings, which in turn become
the initial cause of his route to discovering the truth. The doubt that beings to form within Truman,
caused by his sense of sight, could not support him entirely until it merges with his sense of touch.
This is heavily depicted in the duration of the final few scenes where Truman's ship collides with the
sky. Despite Truman seeing the solid plaster wall as a supposed sky, the moment he touches the wall
with his bare hands, his theory is comprehensively validated through the act of him breaking down
into tears with utter shock from realization. Forms of sense perception were put forth in order to
convince Truman of his ignorance to the falsehood of his alleged
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Duality In Cannery Row
Cannery Row: A Literary Excavation on Duality Cannery Row is a town located in Monterey,
California. Despite being small, dirty and crowded, it is a well functioned town and is home to
people from different walks of life. In the novel's prologue, John Steinbeck wrote the following: "Its
inhabitants are, as one man once said, 'whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches' by which he
meant Everybody" and "[have] the man looked through another peephole he might have said: 'Saints
and angels and martyrs and holy men,' and he would have meant the same thing" (Steinbeck 1). He
basically comments that the difference in viewpoints given the same event results from the power of
perspective and duality observed in people. One might see Cannery Row as a low–down place while
the others might see Cannery Row as a lively, vigorous town. One would see a character's actions
disputable while the others would see their behaviors admirable. The viewpoints of the readers and
the way characters behave at various times explain the fact that Cannery Row and its inhabitants
possess qualities crossing good and evil.
Cannery Row begins with the character Lee Chong, a small grocery owner that supplies the town.
Lee was depicted as a kind and generous man, and his good nature was reflected through his
appearance and personality. Steinbeck states that "[his] mouth was full and benevolent and the flash
of gold when he smiled was rich and warm" (Steinbeck 7). This simple passage gives us a clear first
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Differences Between The Giver Book And Movie
This essay is about comparing the Giver book and movie. The Giver is a story about a boy named
Jonas who was chosen to be the community's next Receiver of Memory. He lived in a community
where everything was chosen for the citizens, and everything was perfect. During Jonas' training, he
realized that the community was missing something and that there was more in the world. Jonas
wanted the everybody to know that. The Giver book was then made into a movie. Though the two
were based on the same story, there are three important differences that could've made them two
separate stories. The three main differences between the book and the movie are Asher and Fiona's
Assignments, the similarity all Receivers had and the Chief Elder's role. One ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
His parents did, and Lily did, and so did all of his group members and friends. But there were a few
exceptions: Jonas himself, and a female Five who he had noticed had the different, lighter eyes,"
(pg. 20 – Lois Lowry). Only those with light eyes would become the next Receiver of Memory,
which is why it was such an important detail. In the Giver movie, it was changed into a birthmark.
That birthmark was shaped like a triangle and in the movie, all Receivers of Memory had them. The
third main difference between The Giver book and the movie was the Chief Elder's role. In the
Giver book, the Chief Elder was not much of an important character, "The initial speech at the
Ceremony of Twelve was made by the Chief Elder, the leader of the community who was elected
every ten years," (pg. 51 – Lois Lowry). However, the Chief Elder played an important role in the
Giver movie. In the book, the Chief spoke in a few chapters during Ceremonies and that was all. The
Giver movie's Chief Elder always watched Jonas closely. She started becoming suspicious of Jonas,
and so she would warn Jonas' mother and The Giver. She then found out about Jonas' plan to escape.
When she did, she ordered Asher to "lose him" (The Giver movie). That meant she wanted Asher to
kill Jonas. This essay was about the three main differences between the Giver book and the Giver
movie. The first main difference was talked about in the first body paragraph. That paragraph was
about
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Introducing America 's New Family
Introducing America's New Family: The Bundy's American television today has drastically changed
from the first appearance of the television in the 1920s. Currently, television is nothing but sitcoms
poking jokes at the disabled, the LGBT community adapting to the American family standard, and
even late night television poking fun at our 2016 Presidential candidates.1950s television depicted
America's heterosexual, patriarchal society in which an "ideal and acceptable" family consisted of a
generous working class father, an accommodating and good–natured mother, and a few respectful
children. Whereas 1950s American television required the audience to accept television families
without question, American networks today understand that times are changing and just like mass
communication, adapting to the millennial generation of technology is a must for television families
to appeal to the growing masses. But when did television families first start to step away from the
cultural ideals of its time? From the 1920s through the 1960s television upheld the Father Knows
Best standard of television with shows such as 'Father Knows Best" and "I Love Lucy." Well, fast
forward 30 years, and in came the Bundy's. The Bundy's were television's first dysfunctional, on
screen family to undermine the idea that an ideal family must function perfectly all the time.
Married with Children reminded us that it was ok to not conform to society's cultural norms.
"...people want to watch a family that
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Cinematic Features Displayed in Pleasantville and The...
The Cinematic Features Displayed in Pleasantville and The Truman Show
The following essay, which I have composed, is based on two important films of the last decade.
Their titles are "Pleasantville" and "The Truman Show". Starting with the "Pleasantville", the
general overview of the film's plot gets more complicated the further you get into it. It brings up
several issues all of which I have commented on in this essay.
The film starts with two teenagers, David and Jennifer. David has an addiction to old reruns of a
fifties sitcom also by the name of "Pleasantville". Jennifer is the complete opposite of her brother,
leading a rather promiscuous lifestyle. During an argument, their TV remote ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
This television show would be live twenty–four hours a day, seven days a week filming this
unwanted pregnancy's life. They name the baby Truman Burbank, and the show, "The Truman
Show". The film starts when Truman is in his mid to late twenties with an ideal job, wife and home
in the town which is Seahaven. I will relate more to this town in the next section. All this is, from
actors to the weather, is controlled by Christof, the director of the show. He controls everything
around Truman and will be talked about more in the next section.
The towns of Pleasantville and Seahaven, the sets for both films are similar in ways and different in
others. The main similarity is how both are supposed to be 'perfect worlds'. Pleasantville, the first
perfect world, is based on what most American fifties sitcoms were truly like. They also repeat re–
runs of these shows even today just like Pleasantville 'the TV show' is in the film. These sitcoms
usually featured wholesome American families consisting of a father, mother and two children, a
boy and a girl. Their lives were basically the same. The two children would grow up, get married
and have children whilst the husband would go to work and the wife would stay at home. In
Pleasantville the town, this is what the population's lives are really like. They also have tacky
phrases such as "Honey, I'm Home" used
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Skepticism In The Truman Show
The Truman Show introduces us to a man named Truman who is living a fake life, a life in which
everything around him has been scripted out by a director of a television show. He was adopted at
birth and raised inside a television studio that was made to resemble the real world. However,
Truman is unaware that he has been the star of a television show since birth and thanks to free will,
he continues to live life as a normal person. Meanwhile, the director, Christof attempts to control
every aspect of Truman's life as if to lead him to take certain actions and to think a certain way.
Like so many other philosophical issues, the problem of skepticism can be traced back as far as the
ancient Greeks. Nevertheless, it was Descartes who placed this ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Given the logical possibility that such a creature exists, how can we be certain that our beliefs about
the world are not radically mistaken? How, Descartes asked, can we be certain that we are all not
utterly deceived? The Truman Show presents a similar skeptical problem, but in the most
convincing of ways. Christof is clearly the evil genius that Descartes described, but whereas
Descartes' fatal demon is a creature of pure fantasy, the character of Christof and the conspiracy that
he orchestrates seem dangerously real. In Descartes' Second Meditation he says, "I suppose, then,
that all the things that I see are false, I persuade myself that nothing has ever existed of all that my
fallacious memory represents to me". In the Truman show, Truman finds himself believing that the
world around him is the real world, however he is being deceived. Would Truman have been better
off believing Descartes' words? Descartes attempts to question how he is supposed to understand the
world around him as real. Through thinking and questioning, Descartes knows himself, and his mind
to be real. However, he still has an uncertainty about the world around him. Descartes concludes the
Second Meditations by posing that, "because it is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Loneliness, Sympathy, and Remuneration in John...
Loneliness, Sympathy, and Remuneration in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
Many themes were portrayed in Cannery Row. These themes give the play depth and fascination.
The three most significant themes thought are Loneliness, Sympathy, and Remuneration, allowing
the story to reach many areas in life.
In the story Cannery Row Loneliness is a main theme to the characters lives. One of these themes is
Loneliness. 'He was a dark and lonesome looking man' No one loved him. No one cared about
him'(Page 6). The severity of his solitude makes this theme one of the most important. The seclusion
of this man can penetrate ones innermost thoughts and leave them with a sense of belonging after
hearing of this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Sympathy, another theme in this book, can have the same amount of impact on an individual.
Instead of it having a negative reaction to the reader it has a superior reaction to the reader. ?Lee
Chong? knew he could not have helped it, but he wished he might have known and perhaps tried to
help. It was deeply a part of Lee?s kindness and understanding that man?s right to kill himself is
inviolable, but sometimes a friend can make it unnecessary?(Page 2). Lee was having
compassionate sentiments for the man who committed suicide. He had a deep feeling that he could
of helped in someway to convince the man that his life was worth living. A side story that was
important to the theme of Sympathy was a story about Mrs. Kitty Casini a mouse and Mary Talbot ?
Kitty Casini had a mouse?Daintily she stabbed the mouse through the back and drew it wriggling to
her and her tail flicked with tense delight? ?I can?t blame Kitty Casini? said Mary. ?I?m just not
going to like her no matter how much I want to??(Pages 155–156). Mary had intense sympathy for
that mouse that with no doubt died a tragic death. She went to the extreme of disliking on of her
favorite cat. Sympathy can bring about the good in people. Sympathy for loved ones or strangers can
surprise one for their intense emotions.
The final noteworthy theme in the story Cannery Row was Remuneration. Remuneration is the most
memorable thing a person can do
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cartoons And The Powerpuff Girls
"Ed, Edd n Eddy" and "The Powerpuff Girls": Different Cartoons, Similar Traits
Danny Antonucci, creator of the well–renowned children's cartoon "Ed, Edd n Eddy", did not
originally make cartoons of the sort. His career had previously consisted of more explicit, adult
cartoons; the animation was the result of a dare given to him to create a new production for younger
audiences (Celebrity Bio). In a similar way, Craig McCracken originally called his cartoon centered
around crime–fighting girls "Whoopass Stew". When it aired on television, it was changed to "The
Powerpuff Girls", obviously for the sake of its viewers (Turner Classic
Movies). These small coincidences between the creators are far from the only similarities between
both ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Equally, Blossom is the brains and unofficial leader of the group, Bubbles is the sweet and 'innocent'
one, and
Buttercup is the tough, 'don't–mess–with–me' one. While these characters come from different
cartoons, it is easy to see that they share many similar attributes with only subtle contrast.
While the connections between both cartoons' settings are not as easy to make, they're not the most
difficult to, either. All episodes of both cartoons are situated in one general location.
"Ed, Edd n Eddy" takes place in a small town called Peach Creek, with a suburban neighborhood
and cul–de–sac that the three spend most of their time in. On the other hand, "The Powerpuff
Girls" takes place in the city of Townsville, which is primarily urban and has its own mayor. But
while the two settings are geographically different, they both have a forest with woodland creatures
that the two trios have visited as a way to complete their goals. For instance, in one episode, the Eds
attempted to execute a scam involving frogs ("Thick as an Ed"). Similarly, the girls once saved a
squirrel from an eagle ("Stray Bullet"). Lastly, school is depicted in both cartoons. In the fifth season
of "Ed, Edd n Eddy", the three are junior high students, while throughout "The Powerpuff Girls", the
three are kindergartners. While not as obvious as the connections between the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Function Of The Environment In Cannery Row, By John Steinbeck
Human behavior is a function of the environment that he/she is brought up in because it is the
environment that shapes the person's morals. This statement is openly validated in the novel
Cannery Row where an inclusive community is built as a result of good morals that have been
developed and shaped by the environment. Cannery Row is novel that was published in 1945 by
John Steinbeck in Monterey. It was named after a waterfront street in California which had sardine
caning factories. According to Grasse et al (75), fellowship and warm–heartedness is all that is
required to form a united and successful community. Wealth is important part of one's life but it
should not take away the person's happiness. Steinbeck in his work uses the characters of the novel
to communicate this message in a clear and understandable manner. The name of the novel matches
with the actual meaning that the writer wanted to communicate the readers. He used the name to
enable the readers to be able to relate the novel's actual meaning with authentic opinions.
One of the ideas that show clearly from the novel is that, proper care of the environment can
improve our livelihood. This could be through sourcing of food and income. This is evidenced by
majority of the characters in the novel who depend on the environment for livelihood. The marine
biologist by the name Doc gets his income from collecting marine creatures and presents them for
research in colleges and universities. Lee Chong operates a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row As A Pastoral Novel Similar To Tortilla Flat
Alexander's excerpt drives his point that Cannery Row is a pastoral novel similar to Tortilla Flat but
with deeper and more admirable sentiments. In his point of view, Cannery Row displays the
marginal existence of the relatively primitive townsfolk in Monterey, with its pastoral aspects
coming from detached, truth–hungry Doc. Alexander argues that the pastoral tone of Cannery Row
is established in the short inter–chapter where Steinbeck renders Monterey as a microcosm with
Mack and the boys' orbits being more stable than those of the world. In addition, Alexander believes
that Mack's famous apology to Doc for wrecking his lab 6recounts the outcast–renunciate status of
the men.
Though as opinionated as any other literary criticism, Alexander justifies his standpoint with
specific examples and allusions from the novel. The writing's goal to uphold Cannery Row as one
long "pastoral poem" is more precise and thorough than many other criticism's with similar
objectives. Alexander's direct and confident tone makes his essay easier to read compared to other
sources.
In Benson's article, he describes his belief that Cannery Row is a tribute to friendship, specifically to
a man named Ed Ricketts, who some say Doc from Cannery Row vaguely resembles. He
approaches the novel from three different perspectives: from the novel's literary context, its
underlying naturalistic philosophy, and from the direction of Steinbeck as an artist. Also, Benson
contends that Cannery Row
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row Language Analysis
The opening passage of Cannery Row by John Steinbeck reveals bit about the life of Cannery row in
Monterey in California. It tells about the life of a small community but doesn't yet truly
acknowledge the protagonists of the text. The author concentrates on building a setting by using
creative wording and taking account the audience of his text. In the Cannery row Steinbeck
demonstrates how to use English language when describing milieu. Steinbeck creates the picture one
word at a time by exploiting our senses. "Cannery Row. . . is a poem, a grating noise, a stink, a
quality of light. . . " Already in the first sentence of the chapter, the author captures readers interest
by these words: something we can hear, smell and see. This is used
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay about The Importance of Respect in John Steinbeck's...
The Importance of Respect in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
Cannery Row is a novel John Steinbeck wrote after World War I. At first, the novel almost seems
like a humorous book, written in a style commonly used by Steinbeck. The book has its main plot,
but also has side chapters that periodically interrupt the main idea, which adds to the story. One
would think that these side chapters are there to universalize the book, but in fact that is not true.
The side chapters tell their own story, and they have a message that Steinbeck was clearly trying to
show through his book. The novel has a main point about respect. In Cannery Row , Steinbeck is
trying to say that respectability is the destructive force that preys on the world. Steinbeck ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This man is very mysterious in the book and is meant to represent loneliness and aging. A young
boy in chapter four makes fun of the old china man. He felt that he should make fun of him "to keep
his self respect" (19). Both of these incidents illustrate that a person may be driven to
uncomfortable, frightening and even suicidal lengths to keep up a front. These two characters were
made fun of, laughed at and branded as different. They were not respected in any way, which
Steinbeck clearly shows.
The plot of the novel begins to become clear in the next few chapters. This is where Mack and his
gang of friends are introduced. Mack and the boys were homeless; until one day when an abandoned
fish food storage house was given to them. They loved the house for its protection from the weather.
The boys put furniture, posters, beds, a stove and even some flowers in and around their house.
Their house gave them a since of pride. "In their minds they sneered at unsettled people who had no
house to go to" (34). They now felt more respect and pride in society.
Doc is also introduced in these chapters. Doc is one of the most respected people in town. He runs a
laboratory called Western Biological and through the years he had became the fountain of
philosophy, science and art in Cannery row. "Doc would listen to any kind of nonsense and change it
for you to a kind of wisdom. His mind had no horizon–– and his sympathy had no warp . . .
Everyone who thought of him
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Character Development in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Essay
Character Development in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
Maybe it's more important to be appreciated than to be wealthy. Cannery Row by John Steinbeck
(1945) is one of the most unique of all of the Nobel Prize winning novels. Cannery Row is set in a
very poor area of California known as Monterey. It is a small port town south of San Francisco. The
time era is post Depression and World War II. The novel is about how lower class people with warm
hearts have the ability to create their own heaven on earth. The novel starts out with a group of
people known as Mack and the boys. None of these men have jobs, and they all live in a small shack
at the end of town. Mack and the boys want to do something nice for their loving friend Doc. Doc is
a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
They set up the surprise party at Doc's house, but Doc is late getting home and by the time he gets
there, his house is trashed and everyone is passed out drunk. There seems to be a bad feeling
haunting the town for a while after the party. As time goes on, Doc, Lee and Mack begin to spend
more time together. They encounter many obstacles throughout the rest of the novel. First the whole
town comes down with a terrible influenza, then they have to deal with heart ache when they find
their friend, dead in the ocean. After things begin to return to normal, Mack and Lee decide to throw
another party for their dear friend Doc. This time Doc attends his party and has a wonderful time.
He is very happy to have friends like Lee, Mack and the boys to show that he is appreciated. Doc
then begins to clean his house while he thinks back on all his memories in the beautiful town known
as Cannery Row. Steinbeck develops the characters and their personalities in a unique way, turning a
small ordinary town into a magical paradise.
The main character, Doc has a strong personality that shows leadership. He is the strong one who
holds the stability among all the other characters. He is a gentle, confident, middle–aged man.
Everyone in the novel respects Doc and confides in him for all their needs or advice. One quote
showing how Doc is a leader to all states, "Doc tips his hat to dogs as he drives by and the dogs look
up and smile at him"(23). Doc is well
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Truman Show
1. The Truman Show included multiple scenes of people reading newspaper headlines. The
headlines had secret meanings to them that an unknown viewer would not notice.
Crackdown on Homeless: This headline appeared the day after the presumed homeless man
identified himself as Truman's father. After he did this, random people took him away. The intent of
the newspaper was to convince Truman that the person he encountered was a homeless man and that
SeaHaven is trying to get the homeless out.
Travelers Beware: After Truman decided that he wanted to travel to Fiji, he went to a traveling
agency to book a flight. While he was waiting for the agent, he looked over and saw the sign
headline. This sign wanted to heighten Truman's fear of travel.
Forest ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Contradictory to the movie, the name also inquires that everything around Truman is the truth. In
addition, Truman had moments of resemblance to Jesus Christ which also ties into the names
Christof and Santa Maria.
4. The Truman Show used many different camera angles to depict every aspect of Truman's life.
This was so the viewer had complete satisfaction. They used reasonable angles such as store security
cameras, picture frames, and mechanical equipment. In contrast, the show used angles from inside
vending machines, pencil sharpeners, and buttons on other actor's clothing. When Christof and
Truman were in a shot together, Christof would always be bigger in one way or another, except for
one shot. This was to showcase that Christof overpowers Truman.
5. The quote by Roger Ebert states "Television, with such insatiable hunger for material, has made
celebrities into content." He is speaking about when viewers watch something and become
interested in the content that they do not see the actors as actual people. The actors are just seen as
material for the viewers. For example, when the transmission of the show was cut, Truman's face
was used as a stand by screen. Christof said, "We're getting higher ratings with this graphic..." This
in turn shows how the viewers saw Truman as a good story instead of a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row Dbq
The Cannery Row is like a domino, if one member drops than the rest are affected by it. Cannery
Row was written by John Steinbeck. He was one of the finest authors during 1900s. His stories
mostly take place during the Great Depression in Monterey, California. He wrote about migrant
workers and people lifestyle during the Great Depression. Even though he was a fictional author, he
kept his books close to reality and connected to the current event. This story is identical to a domino
because Cannery Row use to be a happy and beautiful town but after Macks and his friends fallout it
turns into a dull and sad place. The reason behind their fallout was when Mack and his friends
decided to give a surprising party. When they were preparing for the party, some drunks broke into
the party from La Ida created a chaos. This chaos caused the boys to fight with them and fight with
them which led to Doc's laboratory. In Cannery Row, John Steinbeck, shows how everyone is
interconnected in the community and if one part of a community fails then ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
When Mack and his friends fail because of the disastrous party that was supposed to be a surprise
party for Doc, they affect everyone who is connected to him. After their fallout Cannery Row
becomes a sad and dull place. People of Cannery Row go through an unpleasant time.The happy and
helpful Lee Chong who once gave the boys things from his store for free goes through a financial
loss. There was rumors that the boys stole money and liquor for the party from his store. Dora's Bear
Flag Restaurant closed down for two months. Everyone who came to the disastrous party or were
involved in the party blamed themselves for their fall out.This shows how Mack and his friends are
interconnected and how one affects
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Character Analysis Of Cannery Row
Cannery Row is a town located in Monterey, California. Despite being small, dirty and crowded, it
is a well functioned town and is home to people from different walks of life. In the novel's prologue,
John Steinbeck wrote the following: "Its inhabitants are, as one man once said, 'whores, pimps,
gamblers, and sons of bitches' by which he meant Everybody" and "[have] the man looked through
another peephole he might have said: 'Saints and angels and martyrs and holy men,' and he would
have meant the same thing" (Steinbeck 1). He basically comments that the difference in viewpoints
given the same event results from the power of perspective and duality observed in people. One
might see Cannery Row as a low–down place while the others might see Cannery Row as a lively,
vigorous town. One would see a character's actions disputable while the others would see their
behaviors admirable. The viewpoints of readers and the way characters behave at various times
explain the fact that Cannery Row and its inhabitants possess qualities crossing good and evil.
Cannery Row begins with the character Lee Chong, a small grocery owner that supplies the town.
Lee was depicted as a kind and generous man, and his good nature was reflected through his
appearance and personality. Steinbeck states that "[his] mouth was full and benevolent and the flash
of gold when he smiled was rich and warm" (Steinbeck 7). This simple passage gives us a clear first
impression of what Lee Chong was like, a man with a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Jim Elliot : God 's Instrument
Grace Elliott
Mrs. Galaviz
English 12
15 April 2015
Jim Elliot: God's Instrument Slap! As the newborn's cry pierced the air, Philip James Elliot was
welcomed into the world on October 8, 1927 (Wikipedia). He was born, like all of us, pink, fragile,
and helpless. With time, spiritual maturity, and obedience, he developed into a mighty man of God
and great in the Christian faith. People are still impacted by his life and death. Elliot, known as Jim,
was a missionary who was brutally killed in the effort to evangelize the Huaorani people in Ecuador
(Wikipedia). Jim Elliot's death was not in vain because of his lasting legacy, which is illustrated by
the choices he made, the transformation of the tribe, and the encouragement to others ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
By having older brothers, he learned from their mistakes, and at the same time was a role model for
his sister. The faith and principles Elliot's family held on to, played a major role in who he was. At a
young age he could differentiate between right from wrong. His parents helped instill honesty and
obedience in him by enforcing it in the home (Wikipedia). From observing his faith–led father and
church members, he witnessed Jesus' intricate part in life. Elliot called Christ his Savior at age six,
and from then on he trusted God with his future (Flickas, "Jim", Wikipedia). In the following years,
he attended Benson Polytechnic High School (Flickas, Wikipedia). While there, became bolder in
his faith and sought after adventure (Flickas). Elliot was daily seen carrying his Bible or taking part
in extracurricular activities (Flickas, Wikipedia). After high school, he became a student at Wheaton
College in Illinois (Flickas, Wikipedia). Elliot devoted all he did to God, and took it upon himself to
present the Gospel to others (Flickas, Wikipedia). He stayed disciplined and looked for opportunities
to share (Flickas). From helping out in Mexico and an encounter with a missionary, he felt more
confident that God was calling him to witness in South America (Wikipedia, Flickas). He hoped one
day, soon, he would minister to a nation where Jesus was virtually unknown. Elliot was a man of
God, who had a heart for the lost. After his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of The Movie ' Truman Show '
What would you feel like if you found out that your whole life was fake and it was all for television?
The Truman Show is a film where a man for his whole life has been filmed for the entertainment of
others and doesn't even realize that he is on camera at all times. There are a few scenes that will be
discussed whether the scene is able to provide a religious experience.
The Truman Show is about a man named Truman Burbank. Before he was even born a large
corporation adopted him to use as the main character for their television show. Throughout the
movie, Truman slowly starts to notice that things seem a little odd and that the world around him
doesn't make sense. By the end of the movie, he knows that his life is fake even though no one told
him at the time that his world is fake.
The first scene that we will be looking at is the very first scene of the movie. In the scene we see a
man talking to us. He is the director of The Truman Show, he talks about how while the world
around Truman is fake Truman's emotions are real and genuine and that nothing about Truman is
fake in any way. Since the director created and runs the television show he can be seen as the holy
or divine because he created this world and can control every aspect of it. This scene asks the
questions is there a higher being. The director can be seen as a godly figure because he controls the
environment and the actions of everyone around Truman. Since everyone are actors on a tv show
then that means that all
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Truman Show Research Paper
Epistemology is a branch of philosophy concerning the method of how do we know what we know,
which can be referred to as the 'theory of knowing'. This philosophical idea is apparent in the 1998
film 'The Truman Show'. The lead protagonist Truman Burbank has lived his entire life as the star of
a 'reality' television show. Truman is not aware that his reality, the world around him, is simply an
extravagant set; his friends, mother, wife and colleagues are all actors. Truman's questioning of the
appearance of the reality around him leads him to discover the truth. This leads to the question "Is
the world within The Truman Show an illusion or does it have some reality?" This is a difficult
question to answer, as it is questioning what is real and there are many possible philosophical
positions that can support different views. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Empiricism is the theory stating that all our knowledge comes from sensory experience. We perceive
the world around us through our senses as real, for instance: a table feels hard and solid therefore it's
real, I can taste this burger, therefore its real. Philosopher John Lock says that when we are born our
minds are like blank slates (in Latin, this is called tabula rasa), slate being the original material that
black boards were once made of. Locke is saying that at birth our minds are clean blackboards, and
all the information we obtain through experiences in written on the blackboard. (Kaye, S.M &
Thomson, P, 2007) This relates to Truman's life as he was born into his fake reality as a blank slate
and through his sensory experiences has built his knowledge of this
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row Essay
The minor characters in John Steinbeck's novel Cannery Row are a contradiction within themselves.
Steinbeck shows two conflicting sides to each character; for example, Mack is smart and lazy and
some of his colleagues are both good and bad. Doc is a father figure with some bad habits. Dora
Flood is a kind–hearted saint who happens to run a brothel. Lee Chong is a shrewd businessman
who likes to take advantage of others. Henri is an artist with a French background even though he
isn't from France. Through his characters, Steinbeck shows that humans are complicated and can
have many faces.
Mack and his Boys are a group of down–and–out but always devious men who live together in the
run–down fishmeal shack, owned by Lee Chong, which they ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Gay is a gifted mechanic who can make any vehicle run. Steinbeck allows for most of his characters
to posses a double–sided appeal. All of the boys lead relatively normal lives by Cannery standards,
but can be seen in two different lights. On one hand they are do–gooders, holy–men, martyrs, the
type one would always want on their side. On the other hand, with their refined manipulative
abilities, they can be perceived as bullies, bottom–feeders, and lowlifes. They are the instigators and
problem–solvers; the straight–men and the comic reliefs; the villains and the heroes. With any role
they play, they proceed to play the opposite.
Doc is the owner of Western Biological Laboratory, a specimen supply house. Doc is a placid,
melancholy man who is a source of culture, munificence, and aid for all on the Row. He introduces
Dora's girls and the boys to opera, classical music, and literature, and he takes a mentally
handicapped boy in and cares for him. He is also a bit of a womanizer. Somehow, though, Doc
always seems lonely, and everyone on the Row constantly wants to do something to show him how
much he is loved. Doc is a sort–or father figure to the residents of Cannery Row. When the people
are sick, he is their doctor; when they are lonely, their psychologist; and when abandoned, he is their
home.
Dora Flood is the local madam; a proprietor of the Bear Flag Restaurant, a brothel. Dora is a large
woman with
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Of Symbolism In Radiohead's 'OK Computer'
In a society so rigidly ruled by structures, Radiohead holds up a funhouse mirror to reveal its flaws
and inner workings. Radiohead's OK Computer reveals that society's obsession with hiding
vulnerability through repeating symbolism, lyrical metaphors, and
By using repeating symbolic imagery, OK Computer shows that ruling power structures, like
religion and corporations, center around vulnerability in how they gain influence and in how they
are motivated. Additionally, in order to maintain their influence, these powers have to put up a front
of indestructibility while also managing internal struggles. Planes crashes are depicted throughout
the album's artwork, a symbol of innovation and monetary means that has failed and brought people
down with it. Planes, much like corporations, are supposed to have very few chinks in their armor,
but both can go down; both are vulnerable under their guise of perfection. There is also the case of
religion, where a statue of Jesus is seen being worshipped by a considerably smaller family.
Religion is a form of protection, both for the herd immunity and for the surety of an afterlife, and
the family is beneath, quite vulnerable. However, the statue is white, like the scribbles surrounding
it, while the family is not and would take more work to scribble over because of this. This suggests
that religion can be consumed easily and has less control over modern life than in previous
centuries. When the statue appears again, it is a hand behind a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
The book Cannery Row by John Steinbeck, is about a town that goes through good times and bad
times. This book shows that despite your differences, you can work together to make a great
community. It also demonstrates that the choices you make have an effect on other people. The book
starts out explaining a grocery store in Cannery Row. The owner, Lee Chong, is a very friendly and
nice person. A group of bums led by Mack, ask the grocer if they can rent a place that Lee Chong
owns, but doesn't use. They get his permission. This group of bums cause a lot of problems in this
book. One of them being stealing things from multiple people. The group is very shady, and are
good liars. They also try to throw a party at Docs, a scientist, which is a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
John Steinbeck's East of Eden
Good Versus Evil in East of Eden
The idea of good versus evil is illustrated in several ways in John Steinbeck's East of Eden. This is
seen through the external conflicts in the novel, the internal conflicts of the characters, and a
universal understanding of the battle between good and evil.
External conflicts between the main characters, Cathy and Adam, reflect the idea of good versus evil
in their relationship. Cathy, who is much like Satan, creates a huge fight between Adam and his
brother Charles with her manipulations. Later, she ruins Adam's dreams and breaks his heart when
she shoots him and leaves, sending Adam into a deep depression. After twelve years, Adam snaps
out of his dream world and confronts Cathy. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
(Lee is Adam's Chinese servant, who really is a main character in this novel). Lee's mother dies as a
result of a rape by railway workers who she had hidden her gender and later her pregnancy from.
The same men who raped Lee's mother help take care of him as he grows up. The taking care of the
infant Lee is seen as a light in a very dark world.
Another way the idea of good versus evil is expressed is by the internal conflicts of the characters.
Cathy is good example of a character that has an inner conflict of good versus evil. Cathy, the most
evil of all in this novel, kills her parents, manipulates Adam and Charles, attempts to abort her
children, shoots Adam, abandons her twin sons once they are born, and murders Faye, her friend and
boss. However, the good in Cathy overcomes the bad. By the end of the novel she becomes religious
and she leaves all of her fortune to her son. Charles is also a good example of a character struggling
with inner conflict. Whenever Adam beats him in a game, Charles becomes very abusive towards
him; once he almost kills Adam. However, Charles also protects Adam from others and he does, in
fact, love him. He "fought any boy who ... slurred Adam and ... protected Adam from his father's
harshness" (Steinbeck 491). Adam is forced to join the service and is sent to war, Charles tries to
keep in touch with him by writing letters. In
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of The Book ' Cannery Row ' By John Steinbeck
Polar Cannery Row, by John Steinbeck, is a book that follows the relationships the inhabitants of the
Monterey community have to one another. The adventures of the degenerates of the community
revolve around the highly respectable Doc, making up the main plot of the book. However, the story
of the dynamic between the two is laced with segments of distraught that paint the cannery into
something other than a home to American industry. Steinbeck creates this little community to
represent any other, however gives the reader different perspectives of the activities within in order
to deconstruct the expected utopia that everyone assumes to plague local communities. He shifts the
outlook on the cannery from a lifeless snapshot of a community located within Monterey California,
to a living image bustling with reality. Steinbeck creates a rift in perspective to reflect the hidden
values and realities of the ugly and beautiful through the interactions and pursuits of the degenerates
of the community, "Mack and the boys," and the figurehead of Cannery Row, Doc. Throughout the
entire book, Mack and the Boys are proven to be quite noble men, despite their social rank. Each of
the men in this group are shown to possess one unique quality that seems to be the moral of a
folktale or mythological story. Even the purposes these men serve within the book are rooted within
good intent. Meanwhile, the highly–respected Doc drowns himself in women and music to hide
from his loneliness. This
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
How Is Truman Trying To Get His Identity
"The best place on earth Seahaven voted planets top town." This newspaper headline helps to
control Truman because they are saying he needs to stay in Seahaven because its the best place.
"Who needs Europe!" They don't want Truman to leave and go to Europe so they put that there to
control him from leaving or wanting to leave. "Crackdown on homeless Seahaven Islands City
Fathers say "Enough is Enough!" They do this to control Truman because he said his father looked
like a homeless man and they are trying to justify Truman seeing them drag his father onto the bus
to get rid of him. 2. When you are young you are trying to find your identity by trying new things
and trying to experience life. Media influences a lot of choices because it could ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
They had lots of different camera angles and one was from a trash can so that the audience could see
him in the morning, another was from his ring so they could see him at all times, another one was
from the back seat of his car so they could watch him while he drives, another was on an
advertisement board so they could watch him on his way to work, another was on posts outside his
house so they could see him anytime he was home, another was on a bookshelf so they could see
what he did and who he talked to, there are a lot more but those are just some of them. Some camera
angles with Christof are when Truman is bigger than him for once and this is to show more emotion,
we also see Christof looking over the whole dome from the moon and this shows that he can always
see everything, also we see him when he is leaving the room and walking through the metal detector
and the guards are wearing Truman shirts that say "Love him, protect him" this could mean either
love Christof or Truman and protect either Christof or Truman. They chose the angles for Truman
because the whole world was watching him, they at least needed to have some good angles of his
every action. They chose the angles for Christof so that we could see how they operated everyday
and how they fixed any
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Interconnecting Chapters In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
Throughout Cannery Row the use of interconnecting chapters is used by John Steinbeck for a
purpose that was not understood at first by critics. Nearly half of the chapters in Cannery Row are
interconnecting chapters, some chapters even stray away from the plot, but are implemented for one
reason or another. These chapters were not seen to have significance to the book at the time and lead
to many bad critics of the novel, but the bad reviews would not be enough to stop people from
buying Steinbeck's Cannery Row. Having these interconnecting chapters take up so much of the
novel has to have some significance since it was deliberately implemented by its author.
Understanding these interconnecting chapters plays a big role in understanding Cannery ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Having had great success with Tortilla Flat, Cannery Row, publicly proclaimed as its sequel, didn't
live up to expectations, at first. Although it was not met with the same interest as Steinbeck's
previous works, in fact it received much hate amongst critics for its constant jumping around and
ideals, Cannery Row ended up being Steinbeck's most successful books; it was like a love hate
relationship between critics and the novel. It wasn't until the design of Cannery Row became public
did these critics fall in love with the book. Additionally this book changed literature as a whole,
"However, Cannery Row was still seen as an important work to add to the canon of American
literature because it marked an important transition into what is now known as environmental
literature" (Critical Reception). Known as a fictional book, Steinbeck has made it clear that many
aspects of Cannery Row can be found in the real world, more precisely Steinbeck's childhood home.
The impact Cannery Row had on literature does not stop there, as Cannery row grew in popularity
many people sought out searching for the so called Monterey, California; so much that it today it is a
tourist attraction and as of 1953 Ocean View Avenue was renamed Cannery Row (Critical
Reception). It's no surprise that with the following Steinbeck had that the small city of Monterey
could be transformed into a tourist attraction and it all began with theses interconnecting chapter's
influencing the structure and the themes of the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Summer Ball Summary
"Summer Ball" by Mike Lupica is a children's literature story of particular interest and young boys.
It follows a 13 year–old boy named Danny Walker. Danny is a basketball player who is attending an
elite basketball camp called "Right Way" in Maine during the summer. Danny is a very good
basketball player but there is a small problem, he is really small. Now he is going to the camp to
find out will his lack of height prevent him from playing with the big boys.
Danny live in Middletown, Long Island with his parents, Richie and Ali Walker, who have recently
reconciled after a long separation. Danny, like his father before him, is a star basketball player
whose elite travel team won the national championship in their age group, largely behind the skills
of Danny and his friends Will and Ty. But Danny has a serious concern – he is very short for his age
and since his father is also less than 5'10" tall, he is unlikely to grow to be as tall as he'd like to be a
better basketball player. In the beginning, his height didn't hold him back, but in the past year other
boys have been getting taller and he is having trouble competing. He is also considerably shorter
than his close friend, Tess Hewitt, on whom he has a not–so–secret crush, but their relationship has
cooled since she began hanging out with a new boy who shares her interest in tennis.
As the summer following his 8th grade year begins, Danny's big concern is his upcoming trip to
Right Way. He knows he should be excited
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Most Fruitful Character In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
The Most Fruitful Character of Cannery Row
Cannery Row (by J. Steinbeck) is mystical and philosophic book that doesn't follow conventional
storytelling. The book isn't about Cannery Row itself, but the people that inhabit it. Cannery Row
deals with people's stories of greed, failure and success. One of the most successful characters in the
story is Doc Ricketts, due to his philanthropy towards the people of Cannery Row, his flexibility
towards others, and his gift of strong intellect. Doc (Ricketts) is one of the main characters in the
story, and perhaps the most important. He plays an integral part of the story, and outside of the it
aswell. Doc is a marine biologist who is also the unofficial doctor, philosopher and backbone of ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Obviously Doc has this. He runs a business, selling marine life to universities and educational
institutions. Going back to the previous example, he calmly takes the tab off Mack, subtly showing
his success. And going back to the first example, he gives money away to people of the row. He gets
the money through his intelligence. The majority of scholars and educators alike seem to think that
the characters Dora and Mack (and the boys) are the most successful characters. Dora, while being
financially successful and helping the Row, runs an illegitimate business; so, on a technical level,
her success isn't legitimate. Mack is full of contentment, yet he is poor and gets his money through
immoral schemes. One might call Mack, "philosophic;" he isn't because he lacks the objective
intellect required to even be on the caliber of a philosopher. Doc, unlike those two people, gets his
monetary gain legitimate ways, has contentment, and isn't poor. Doc is the most successful character
in Cannery Row due to his kindness, pliancy towards others, and prodigious intelligence. Success is
simply a title. We are all successful in our own ways, just like how unconventionally Doc is.
Striving for success, whether it be through school, hard work, or kindness is something everyone
should aim to achieve. If Doc can do it, so can
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row Essay
In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row, Mack and his ravenous companions depart the inhospitable
coastal fog of Monterey, California, and head east toward Carmel Valley, searching for sun.
Turning down a sinuous two–lane road running alongside the Carmel River, they discover an
Elysian plain basking beneath crystalline skies. Wildflowers stippled the orchards and quilted
greenery at the base of the Santa Lucia Mountain Range.
The men scoop up carrots fallen from a flatbed. Their truck runs over a rooster. They snag a bay leaf
from a tree, make a fire, and prepare a feast.
"Luck," Steinbeck writes, "blossomed from the first."
Steinbeck's Depression–era saga was published in 1945. Exactly 20 years later, a 15–year–old
Monterey High student named Peter Partch made the same eastbound turn onto Carmel Valley Road.
Sitting quietly alongside his father in the cab of their truck, Partch hoped luck would blossom for
him, too.
"My big brother was an athlete – a great baseball player," Partch said. "He'd hit the ball and it would
take off like a rocket. He was kind of majestic, but I was an abysmal failure. I wasn't sure of myself
or my abilities, or my place in the world, for that matter."
Reserved and without the hard shell needed to succeed in sports, Partch found salvation in art.
"I had an instinct that I'd have a place in the art world," he said. "Artists seemed to have a higher
purpose. It wasn't about the ego.
"I was particularly interested in sculpture. At the end of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row Analysis
The beginning of Cannery Row, by John Steinbeck, gives/includes a great description for the milieu.
After reading the opening chapter it is easy to imagine yourself to the real settings. Story revolves
around the very realistic environment of harbour cities in the twentieth century; stinky mixed odour
of dead and living fish and rusty metal splinters sprawling all around. So, if you get properly
affected by that description, you should nose out the stink of canned fish and feel like you ́re one of
those oil clothed Polaks. Canneries made of corrugated iron gets my thoughts to old, wild–western
movies. Everything is rusty and so the overall view is reddish–brown. Splintered wood and weedy
lots reflects an image that no–one is taking care of the city, sardine canning is the main task and
whole Monterey is working for that. There ́s no time for such thing as renovation, the minor time
called leisure is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Inhabitants are "hidden" to flophouses and lonely Asian grocer waits on his own that someone
would come to buy even one quart of beer. Junk heaps on the street are absorbed to the darkness.
There are no houses near Cannery Row, typical workers live up on the hill and prestigious upper
class lives somewhere where the stinky smell doesn ́t reach. Every morning the scream of
frightening, arriving fleet whistle gives an alarm to go work. I guess author used that sound to
describe morning habit because everyone can imagine how horrible it would be to wake up in the
voice coming from cargo ship, it reminds me of nuclear power accident... The scream means to
scramble into clothes and precipitate down to canneries. Down the canneries people are primarily
wearing rubber coats and oilcloth aprons. The place wasn ́t hygienic, this can be seen in overall
depiction; I can see blood trails and guts of fish
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Truman Show Research Paper
The Truman Show
The Truman Show film is based on a television show that focuses on a character called Truman,
whose life is circumscribed by a large dome–shaped soundstage constructed to house the entire cast,
crew, environment and special effects such as the weather, sun and moon. Truman is completely
clueless of the world which he is living in as his family and friends are also actors following orders
from the control room. Truman is the main character and also the star of the show, out of five
unwanted pregnancies, Truman was chosen determined by the air date of the show. Christof is the
director of the Truman Show is also portrayed as a God type figure throughout the show. He is able
to control everything that is within the dome, even manipulating the way in which Truman thinks.
Christof wants the money ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Truman is unable to leave Sea Haven because of Christof's manipulation. Christof has manufactured
a strong emotional relationship throughout Truman's life, his father's death at sea is the most
powerful emotion which has made Truman fear water ever since. Christof has tried many ways to
keep Truman from escaping the island, but he knows if someone very close to Truman dies at sea,
Truman will not go near water again. Everyone who is around Truman is an actor hired to be on the
show, they all have little speakers inside their ears to receive orders from the control room. Truman
is constantly manipulated of his thoughts by his best friend Marlon. Truman constantly wants to go
to Fiji but Marlon is acting clueless of where Fiji is and constantly convinces him not to go but to
remain in Sea Haven. Although Marlon does not want to lie to Truman, he is forced to as Christof is
completely in control of what Marlon says to Truman, this is the way that Christof manages to keep
Truman within Sea
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Pepé's Journey
Pepé transforms from an oversized boy to a brave man in the span of a few short days in John
Steinbeck's Flight. Under Pepé's and Mama's standards of a man, Pepé is man right after he murders
the man in Monterey, because he murdered the man in Monterey. Truly, however, Pepé isn't a man
until he has endured the hardships of living in the mountains alone and the independence that this
journey requires him to gain. When Pepé leaves for his infamous journey to Monterey, he is still a
mere boy of nineteen. Pepé acts like a boy and is treated like a boy before journeying to Monterey
alone. The first sign of Pepé's childness is his lack of responsibility and his laziness. Pepé is a
nineteen–year–old boy in a household with no father, and he still ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
When Pepé returns from Monterey "he was changed" (135). After Pepé reveals what he has done to
Mama, he says, "I am a man now, Mama. The man said names to me I could not allow" (135). This
implies that Pepé thinks this what a man does: stands up for himself no matter what even if this
means murder. After Pepé returns from Monterey, he considers himself a man and therefore starts
acting like a man. His eyes are "bright, sharp, and purposeful" (135). This is certainly more manly
than how Pepé acted before his trip to Monterey (foolish and care–free), but this does not make him
manly, it is simply an expectation of most nineteen–year–olds. Mama also thinks of Pepé as a man
because of his actions in Monterey. "Pepé is man now. He has a man's thing to do" (136). This
shows that Mama thinks going to the mountains alone, a result of Pepé's violence, is what makes
someone a man, that this is something customary of all men. Mama also calls Pepé a man many
times after he returns, which contrasts her thoughts before Pepé leaves for Monterey. "Yes, thou art a
man" (135), Mama says. Mama also calls Pepé "our beautiful– our brave... our protector" (137).
Mama and Pepé both think of Pepé as a man as he embarks on his journey into the mountains, but
both of their perceptions of what a man truly is are not completely on
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row Ambition
"Cannery Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a
tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream"(Steinbeck 1). In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row, Mack and the
boys are trying to do something cordial for their friend Doc, who has been extremely amiable
without requesting a reward. Mack hits on the idea that they should throw a thank–you party, and
the entire community quickly becomes involved. Unfortunately, the party rages out of control, and
Doc's lab and mood are ruined. In an effort to return to Doc's good graces, Mack and the boys
decide to throw another party, but make it work this time. Through a procession of linked vignettes
and many different themes, such as community, ambitions, and domesticity; ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
All of the characters in the book have a specific ambition. In other words, Mack's ambition is
throwing a party for Doc and Henri's ambition is to never finish his boat and to live the life of a
french painter. To add on, Mrs. Malloy's ambition was to decorate her boiler so that it felt more like
home. When her husband became a landlord "she began to change. First it was a rug, then a
washtub, then a lamp with a colored silk shade. Finally she came into the boiler on her hands and
knees one day and she stood up and said a little breathlessly, 'Holman's are having a sale of curtains.
Real lace curtains and edges of blue and pink–$1.98 a set with curtain rods thrown in.' "(Steinbeck
43). At first, Mrs. Malloy was content with the boiler being undecorated. But as soon as her husband
became the landlord, she felt like the house was hers and that it should feel like home. She started
finding things that she liked and then she would put them in the house. Finally, she found some
cheap curtains that she liked, and she wanted to put them in the boiler, even though the boiler didn't
have any windows. In Cannery Row, Steinbeck displays a simpler rendition of ambition: the
aspiration to find happiness within one's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Function Of The Environment In Cannery Row, By John Steinbeck
Human behavior is a function of the environment that he/she is brought up in because it is the
environment that shapes the person's morals. This statement is openly validated in the novel
Cannery Row where an inclusive community is built as a result of good morals that have been
developed and shaped by the environment. Cannery Row is novel that was published in 1945 by
John Steinbeck in Monterey. It was named after a waterfront street in California which had sardine
caning factories. According to Grasse et al (75), fellowship and warm–heartedness is all that is
required to form a united and successful community. Wealth is important part of one's life but it
should not take away the person's happiness. Steinbeck in his work uses the characters of the novel
to communicate this message in a clear and understandable manner. The name of the novel matches
with the actual meaning that the writer wanted to communicate the readers. He used the name to
enable the readers to be able to relate the novel's actual meaning with authentic opinions.
One of the ideas that show clearly from the novel is that, proper care of the environment can
improve our livelihood. This could be through sourcing of food and income. This is evidenced by
majority of the characters in the novel who depend on the environment for livelihood. The marine
biologist by the name Doc gets his income from collecting marine creatures and presents them for
research in colleges and universities. Lee Chong operates a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Issue Of Gang Related Crime Essay
As declared by Ed Royce: " This bill is a comprehensive plan, that will increase gang related
prosecutions, and prevent gang related crime. " (House Passes Gangbuster ...S. Congressman Ed
Royce) However, here a precision is necessary. If we have a doubt about gang 's involvement into
criminal activities it 's not per se sufficient to persecute anyone, in only constatating the fact of the
occured or possible to be occured in the future crime. Proofs are necessary."The illegally obtained
evidence may be suppressed, Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471 (1963). (
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/371/471/case.html) We are in the US, gang 's like all
others members, which beloning to a group have the rights to geather, for the free speach, under the
1st and 4th Ammendment. "Trus, the United States Supreme Court has stated that the guarantees of
the Fourth Amendment do not allow stopping and demanding identification or information, or taking
photographs from individuals without any specific basis for believing they are involved in criminal
activity, Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968) (https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/392/1)
and Brown v. Texas, 443 U.S. 47 (1979)."
(https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/443/47/case.html) So, here it will be interesting to
understant which will be the approach of the police while arresting gang 's members in the street.
The situation can be fast the opposite, once in the court and the arestee will charge
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Community In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
Another example of how Steinbeck focuses on the community in this story is when Doc makes a
statement about what men admire in their community. These lines are stated in John Steinbeck's
novel and are talking about how the men in their community or area admire kindness and honesty
but love self–interest, greed, meanness, or even egotism. This is just an example of how the people
in the community are trustworthy and have kind or nice personalities.
A personal interview with Michael Hemp on John Steinbeck's Cannery Row is a very special video
that talks about the history of Cannery Row and also the community. He says that even though there
were some things in the community that some would not agree with, that everyone in Cannery Row
were kind and showed how people would always be ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He says that John wrote this book mostly in memory of friends and picked Cannery Row to write
about because it reminded him of a community with such nice and kind people. Michael also says
that Steinbeck does not write genres of fiction. He states that he only writes about real things, real
people, and also even real places or events. This short interview also shows pictures of where Mack
and his friends stayed all the time. Michael Hemp talks about how cannery row got the name and
what the first item being canned there was, which is sardines. He also says that it was the canning of
sardines that made Monterey Bay famous. This means that the community was very well known. He
shows in the video what Ed Rickett's laboratory and the grocery store looks like today if someone
would visit it. He mentions that Cannery Row is one of John Steinbeck's best novels and that it is all
about a fantastic community that has a great present and very eventful past. He talks about how Ed
Rickett's lab gave children who did not get to experience physiology the chance to study it in his
laboratory with organisms and animals. This shows a good example of someone helping other
people in
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
John Steinbeck's Cannery Row
Cannery Row: Living Heaven on Earth
Cannery Row (1945), a novel written by John Steinbeck, Nobel Prize winner for Literature, is a
book without much of a plot. Instead, it's a novel where setting, atmosphere and most importantly
character, take precedence. Steinbeck creates a colorful array of characters struggling to understand
their own unique places in the world.
The story is set in the early 20th century, immediately following the Depression and World War II.
The characters live in Monterey, California amid the jumble of the sardine fisheries, the "Palace
Flophouses", Lee Chong's grocery, Dora's whorehouse, and Doc's Biological Lab. Throughout the
book, Steinbeck has the uncanny ability to combine his characters' ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Steinbeck frequently interrupts the flow of what could be considered the main story line, by
throwing short segments into the writing thus introducing a new character (usually not directly
connected to the primary story) or referencing some sort of cruel occurrence of real life. For
example, in chapter twelve Steinbeck writes about the death of Josh Billings, an author who had
come to Monterey. After Billings' death, the doctor dumps his remains into a gulch, where a little
boy and his dog later find them. The little boy, not knowing any better, takes the author's remains to
use them for fishing. Upon hearing this, the town quickly collects all his insides and puts them in a
leaden box, which was placed in Josh Billings' coffin.
The purpose of inserting this anecdote was to show the camaraderie and respect of the people in
Cannery Row. At one point in the story, Steinbeck writes, "Josh Billings was a great man, a great
writer. He had honored Monterey by dying there and he had been degraded" (64–65). Steinbeck
demonstrates that by creating an atmosphere of noble intentions and good feelings for one another,
everyone is able to live in a world of peace even when there are bad times.
Steinbeck spends the greater part of the book writing about a party that Mac and the boys plan to
throw for Doc. The boys believe that since Doc has always been such a nice guy that
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cannery Row Themes
John Steinbeck returns to the Monterey area of California for Cannery Row, a story of a few men
living in California in the aftermath of the Great Depression, specifically in an abandoned
warehouse. Steinbeck wrote this book at the behest of a WWII soldier who desired to forget the
horrors of the war he just endured. Cannery Row mixes multiple themes and tones together in order
to bring together a captivating narrative which has endured over time.
Cannery Row takes place in the cannery district of Monterey, California, following the story of
Mack and his friends as the rent a converted shack from Lee Chong, a local grocer. Mack soon
meets Doc, the owner of a local biological warehouse, a man who always has a negative vibe about
him yet is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
People who are described as ""whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches"(1) often band together
to fight against problems, such as the influenza epidemic. Business owners who are shown
throughout the novel that money is a priority such as Lee Chong and Dora deal as often in good will
as they do with cash, helping the boys out along their journey. At the heart of this community rests
Doc, someone that everyone is in some way indebted to along with being overall a good person and
becoming the soul of the community, as when he is wronged the whole town goes into a negative
state. Related to this is finding happiness without material wealth, specifically with analyzing the
story of Mack and the boys. If you throw out side plots and various other things from the story, it's a
few poor guys trying to collect up enough booze and pocket money to throw a party. These men
don't value the concept of wealth in material earnings as much as they measure wealth in the sense
of good will and the experiences on has in life. The boys described as "not mercantile men. They did
not measure their joys in goods sold, their egos in bank balances, nor their loves in what they cost"
(108) Steinbecks writing style almost always provides a tone of affection for at least one character
or group, in Cannery Row it's almost everyone he feels this way about. He calls Mack and the boys
""the Beauties"(14) and writes about
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Morality in Cannery Row by John Steinbeck
In society, people value morality as a human quality. People learn their values from when they are
young from various sources. However, who is to say what is necessarily right and wrong? Values
and morality can have different meanings, especially if placed in the context of a distorted
materialistic society. In Cannery Row, John Steinbeck reminds people about this important theme
and how it applies on a bigger scale. The setting of the story is Cannery Row, located in Monterey,
California. Steinbeck's choice of setting is significant in that it fully captures the breadth of
humanity. On the one hand, it is an area that represents the thriving sardine industry. On the other, it
is also an area where the lower classes, including bums and whores could live. In actuality, the story
is not really about the sardine industry at all, but is rather a collection of short stories that are all
unified about the same theme, the quality and meaning of life. The main plot of this novel is
centered on Doc, a marine biologist. It begins when Mack and the boys, Lee Chong, and Dora throw
a surprise party for him to show their appreciation and great reverence towards him. By writing
about the warm relationships between Doc and the inhabitants of Cannery Row, Steinbeck uses
these short stories as his way of talking about life on a bigger scale. In essence, Cannery Row is
John Steinbeck's personal philosophy on human importance, his take on what humans should be
like, and his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

More Related Content

More from Melissa Dudas

More from Melissa Dudas (20)

017 Essay Example Cheap Custom Writ
017 Essay Example Cheap Custom Writ017 Essay Example Cheap Custom Writ
017 Essay Example Cheap Custom Writ
 
Example Of An Introduction For A Research Paper How To Make
Example Of An Introduction For A Research Paper  How To MakeExample Of An Introduction For A Research Paper  How To Make
Example Of An Introduction For A Research Paper How To Make
 
Free Printable Primary Lined Writing Paper - Discover Th
Free Printable Primary Lined Writing Paper - Discover ThFree Printable Primary Lined Writing Paper - Discover Th
Free Printable Primary Lined Writing Paper - Discover Th
 
School Essay Example Of Informative Essay About Education
School Essay Example Of Informative Essay About EducationSchool Essay Example Of Informative Essay About Education
School Essay Example Of Informative Essay About Education
 
Compare And Contrast Essay Examples (FAQ)
Compare And Contrast Essay Examples (FAQ)Compare And Contrast Essay Examples (FAQ)
Compare And Contrast Essay Examples (FAQ)
 
Writing Commentary Is Undoubtedly The Most Diffic
Writing Commentary Is Undoubtedly The Most DifficWriting Commentary Is Undoubtedly The Most Diffic
Writing Commentary Is Undoubtedly The Most Diffic
 
5 Paragraph Order Template DocTemplates
5 Paragraph Order Template  DocTemplates5 Paragraph Order Template  DocTemplates
5 Paragraph Order Template DocTemplates
 
Compare And Contrast Essay High School Vs College Co
Compare And Contrast Essay High School Vs College  CoCompare And Contrast Essay High School Vs College  Co
Compare And Contrast Essay High School Vs College Co
 
College Essay Length How Long Should It Be Or Word
College Essay Length How Long Should It Be Or WordCollege Essay Length How Long Should It Be Or Word
College Essay Length How Long Should It Be Or Word
 
Argumentative Essay Definiti
Argumentative Essay DefinitiArgumentative Essay Definiti
Argumentative Essay Definiti
 
How To Essay Types Essay Writi
How To Essay Types  Essay WritiHow To Essay Types  Essay Writi
How To Essay Types Essay Writi
 
5 Steps To Quality Essay Writing (With Examples)
5 Steps To Quality Essay Writing (With Examples)5 Steps To Quality Essay Writing (With Examples)
5 Steps To Quality Essay Writing (With Examples)
 
How To Write A Biography Essay And Get An A - Es
How To Write A Biography Essay And Get An A - EsHow To Write A Biography Essay And Get An A - Es
How To Write A Biography Essay And Get An A - Es
 
Cheap Writing Paper
Cheap Writing PaperCheap Writing Paper
Cheap Writing Paper
 
Technical Paper Writing
Technical Paper WritingTechnical Paper Writing
Technical Paper Writing
 
Writeing Paper
Writeing PaperWriteing Paper
Writeing Paper
 
Ielts General Writing Essay Topics
Ielts General Writing Essay TopicsIelts General Writing Essay Topics
Ielts General Writing Essay Topics
 
Learning To Write An Essay
Learning To Write An EssayLearning To Write An Essay
Learning To Write An Essay
 
How To Write An Essay Paper
How To Write An Essay PaperHow To Write An Essay Paper
How To Write An Essay Paper
 
Common College Essay Prompts
Common College Essay PromptsCommon College Essay Prompts
Common College Essay Prompts
 

Recently uploaded

Recently uploaded (20)

Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding  Accommodations and ModificationsUnderstanding  Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
 
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptxExploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
 
REMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptx
REMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptxREMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptx
REMIFENTANIL: An Ultra short acting opioid.pptx
 
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptxTowards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
 
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
 
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptxInterdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
 
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptxCOMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
 
OSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & Systems
OSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & SystemsOSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & Systems
OSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & Systems
 
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
 
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
 
latest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answers
latest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answerslatest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answers
latest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answers
 
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdfFICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
 
Single or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structureSingle or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structure
 
How to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptx
How to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptxHow to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptx
How to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptx
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
Philosophy of china and it's charactistics
Philosophy of china and it's charactisticsPhilosophy of china and it's charactistics
Philosophy of china and it's charactistics
 
dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learningdusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
 
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
 

Perception In The Truman Show

  • 1. Perception In The Truman Show The film The Truman Show portrays an array of the ways of knowing continuously throughout. One of these ways can easily be deciphered as intuition. The essential gut feeling can swallow up any other reliable source solely because of a certain unexplainable phenomena pulling the heart and mind in polar directions. Initially, it is Truman's intuition that over powers his refuting thoughts and this is demonstrated when Truman explains his theory to Marlon, who then proceeds to invalidate it. This leaves Truman empty handed and with a lack of reliable sources, except his intuition. The memory of Sylvia's statement was the bases of Truman's instinctiveness and other events such as the sight of his dead father further developed this gut feeling. The authenticity of these events cannot ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... At the start of the film, Truman believes that he has a clear understanding of the reality in which he is presented, but only through his mere sight. Eyes have a tendency to be deceiving, therefore, it should take more than one out of the five senses to be reassured of a particular belief. The film follows Truman as he soon begins to become skeptical of his surroundings, which in turn become the initial cause of his route to discovering the truth. The doubt that beings to form within Truman, caused by his sense of sight, could not support him entirely until it merges with his sense of touch. This is heavily depicted in the duration of the final few scenes where Truman's ship collides with the sky. Despite Truman seeing the solid plaster wall as a supposed sky, the moment he touches the wall with his bare hands, his theory is comprehensively validated through the act of him breaking down into tears with utter shock from realization. Forms of sense perception were put forth in order to convince Truman of his ignorance to the falsehood of his alleged ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Duality In Cannery Row Cannery Row: A Literary Excavation on Duality Cannery Row is a town located in Monterey, California. Despite being small, dirty and crowded, it is a well functioned town and is home to people from different walks of life. In the novel's prologue, John Steinbeck wrote the following: "Its inhabitants are, as one man once said, 'whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches' by which he meant Everybody" and "[have] the man looked through another peephole he might have said: 'Saints and angels and martyrs and holy men,' and he would have meant the same thing" (Steinbeck 1). He basically comments that the difference in viewpoints given the same event results from the power of perspective and duality observed in people. One might see Cannery Row as a low–down place while the others might see Cannery Row as a lively, vigorous town. One would see a character's actions disputable while the others would see their behaviors admirable. The viewpoints of the readers and the way characters behave at various times explain the fact that Cannery Row and its inhabitants possess qualities crossing good and evil. Cannery Row begins with the character Lee Chong, a small grocery owner that supplies the town. Lee was depicted as a kind and generous man, and his good nature was reflected through his appearance and personality. Steinbeck states that "[his] mouth was full and benevolent and the flash of gold when he smiled was rich and warm" (Steinbeck 7). This simple passage gives us a clear first ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Differences Between The Giver Book And Movie This essay is about comparing the Giver book and movie. The Giver is a story about a boy named Jonas who was chosen to be the community's next Receiver of Memory. He lived in a community where everything was chosen for the citizens, and everything was perfect. During Jonas' training, he realized that the community was missing something and that there was more in the world. Jonas wanted the everybody to know that. The Giver book was then made into a movie. Though the two were based on the same story, there are three important differences that could've made them two separate stories. The three main differences between the book and the movie are Asher and Fiona's Assignments, the similarity all Receivers had and the Chief Elder's role. One ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His parents did, and Lily did, and so did all of his group members and friends. But there were a few exceptions: Jonas himself, and a female Five who he had noticed had the different, lighter eyes," (pg. 20 – Lois Lowry). Only those with light eyes would become the next Receiver of Memory, which is why it was such an important detail. In the Giver movie, it was changed into a birthmark. That birthmark was shaped like a triangle and in the movie, all Receivers of Memory had them. The third main difference between The Giver book and the movie was the Chief Elder's role. In the Giver book, the Chief Elder was not much of an important character, "The initial speech at the Ceremony of Twelve was made by the Chief Elder, the leader of the community who was elected every ten years," (pg. 51 – Lois Lowry). However, the Chief Elder played an important role in the Giver movie. In the book, the Chief spoke in a few chapters during Ceremonies and that was all. The Giver movie's Chief Elder always watched Jonas closely. She started becoming suspicious of Jonas, and so she would warn Jonas' mother and The Giver. She then found out about Jonas' plan to escape. When she did, she ordered Asher to "lose him" (The Giver movie). That meant she wanted Asher to kill Jonas. This essay was about the three main differences between the Giver book and the Giver movie. The first main difference was talked about in the first body paragraph. That paragraph was about ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Introducing America 's New Family Introducing America's New Family: The Bundy's American television today has drastically changed from the first appearance of the television in the 1920s. Currently, television is nothing but sitcoms poking jokes at the disabled, the LGBT community adapting to the American family standard, and even late night television poking fun at our 2016 Presidential candidates.1950s television depicted America's heterosexual, patriarchal society in which an "ideal and acceptable" family consisted of a generous working class father, an accommodating and good–natured mother, and a few respectful children. Whereas 1950s American television required the audience to accept television families without question, American networks today understand that times are changing and just like mass communication, adapting to the millennial generation of technology is a must for television families to appeal to the growing masses. But when did television families first start to step away from the cultural ideals of its time? From the 1920s through the 1960s television upheld the Father Knows Best standard of television with shows such as 'Father Knows Best" and "I Love Lucy." Well, fast forward 30 years, and in came the Bundy's. The Bundy's were television's first dysfunctional, on screen family to undermine the idea that an ideal family must function perfectly all the time. Married with Children reminded us that it was ok to not conform to society's cultural norms. "...people want to watch a family that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. The Cinematic Features Displayed in Pleasantville and The... The Cinematic Features Displayed in Pleasantville and The Truman Show The following essay, which I have composed, is based on two important films of the last decade. Their titles are "Pleasantville" and "The Truman Show". Starting with the "Pleasantville", the general overview of the film's plot gets more complicated the further you get into it. It brings up several issues all of which I have commented on in this essay. The film starts with two teenagers, David and Jennifer. David has an addiction to old reruns of a fifties sitcom also by the name of "Pleasantville". Jennifer is the complete opposite of her brother, leading a rather promiscuous lifestyle. During an argument, their TV remote ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This television show would be live twenty–four hours a day, seven days a week filming this unwanted pregnancy's life. They name the baby Truman Burbank, and the show, "The Truman Show". The film starts when Truman is in his mid to late twenties with an ideal job, wife and home in the town which is Seahaven. I will relate more to this town in the next section. All this is, from actors to the weather, is controlled by Christof, the director of the show. He controls everything around Truman and will be talked about more in the next section. The towns of Pleasantville and Seahaven, the sets for both films are similar in ways and different in others. The main similarity is how both are supposed to be 'perfect worlds'. Pleasantville, the first perfect world, is based on what most American fifties sitcoms were truly like. They also repeat re– runs of these shows even today just like Pleasantville 'the TV show' is in the film. These sitcoms usually featured wholesome American families consisting of a father, mother and two children, a boy and a girl. Their lives were basically the same. The two children would grow up, get married and have children whilst the husband would go to work and the wife would stay at home. In Pleasantville the town, this is what the population's lives are really like. They also have tacky phrases such as "Honey, I'm Home" used ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Examples Of Skepticism In The Truman Show The Truman Show introduces us to a man named Truman who is living a fake life, a life in which everything around him has been scripted out by a director of a television show. He was adopted at birth and raised inside a television studio that was made to resemble the real world. However, Truman is unaware that he has been the star of a television show since birth and thanks to free will, he continues to live life as a normal person. Meanwhile, the director, Christof attempts to control every aspect of Truman's life as if to lead him to take certain actions and to think a certain way. Like so many other philosophical issues, the problem of skepticism can be traced back as far as the ancient Greeks. Nevertheless, it was Descartes who placed this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Given the logical possibility that such a creature exists, how can we be certain that our beliefs about the world are not radically mistaken? How, Descartes asked, can we be certain that we are all not utterly deceived? The Truman Show presents a similar skeptical problem, but in the most convincing of ways. Christof is clearly the evil genius that Descartes described, but whereas Descartes' fatal demon is a creature of pure fantasy, the character of Christof and the conspiracy that he orchestrates seem dangerously real. In Descartes' Second Meditation he says, "I suppose, then, that all the things that I see are false, I persuade myself that nothing has ever existed of all that my fallacious memory represents to me". In the Truman show, Truman finds himself believing that the world around him is the real world, however he is being deceived. Would Truman have been better off believing Descartes' words? Descartes attempts to question how he is supposed to understand the world around him as real. Through thinking and questioning, Descartes knows himself, and his mind to be real. However, he still has an uncertainty about the world around him. Descartes concludes the Second Meditations by posing that, "because it is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Loneliness, Sympathy, and Remuneration in John... Loneliness, Sympathy, and Remuneration in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Many themes were portrayed in Cannery Row. These themes give the play depth and fascination. The three most significant themes thought are Loneliness, Sympathy, and Remuneration, allowing the story to reach many areas in life. In the story Cannery Row Loneliness is a main theme to the characters lives. One of these themes is Loneliness. 'He was a dark and lonesome looking man' No one loved him. No one cared about him'(Page 6). The severity of his solitude makes this theme one of the most important. The seclusion of this man can penetrate ones innermost thoughts and leave them with a sense of belonging after hearing of this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Sympathy, another theme in this book, can have the same amount of impact on an individual. Instead of it having a negative reaction to the reader it has a superior reaction to the reader. ?Lee Chong? knew he could not have helped it, but he wished he might have known and perhaps tried to help. It was deeply a part of Lee?s kindness and understanding that man?s right to kill himself is inviolable, but sometimes a friend can make it unnecessary?(Page 2). Lee was having compassionate sentiments for the man who committed suicide. He had a deep feeling that he could of helped in someway to convince the man that his life was worth living. A side story that was important to the theme of Sympathy was a story about Mrs. Kitty Casini a mouse and Mary Talbot ? Kitty Casini had a mouse?Daintily she stabbed the mouse through the back and drew it wriggling to her and her tail flicked with tense delight? ?I can?t blame Kitty Casini? said Mary. ?I?m just not going to like her no matter how much I want to??(Pages 155–156). Mary had intense sympathy for that mouse that with no doubt died a tragic death. She went to the extreme of disliking on of her favorite cat. Sympathy can bring about the good in people. Sympathy for loved ones or strangers can surprise one for their intense emotions. The final noteworthy theme in the story Cannery Row was Remuneration. Remuneration is the most memorable thing a person can do ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. Cartoons And The Powerpuff Girls "Ed, Edd n Eddy" and "The Powerpuff Girls": Different Cartoons, Similar Traits Danny Antonucci, creator of the well–renowned children's cartoon "Ed, Edd n Eddy", did not originally make cartoons of the sort. His career had previously consisted of more explicit, adult cartoons; the animation was the result of a dare given to him to create a new production for younger audiences (Celebrity Bio). In a similar way, Craig McCracken originally called his cartoon centered around crime–fighting girls "Whoopass Stew". When it aired on television, it was changed to "The Powerpuff Girls", obviously for the sake of its viewers (Turner Classic Movies). These small coincidences between the creators are far from the only similarities between both ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Equally, Blossom is the brains and unofficial leader of the group, Bubbles is the sweet and 'innocent' one, and Buttercup is the tough, 'don't–mess–with–me' one. While these characters come from different cartoons, it is easy to see that they share many similar attributes with only subtle contrast. While the connections between both cartoons' settings are not as easy to make, they're not the most difficult to, either. All episodes of both cartoons are situated in one general location. "Ed, Edd n Eddy" takes place in a small town called Peach Creek, with a suburban neighborhood and cul–de–sac that the three spend most of their time in. On the other hand, "The Powerpuff Girls" takes place in the city of Townsville, which is primarily urban and has its own mayor. But while the two settings are geographically different, they both have a forest with woodland creatures that the two trios have visited as a way to complete their goals. For instance, in one episode, the Eds attempted to execute a scam involving frogs ("Thick as an Ed"). Similarly, the girls once saved a squirrel from an eagle ("Stray Bullet"). Lastly, school is depicted in both cartoons. In the fifth season of "Ed, Edd n Eddy", the three are junior high students, while throughout "The Powerpuff Girls", the three are kindergartners. While not as obvious as the connections between the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Function Of The Environment In Cannery Row, By John Steinbeck Human behavior is a function of the environment that he/she is brought up in because it is the environment that shapes the person's morals. This statement is openly validated in the novel Cannery Row where an inclusive community is built as a result of good morals that have been developed and shaped by the environment. Cannery Row is novel that was published in 1945 by John Steinbeck in Monterey. It was named after a waterfront street in California which had sardine caning factories. According to Grasse et al (75), fellowship and warm–heartedness is all that is required to form a united and successful community. Wealth is important part of one's life but it should not take away the person's happiness. Steinbeck in his work uses the characters of the novel to communicate this message in a clear and understandable manner. The name of the novel matches with the actual meaning that the writer wanted to communicate the readers. He used the name to enable the readers to be able to relate the novel's actual meaning with authentic opinions. One of the ideas that show clearly from the novel is that, proper care of the environment can improve our livelihood. This could be through sourcing of food and income. This is evidenced by majority of the characters in the novel who depend on the environment for livelihood. The marine biologist by the name Doc gets his income from collecting marine creatures and presents them for research in colleges and universities. Lee Chong operates a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Cannery Row As A Pastoral Novel Similar To Tortilla Flat Alexander's excerpt drives his point that Cannery Row is a pastoral novel similar to Tortilla Flat but with deeper and more admirable sentiments. In his point of view, Cannery Row displays the marginal existence of the relatively primitive townsfolk in Monterey, with its pastoral aspects coming from detached, truth–hungry Doc. Alexander argues that the pastoral tone of Cannery Row is established in the short inter–chapter where Steinbeck renders Monterey as a microcosm with Mack and the boys' orbits being more stable than those of the world. In addition, Alexander believes that Mack's famous apology to Doc for wrecking his lab 6recounts the outcast–renunciate status of the men. Though as opinionated as any other literary criticism, Alexander justifies his standpoint with specific examples and allusions from the novel. The writing's goal to uphold Cannery Row as one long "pastoral poem" is more precise and thorough than many other criticism's with similar objectives. Alexander's direct and confident tone makes his essay easier to read compared to other sources. In Benson's article, he describes his belief that Cannery Row is a tribute to friendship, specifically to a man named Ed Ricketts, who some say Doc from Cannery Row vaguely resembles. He approaches the novel from three different perspectives: from the novel's literary context, its underlying naturalistic philosophy, and from the direction of Steinbeck as an artist. Also, Benson contends that Cannery Row ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. Cannery Row Language Analysis The opening passage of Cannery Row by John Steinbeck reveals bit about the life of Cannery row in Monterey in California. It tells about the life of a small community but doesn't yet truly acknowledge the protagonists of the text. The author concentrates on building a setting by using creative wording and taking account the audience of his text. In the Cannery row Steinbeck demonstrates how to use English language when describing milieu. Steinbeck creates the picture one word at a time by exploiting our senses. "Cannery Row. . . is a poem, a grating noise, a stink, a quality of light. . . " Already in the first sentence of the chapter, the author captures readers interest by these words: something we can hear, smell and see. This is used ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. Essay about The Importance of Respect in John Steinbeck's... The Importance of Respect in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Cannery Row is a novel John Steinbeck wrote after World War I. At first, the novel almost seems like a humorous book, written in a style commonly used by Steinbeck. The book has its main plot, but also has side chapters that periodically interrupt the main idea, which adds to the story. One would think that these side chapters are there to universalize the book, but in fact that is not true. The side chapters tell their own story, and they have a message that Steinbeck was clearly trying to show through his book. The novel has a main point about respect. In Cannery Row , Steinbeck is trying to say that respectability is the destructive force that preys on the world. Steinbeck ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This man is very mysterious in the book and is meant to represent loneliness and aging. A young boy in chapter four makes fun of the old china man. He felt that he should make fun of him "to keep his self respect" (19). Both of these incidents illustrate that a person may be driven to uncomfortable, frightening and even suicidal lengths to keep up a front. These two characters were made fun of, laughed at and branded as different. They were not respected in any way, which Steinbeck clearly shows. The plot of the novel begins to become clear in the next few chapters. This is where Mack and his gang of friends are introduced. Mack and the boys were homeless; until one day when an abandoned fish food storage house was given to them. They loved the house for its protection from the weather. The boys put furniture, posters, beds, a stove and even some flowers in and around their house. Their house gave them a since of pride. "In their minds they sneered at unsettled people who had no house to go to" (34). They now felt more respect and pride in society. Doc is also introduced in these chapters. Doc is one of the most respected people in town. He runs a laboratory called Western Biological and through the years he had became the fountain of philosophy, science and art in Cannery row. "Doc would listen to any kind of nonsense and change it for you to a kind of wisdom. His mind had no horizon–– and his sympathy had no warp . . . Everyone who thought of him ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Character Development in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Essay Character Development in John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Maybe it's more important to be appreciated than to be wealthy. Cannery Row by John Steinbeck (1945) is one of the most unique of all of the Nobel Prize winning novels. Cannery Row is set in a very poor area of California known as Monterey. It is a small port town south of San Francisco. The time era is post Depression and World War II. The novel is about how lower class people with warm hearts have the ability to create their own heaven on earth. The novel starts out with a group of people known as Mack and the boys. None of these men have jobs, and they all live in a small shack at the end of town. Mack and the boys want to do something nice for their loving friend Doc. Doc is a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They set up the surprise party at Doc's house, but Doc is late getting home and by the time he gets there, his house is trashed and everyone is passed out drunk. There seems to be a bad feeling haunting the town for a while after the party. As time goes on, Doc, Lee and Mack begin to spend more time together. They encounter many obstacles throughout the rest of the novel. First the whole town comes down with a terrible influenza, then they have to deal with heart ache when they find their friend, dead in the ocean. After things begin to return to normal, Mack and Lee decide to throw another party for their dear friend Doc. This time Doc attends his party and has a wonderful time. He is very happy to have friends like Lee, Mack and the boys to show that he is appreciated. Doc then begins to clean his house while he thinks back on all his memories in the beautiful town known as Cannery Row. Steinbeck develops the characters and their personalities in a unique way, turning a small ordinary town into a magical paradise. The main character, Doc has a strong personality that shows leadership. He is the strong one who holds the stability among all the other characters. He is a gentle, confident, middle–aged man. Everyone in the novel respects Doc and confides in him for all their needs or advice. One quote showing how Doc is a leader to all states, "Doc tips his hat to dogs as he drives by and the dogs look up and smile at him"(23). Doc is well ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. The Truman Show 1. The Truman Show included multiple scenes of people reading newspaper headlines. The headlines had secret meanings to them that an unknown viewer would not notice. Crackdown on Homeless: This headline appeared the day after the presumed homeless man identified himself as Truman's father. After he did this, random people took him away. The intent of the newspaper was to convince Truman that the person he encountered was a homeless man and that SeaHaven is trying to get the homeless out. Travelers Beware: After Truman decided that he wanted to travel to Fiji, he went to a traveling agency to book a flight. While he was waiting for the agent, he looked over and saw the sign headline. This sign wanted to heighten Truman's fear of travel. Forest ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Contradictory to the movie, the name also inquires that everything around Truman is the truth. In addition, Truman had moments of resemblance to Jesus Christ which also ties into the names Christof and Santa Maria. 4. The Truman Show used many different camera angles to depict every aspect of Truman's life. This was so the viewer had complete satisfaction. They used reasonable angles such as store security cameras, picture frames, and mechanical equipment. In contrast, the show used angles from inside vending machines, pencil sharpeners, and buttons on other actor's clothing. When Christof and Truman were in a shot together, Christof would always be bigger in one way or another, except for one shot. This was to showcase that Christof overpowers Truman. 5. The quote by Roger Ebert states "Television, with such insatiable hunger for material, has made celebrities into content." He is speaking about when viewers watch something and become interested in the content that they do not see the actors as actual people. The actors are just seen as material for the viewers. For example, when the transmission of the show was cut, Truman's face was used as a stand by screen. Christof said, "We're getting higher ratings with this graphic..." This in turn shows how the viewers saw Truman as a good story instead of a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. Cannery Row Dbq The Cannery Row is like a domino, if one member drops than the rest are affected by it. Cannery Row was written by John Steinbeck. He was one of the finest authors during 1900s. His stories mostly take place during the Great Depression in Monterey, California. He wrote about migrant workers and people lifestyle during the Great Depression. Even though he was a fictional author, he kept his books close to reality and connected to the current event. This story is identical to a domino because Cannery Row use to be a happy and beautiful town but after Macks and his friends fallout it turns into a dull and sad place. The reason behind their fallout was when Mack and his friends decided to give a surprising party. When they were preparing for the party, some drunks broke into the party from La Ida created a chaos. This chaos caused the boys to fight with them and fight with them which led to Doc's laboratory. In Cannery Row, John Steinbeck, shows how everyone is interconnected in the community and if one part of a community fails then ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When Mack and his friends fail because of the disastrous party that was supposed to be a surprise party for Doc, they affect everyone who is connected to him. After their fallout Cannery Row becomes a sad and dull place. People of Cannery Row go through an unpleasant time.The happy and helpful Lee Chong who once gave the boys things from his store for free goes through a financial loss. There was rumors that the boys stole money and liquor for the party from his store. Dora's Bear Flag Restaurant closed down for two months. Everyone who came to the disastrous party or were involved in the party blamed themselves for their fall out.This shows how Mack and his friends are interconnected and how one affects ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Character Analysis Of Cannery Row Cannery Row is a town located in Monterey, California. Despite being small, dirty and crowded, it is a well functioned town and is home to people from different walks of life. In the novel's prologue, John Steinbeck wrote the following: "Its inhabitants are, as one man once said, 'whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches' by which he meant Everybody" and "[have] the man looked through another peephole he might have said: 'Saints and angels and martyrs and holy men,' and he would have meant the same thing" (Steinbeck 1). He basically comments that the difference in viewpoints given the same event results from the power of perspective and duality observed in people. One might see Cannery Row as a low–down place while the others might see Cannery Row as a lively, vigorous town. One would see a character's actions disputable while the others would see their behaviors admirable. The viewpoints of readers and the way characters behave at various times explain the fact that Cannery Row and its inhabitants possess qualities crossing good and evil. Cannery Row begins with the character Lee Chong, a small grocery owner that supplies the town. Lee was depicted as a kind and generous man, and his good nature was reflected through his appearance and personality. Steinbeck states that "[his] mouth was full and benevolent and the flash of gold when he smiled was rich and warm" (Steinbeck 7). This simple passage gives us a clear first impression of what Lee Chong was like, a man with a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Jim Elliot : God 's Instrument Grace Elliott Mrs. Galaviz English 12 15 April 2015 Jim Elliot: God's Instrument Slap! As the newborn's cry pierced the air, Philip James Elliot was welcomed into the world on October 8, 1927 (Wikipedia). He was born, like all of us, pink, fragile, and helpless. With time, spiritual maturity, and obedience, he developed into a mighty man of God and great in the Christian faith. People are still impacted by his life and death. Elliot, known as Jim, was a missionary who was brutally killed in the effort to evangelize the Huaorani people in Ecuador (Wikipedia). Jim Elliot's death was not in vain because of his lasting legacy, which is illustrated by the choices he made, the transformation of the tribe, and the encouragement to others ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... By having older brothers, he learned from their mistakes, and at the same time was a role model for his sister. The faith and principles Elliot's family held on to, played a major role in who he was. At a young age he could differentiate between right from wrong. His parents helped instill honesty and obedience in him by enforcing it in the home (Wikipedia). From observing his faith–led father and church members, he witnessed Jesus' intricate part in life. Elliot called Christ his Savior at age six, and from then on he trusted God with his future (Flickas, "Jim", Wikipedia). In the following years, he attended Benson Polytechnic High School (Flickas, Wikipedia). While there, became bolder in his faith and sought after adventure (Flickas). Elliot was daily seen carrying his Bible or taking part in extracurricular activities (Flickas, Wikipedia). After high school, he became a student at Wheaton College in Illinois (Flickas, Wikipedia). Elliot devoted all he did to God, and took it upon himself to present the Gospel to others (Flickas, Wikipedia). He stayed disciplined and looked for opportunities to share (Flickas). From helping out in Mexico and an encounter with a missionary, he felt more confident that God was calling him to witness in South America (Wikipedia, Flickas). He hoped one day, soon, he would minister to a nation where Jesus was virtually unknown. Elliot was a man of God, who had a heart for the lost. After his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Analysis Of The Movie ' Truman Show ' What would you feel like if you found out that your whole life was fake and it was all for television? The Truman Show is a film where a man for his whole life has been filmed for the entertainment of others and doesn't even realize that he is on camera at all times. There are a few scenes that will be discussed whether the scene is able to provide a religious experience. The Truman Show is about a man named Truman Burbank. Before he was even born a large corporation adopted him to use as the main character for their television show. Throughout the movie, Truman slowly starts to notice that things seem a little odd and that the world around him doesn't make sense. By the end of the movie, he knows that his life is fake even though no one told him at the time that his world is fake. The first scene that we will be looking at is the very first scene of the movie. In the scene we see a man talking to us. He is the director of The Truman Show, he talks about how while the world around Truman is fake Truman's emotions are real and genuine and that nothing about Truman is fake in any way. Since the director created and runs the television show he can be seen as the holy or divine because he created this world and can control every aspect of it. This scene asks the questions is there a higher being. The director can be seen as a godly figure because he controls the environment and the actions of everyone around Truman. Since everyone are actors on a tv show then that means that all ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. The Truman Show Research Paper Epistemology is a branch of philosophy concerning the method of how do we know what we know, which can be referred to as the 'theory of knowing'. This philosophical idea is apparent in the 1998 film 'The Truman Show'. The lead protagonist Truman Burbank has lived his entire life as the star of a 'reality' television show. Truman is not aware that his reality, the world around him, is simply an extravagant set; his friends, mother, wife and colleagues are all actors. Truman's questioning of the appearance of the reality around him leads him to discover the truth. This leads to the question "Is the world within The Truman Show an illusion or does it have some reality?" This is a difficult question to answer, as it is questioning what is real and there are many possible philosophical positions that can support different views. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Empiricism is the theory stating that all our knowledge comes from sensory experience. We perceive the world around us through our senses as real, for instance: a table feels hard and solid therefore it's real, I can taste this burger, therefore its real. Philosopher John Lock says that when we are born our minds are like blank slates (in Latin, this is called tabula rasa), slate being the original material that black boards were once made of. Locke is saying that at birth our minds are clean blackboards, and all the information we obtain through experiences in written on the blackboard. (Kaye, S.M & Thomson, P, 2007) This relates to Truman's life as he was born into his fake reality as a blank slate and through his sensory experiences has built his knowledge of this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Cannery Row Essay The minor characters in John Steinbeck's novel Cannery Row are a contradiction within themselves. Steinbeck shows two conflicting sides to each character; for example, Mack is smart and lazy and some of his colleagues are both good and bad. Doc is a father figure with some bad habits. Dora Flood is a kind–hearted saint who happens to run a brothel. Lee Chong is a shrewd businessman who likes to take advantage of others. Henri is an artist with a French background even though he isn't from France. Through his characters, Steinbeck shows that humans are complicated and can have many faces. Mack and his Boys are a group of down–and–out but always devious men who live together in the run–down fishmeal shack, owned by Lee Chong, which they ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Gay is a gifted mechanic who can make any vehicle run. Steinbeck allows for most of his characters to posses a double–sided appeal. All of the boys lead relatively normal lives by Cannery standards, but can be seen in two different lights. On one hand they are do–gooders, holy–men, martyrs, the type one would always want on their side. On the other hand, with their refined manipulative abilities, they can be perceived as bullies, bottom–feeders, and lowlifes. They are the instigators and problem–solvers; the straight–men and the comic reliefs; the villains and the heroes. With any role they play, they proceed to play the opposite. Doc is the owner of Western Biological Laboratory, a specimen supply house. Doc is a placid, melancholy man who is a source of culture, munificence, and aid for all on the Row. He introduces Dora's girls and the boys to opera, classical music, and literature, and he takes a mentally handicapped boy in and cares for him. He is also a bit of a womanizer. Somehow, though, Doc always seems lonely, and everyone on the Row constantly wants to do something to show him how much he is loved. Doc is a sort–or father figure to the residents of Cannery Row. When the people are sick, he is their doctor; when they are lonely, their psychologist; and when abandoned, he is their home. Dora Flood is the local madam; a proprietor of the Bear Flag Restaurant, a brothel. Dora is a large woman with ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Of Symbolism In Radiohead's 'OK Computer' In a society so rigidly ruled by structures, Radiohead holds up a funhouse mirror to reveal its flaws and inner workings. Radiohead's OK Computer reveals that society's obsession with hiding vulnerability through repeating symbolism, lyrical metaphors, and By using repeating symbolic imagery, OK Computer shows that ruling power structures, like religion and corporations, center around vulnerability in how they gain influence and in how they are motivated. Additionally, in order to maintain their influence, these powers have to put up a front of indestructibility while also managing internal struggles. Planes crashes are depicted throughout the album's artwork, a symbol of innovation and monetary means that has failed and brought people down with it. Planes, much like corporations, are supposed to have very few chinks in their armor, but both can go down; both are vulnerable under their guise of perfection. There is also the case of religion, where a statue of Jesus is seen being worshipped by a considerably smaller family. Religion is a form of protection, both for the herd immunity and for the surety of an afterlife, and the family is beneath, quite vulnerable. However, the statue is white, like the scribbles surrounding it, while the family is not and would take more work to scribble over because of this. This suggests that religion can be consumed easily and has less control over modern life than in previous centuries. When the statue appears again, it is a hand behind a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. John Steinbeck's Cannery Row The book Cannery Row by John Steinbeck, is about a town that goes through good times and bad times. This book shows that despite your differences, you can work together to make a great community. It also demonstrates that the choices you make have an effect on other people. The book starts out explaining a grocery store in Cannery Row. The owner, Lee Chong, is a very friendly and nice person. A group of bums led by Mack, ask the grocer if they can rent a place that Lee Chong owns, but doesn't use. They get his permission. This group of bums cause a lot of problems in this book. One of them being stealing things from multiple people. The group is very shady, and are good liars. They also try to throw a party at Docs, a scientist, which is a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. John Steinbeck's East of Eden Good Versus Evil in East of Eden The idea of good versus evil is illustrated in several ways in John Steinbeck's East of Eden. This is seen through the external conflicts in the novel, the internal conflicts of the characters, and a universal understanding of the battle between good and evil. External conflicts between the main characters, Cathy and Adam, reflect the idea of good versus evil in their relationship. Cathy, who is much like Satan, creates a huge fight between Adam and his brother Charles with her manipulations. Later, she ruins Adam's dreams and breaks his heart when she shoots him and leaves, sending Adam into a deep depression. After twelve years, Adam snaps out of his dream world and confronts Cathy. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (Lee is Adam's Chinese servant, who really is a main character in this novel). Lee's mother dies as a result of a rape by railway workers who she had hidden her gender and later her pregnancy from. The same men who raped Lee's mother help take care of him as he grows up. The taking care of the infant Lee is seen as a light in a very dark world. Another way the idea of good versus evil is expressed is by the internal conflicts of the characters. Cathy is good example of a character that has an inner conflict of good versus evil. Cathy, the most evil of all in this novel, kills her parents, manipulates Adam and Charles, attempts to abort her children, shoots Adam, abandons her twin sons once they are born, and murders Faye, her friend and boss. However, the good in Cathy overcomes the bad. By the end of the novel she becomes religious and she leaves all of her fortune to her son. Charles is also a good example of a character struggling with inner conflict. Whenever Adam beats him in a game, Charles becomes very abusive towards him; once he almost kills Adam. However, Charles also protects Adam from others and he does, in fact, love him. He "fought any boy who ... slurred Adam and ... protected Adam from his father's harshness" (Steinbeck 491). Adam is forced to join the service and is sent to war, Charles tries to keep in touch with him by writing letters. In ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. Analysis Of The Book ' Cannery Row ' By John Steinbeck Polar Cannery Row, by John Steinbeck, is a book that follows the relationships the inhabitants of the Monterey community have to one another. The adventures of the degenerates of the community revolve around the highly respectable Doc, making up the main plot of the book. However, the story of the dynamic between the two is laced with segments of distraught that paint the cannery into something other than a home to American industry. Steinbeck creates this little community to represent any other, however gives the reader different perspectives of the activities within in order to deconstruct the expected utopia that everyone assumes to plague local communities. He shifts the outlook on the cannery from a lifeless snapshot of a community located within Monterey California, to a living image bustling with reality. Steinbeck creates a rift in perspective to reflect the hidden values and realities of the ugly and beautiful through the interactions and pursuits of the degenerates of the community, "Mack and the boys," and the figurehead of Cannery Row, Doc. Throughout the entire book, Mack and the Boys are proven to be quite noble men, despite their social rank. Each of the men in this group are shown to possess one unique quality that seems to be the moral of a folktale or mythological story. Even the purposes these men serve within the book are rooted within good intent. Meanwhile, the highly–respected Doc drowns himself in women and music to hide from his loneliness. This ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. How Is Truman Trying To Get His Identity "The best place on earth Seahaven voted planets top town." This newspaper headline helps to control Truman because they are saying he needs to stay in Seahaven because its the best place. "Who needs Europe!" They don't want Truman to leave and go to Europe so they put that there to control him from leaving or wanting to leave. "Crackdown on homeless Seahaven Islands City Fathers say "Enough is Enough!" They do this to control Truman because he said his father looked like a homeless man and they are trying to justify Truman seeing them drag his father onto the bus to get rid of him. 2. When you are young you are trying to find your identity by trying new things and trying to experience life. Media influences a lot of choices because it could ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They had lots of different camera angles and one was from a trash can so that the audience could see him in the morning, another was from his ring so they could see him at all times, another one was from the back seat of his car so they could watch him while he drives, another was on an advertisement board so they could watch him on his way to work, another was on posts outside his house so they could see him anytime he was home, another was on a bookshelf so they could see what he did and who he talked to, there are a lot more but those are just some of them. Some camera angles with Christof are when Truman is bigger than him for once and this is to show more emotion, we also see Christof looking over the whole dome from the moon and this shows that he can always see everything, also we see him when he is leaving the room and walking through the metal detector and the guards are wearing Truman shirts that say "Love him, protect him" this could mean either love Christof or Truman and protect either Christof or Truman. They chose the angles for Truman because the whole world was watching him, they at least needed to have some good angles of his every action. They chose the angles for Christof so that we could see how they operated everyday and how they fixed any ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Interconnecting Chapters In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Throughout Cannery Row the use of interconnecting chapters is used by John Steinbeck for a purpose that was not understood at first by critics. Nearly half of the chapters in Cannery Row are interconnecting chapters, some chapters even stray away from the plot, but are implemented for one reason or another. These chapters were not seen to have significance to the book at the time and lead to many bad critics of the novel, but the bad reviews would not be enough to stop people from buying Steinbeck's Cannery Row. Having these interconnecting chapters take up so much of the novel has to have some significance since it was deliberately implemented by its author. Understanding these interconnecting chapters plays a big role in understanding Cannery ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Having had great success with Tortilla Flat, Cannery Row, publicly proclaimed as its sequel, didn't live up to expectations, at first. Although it was not met with the same interest as Steinbeck's previous works, in fact it received much hate amongst critics for its constant jumping around and ideals, Cannery Row ended up being Steinbeck's most successful books; it was like a love hate relationship between critics and the novel. It wasn't until the design of Cannery Row became public did these critics fall in love with the book. Additionally this book changed literature as a whole, "However, Cannery Row was still seen as an important work to add to the canon of American literature because it marked an important transition into what is now known as environmental literature" (Critical Reception). Known as a fictional book, Steinbeck has made it clear that many aspects of Cannery Row can be found in the real world, more precisely Steinbeck's childhood home. The impact Cannery Row had on literature does not stop there, as Cannery row grew in popularity many people sought out searching for the so called Monterey, California; so much that it today it is a tourist attraction and as of 1953 Ocean View Avenue was renamed Cannery Row (Critical Reception). It's no surprise that with the following Steinbeck had that the small city of Monterey could be transformed into a tourist attraction and it all began with theses interconnecting chapter's influencing the structure and the themes of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Summer Ball Summary "Summer Ball" by Mike Lupica is a children's literature story of particular interest and young boys. It follows a 13 year–old boy named Danny Walker. Danny is a basketball player who is attending an elite basketball camp called "Right Way" in Maine during the summer. Danny is a very good basketball player but there is a small problem, he is really small. Now he is going to the camp to find out will his lack of height prevent him from playing with the big boys. Danny live in Middletown, Long Island with his parents, Richie and Ali Walker, who have recently reconciled after a long separation. Danny, like his father before him, is a star basketball player whose elite travel team won the national championship in their age group, largely behind the skills of Danny and his friends Will and Ty. But Danny has a serious concern – he is very short for his age and since his father is also less than 5'10" tall, he is unlikely to grow to be as tall as he'd like to be a better basketball player. In the beginning, his height didn't hold him back, but in the past year other boys have been getting taller and he is having trouble competing. He is also considerably shorter than his close friend, Tess Hewitt, on whom he has a not–so–secret crush, but their relationship has cooled since she began hanging out with a new boy who shares her interest in tennis. As the summer following his 8th grade year begins, Danny's big concern is his upcoming trip to Right Way. He knows he should be excited ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Most Fruitful Character In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row The Most Fruitful Character of Cannery Row Cannery Row (by J. Steinbeck) is mystical and philosophic book that doesn't follow conventional storytelling. The book isn't about Cannery Row itself, but the people that inhabit it. Cannery Row deals with people's stories of greed, failure and success. One of the most successful characters in the story is Doc Ricketts, due to his philanthropy towards the people of Cannery Row, his flexibility towards others, and his gift of strong intellect. Doc (Ricketts) is one of the main characters in the story, and perhaps the most important. He plays an integral part of the story, and outside of the it aswell. Doc is a marine biologist who is also the unofficial doctor, philosopher and backbone of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Obviously Doc has this. He runs a business, selling marine life to universities and educational institutions. Going back to the previous example, he calmly takes the tab off Mack, subtly showing his success. And going back to the first example, he gives money away to people of the row. He gets the money through his intelligence. The majority of scholars and educators alike seem to think that the characters Dora and Mack (and the boys) are the most successful characters. Dora, while being financially successful and helping the Row, runs an illegitimate business; so, on a technical level, her success isn't legitimate. Mack is full of contentment, yet he is poor and gets his money through immoral schemes. One might call Mack, "philosophic;" he isn't because he lacks the objective intellect required to even be on the caliber of a philosopher. Doc, unlike those two people, gets his monetary gain legitimate ways, has contentment, and isn't poor. Doc is the most successful character in Cannery Row due to his kindness, pliancy towards others, and prodigious intelligence. Success is simply a title. We are all successful in our own ways, just like how unconventionally Doc is. Striving for success, whether it be through school, hard work, or kindness is something everyone should aim to achieve. If Doc can do it, so can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Cannery Row Essay In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row, Mack and his ravenous companions depart the inhospitable coastal fog of Monterey, California, and head east toward Carmel Valley, searching for sun. Turning down a sinuous two–lane road running alongside the Carmel River, they discover an Elysian plain basking beneath crystalline skies. Wildflowers stippled the orchards and quilted greenery at the base of the Santa Lucia Mountain Range. The men scoop up carrots fallen from a flatbed. Their truck runs over a rooster. They snag a bay leaf from a tree, make a fire, and prepare a feast. "Luck," Steinbeck writes, "blossomed from the first." Steinbeck's Depression–era saga was published in 1945. Exactly 20 years later, a 15–year–old Monterey High student named Peter Partch made the same eastbound turn onto Carmel Valley Road. Sitting quietly alongside his father in the cab of their truck, Partch hoped luck would blossom for him, too. "My big brother was an athlete – a great baseball player," Partch said. "He'd hit the ball and it would take off like a rocket. He was kind of majestic, but I was an abysmal failure. I wasn't sure of myself or my abilities, or my place in the world, for that matter." Reserved and without the hard shell needed to succeed in sports, Partch found salvation in art. "I had an instinct that I'd have a place in the art world," he said. "Artists seemed to have a higher purpose. It wasn't about the ego. "I was particularly interested in sculpture. At the end of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. Cannery Row Analysis The beginning of Cannery Row, by John Steinbeck, gives/includes a great description for the milieu. After reading the opening chapter it is easy to imagine yourself to the real settings. Story revolves around the very realistic environment of harbour cities in the twentieth century; stinky mixed odour of dead and living fish and rusty metal splinters sprawling all around. So, if you get properly affected by that description, you should nose out the stink of canned fish and feel like you ́re one of those oil clothed Polaks. Canneries made of corrugated iron gets my thoughts to old, wild–western movies. Everything is rusty and so the overall view is reddish–brown. Splintered wood and weedy lots reflects an image that no–one is taking care of the city, sardine canning is the main task and whole Monterey is working for that. There ́s no time for such thing as renovation, the minor time called leisure is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Inhabitants are "hidden" to flophouses and lonely Asian grocer waits on his own that someone would come to buy even one quart of beer. Junk heaps on the street are absorbed to the darkness. There are no houses near Cannery Row, typical workers live up on the hill and prestigious upper class lives somewhere where the stinky smell doesn ́t reach. Every morning the scream of frightening, arriving fleet whistle gives an alarm to go work. I guess author used that sound to describe morning habit because everyone can imagine how horrible it would be to wake up in the voice coming from cargo ship, it reminds me of nuclear power accident... The scream means to scramble into clothes and precipitate down to canneries. Down the canneries people are primarily wearing rubber coats and oilcloth aprons. The place wasn ́t hygienic, this can be seen in overall depiction; I can see blood trails and guts of fish ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. The Truman Show Research Paper The Truman Show The Truman Show film is based on a television show that focuses on a character called Truman, whose life is circumscribed by a large dome–shaped soundstage constructed to house the entire cast, crew, environment and special effects such as the weather, sun and moon. Truman is completely clueless of the world which he is living in as his family and friends are also actors following orders from the control room. Truman is the main character and also the star of the show, out of five unwanted pregnancies, Truman was chosen determined by the air date of the show. Christof is the director of the Truman Show is also portrayed as a God type figure throughout the show. He is able to control everything that is within the dome, even manipulating the way in which Truman thinks. Christof wants the money ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Truman is unable to leave Sea Haven because of Christof's manipulation. Christof has manufactured a strong emotional relationship throughout Truman's life, his father's death at sea is the most powerful emotion which has made Truman fear water ever since. Christof has tried many ways to keep Truman from escaping the island, but he knows if someone very close to Truman dies at sea, Truman will not go near water again. Everyone who is around Truman is an actor hired to be on the show, they all have little speakers inside their ears to receive orders from the control room. Truman is constantly manipulated of his thoughts by his best friend Marlon. Truman constantly wants to go to Fiji but Marlon is acting clueless of where Fiji is and constantly convinces him not to go but to remain in Sea Haven. Although Marlon does not want to lie to Truman, he is forced to as Christof is completely in control of what Marlon says to Truman, this is the way that Christof manages to keep Truman within Sea ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. Pepé's Journey Pepé transforms from an oversized boy to a brave man in the span of a few short days in John Steinbeck's Flight. Under Pepé's and Mama's standards of a man, Pepé is man right after he murders the man in Monterey, because he murdered the man in Monterey. Truly, however, Pepé isn't a man until he has endured the hardships of living in the mountains alone and the independence that this journey requires him to gain. When Pepé leaves for his infamous journey to Monterey, he is still a mere boy of nineteen. Pepé acts like a boy and is treated like a boy before journeying to Monterey alone. The first sign of Pepé's childness is his lack of responsibility and his laziness. Pepé is a nineteen–year–old boy in a household with no father, and he still ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When Pepé returns from Monterey "he was changed" (135). After Pepé reveals what he has done to Mama, he says, "I am a man now, Mama. The man said names to me I could not allow" (135). This implies that Pepé thinks this what a man does: stands up for himself no matter what even if this means murder. After Pepé returns from Monterey, he considers himself a man and therefore starts acting like a man. His eyes are "bright, sharp, and purposeful" (135). This is certainly more manly than how Pepé acted before his trip to Monterey (foolish and care–free), but this does not make him manly, it is simply an expectation of most nineteen–year–olds. Mama also thinks of Pepé as a man because of his actions in Monterey. "Pepé is man now. He has a man's thing to do" (136). This shows that Mama thinks going to the mountains alone, a result of Pepé's violence, is what makes someone a man, that this is something customary of all men. Mama also calls Pepé a man many times after he returns, which contrasts her thoughts before Pepé leaves for Monterey. "Yes, thou art a man" (135), Mama says. Mama also calls Pepé "our beautiful– our brave... our protector" (137). Mama and Pepé both think of Pepé as a man as he embarks on his journey into the mountains, but both of their perceptions of what a man truly is are not completely on ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Cannery Row Ambition "Cannery Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream"(Steinbeck 1). In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row, Mack and the boys are trying to do something cordial for their friend Doc, who has been extremely amiable without requesting a reward. Mack hits on the idea that they should throw a thank–you party, and the entire community quickly becomes involved. Unfortunately, the party rages out of control, and Doc's lab and mood are ruined. In an effort to return to Doc's good graces, Mack and the boys decide to throw another party, but make it work this time. Through a procession of linked vignettes and many different themes, such as community, ambitions, and domesticity; ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... All of the characters in the book have a specific ambition. In other words, Mack's ambition is throwing a party for Doc and Henri's ambition is to never finish his boat and to live the life of a french painter. To add on, Mrs. Malloy's ambition was to decorate her boiler so that it felt more like home. When her husband became a landlord "she began to change. First it was a rug, then a washtub, then a lamp with a colored silk shade. Finally she came into the boiler on her hands and knees one day and she stood up and said a little breathlessly, 'Holman's are having a sale of curtains. Real lace curtains and edges of blue and pink–$1.98 a set with curtain rods thrown in.' "(Steinbeck 43). At first, Mrs. Malloy was content with the boiler being undecorated. But as soon as her husband became the landlord, she felt like the house was hers and that it should feel like home. She started finding things that she liked and then she would put them in the house. Finally, she found some cheap curtains that she liked, and she wanted to put them in the boiler, even though the boiler didn't have any windows. In Cannery Row, Steinbeck displays a simpler rendition of ambition: the aspiration to find happiness within one's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Function Of The Environment In Cannery Row, By John Steinbeck Human behavior is a function of the environment that he/she is brought up in because it is the environment that shapes the person's morals. This statement is openly validated in the novel Cannery Row where an inclusive community is built as a result of good morals that have been developed and shaped by the environment. Cannery Row is novel that was published in 1945 by John Steinbeck in Monterey. It was named after a waterfront street in California which had sardine caning factories. According to Grasse et al (75), fellowship and warm–heartedness is all that is required to form a united and successful community. Wealth is important part of one's life but it should not take away the person's happiness. Steinbeck in his work uses the characters of the novel to communicate this message in a clear and understandable manner. The name of the novel matches with the actual meaning that the writer wanted to communicate the readers. He used the name to enable the readers to be able to relate the novel's actual meaning with authentic opinions. One of the ideas that show clearly from the novel is that, proper care of the environment can improve our livelihood. This could be through sourcing of food and income. This is evidenced by majority of the characters in the novel who depend on the environment for livelihood. The marine biologist by the name Doc gets his income from collecting marine creatures and presents them for research in colleges and universities. Lee Chong operates a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. The Issue Of Gang Related Crime Essay As declared by Ed Royce: " This bill is a comprehensive plan, that will increase gang related prosecutions, and prevent gang related crime. " (House Passes Gangbuster ...S. Congressman Ed Royce) However, here a precision is necessary. If we have a doubt about gang 's involvement into criminal activities it 's not per se sufficient to persecute anyone, in only constatating the fact of the occured or possible to be occured in the future crime. Proofs are necessary."The illegally obtained evidence may be suppressed, Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471 (1963). ( https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/371/471/case.html) We are in the US, gang 's like all others members, which beloning to a group have the rights to geather, for the free speach, under the 1st and 4th Ammendment. "Trus, the United States Supreme Court has stated that the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment do not allow stopping and demanding identification or information, or taking photographs from individuals without any specific basis for believing they are involved in criminal activity, Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968) (https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/392/1) and Brown v. Texas, 443 U.S. 47 (1979)." (https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/443/47/case.html) So, here it will be interesting to understant which will be the approach of the police while arresting gang 's members in the street. The situation can be fast the opposite, once in the court and the arestee will charge ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Community In John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Another example of how Steinbeck focuses on the community in this story is when Doc makes a statement about what men admire in their community. These lines are stated in John Steinbeck's novel and are talking about how the men in their community or area admire kindness and honesty but love self–interest, greed, meanness, or even egotism. This is just an example of how the people in the community are trustworthy and have kind or nice personalities. A personal interview with Michael Hemp on John Steinbeck's Cannery Row is a very special video that talks about the history of Cannery Row and also the community. He says that even though there were some things in the community that some would not agree with, that everyone in Cannery Row were kind and showed how people would always be ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He says that John wrote this book mostly in memory of friends and picked Cannery Row to write about because it reminded him of a community with such nice and kind people. Michael also says that Steinbeck does not write genres of fiction. He states that he only writes about real things, real people, and also even real places or events. This short interview also shows pictures of where Mack and his friends stayed all the time. Michael Hemp talks about how cannery row got the name and what the first item being canned there was, which is sardines. He also says that it was the canning of sardines that made Monterey Bay famous. This means that the community was very well known. He shows in the video what Ed Rickett's laboratory and the grocery store looks like today if someone would visit it. He mentions that Cannery Row is one of John Steinbeck's best novels and that it is all about a fantastic community that has a great present and very eventful past. He talks about how Ed Rickett's lab gave children who did not get to experience physiology the chance to study it in his laboratory with organisms and animals. This shows a good example of someone helping other people in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. John Steinbeck's Cannery Row Cannery Row: Living Heaven on Earth Cannery Row (1945), a novel written by John Steinbeck, Nobel Prize winner for Literature, is a book without much of a plot. Instead, it's a novel where setting, atmosphere and most importantly character, take precedence. Steinbeck creates a colorful array of characters struggling to understand their own unique places in the world. The story is set in the early 20th century, immediately following the Depression and World War II. The characters live in Monterey, California amid the jumble of the sardine fisheries, the "Palace Flophouses", Lee Chong's grocery, Dora's whorehouse, and Doc's Biological Lab. Throughout the book, Steinbeck has the uncanny ability to combine his characters' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Steinbeck frequently interrupts the flow of what could be considered the main story line, by throwing short segments into the writing thus introducing a new character (usually not directly connected to the primary story) or referencing some sort of cruel occurrence of real life. For example, in chapter twelve Steinbeck writes about the death of Josh Billings, an author who had come to Monterey. After Billings' death, the doctor dumps his remains into a gulch, where a little boy and his dog later find them. The little boy, not knowing any better, takes the author's remains to use them for fishing. Upon hearing this, the town quickly collects all his insides and puts them in a leaden box, which was placed in Josh Billings' coffin. The purpose of inserting this anecdote was to show the camaraderie and respect of the people in Cannery Row. At one point in the story, Steinbeck writes, "Josh Billings was a great man, a great writer. He had honored Monterey by dying there and he had been degraded" (64–65). Steinbeck demonstrates that by creating an atmosphere of noble intentions and good feelings for one another, everyone is able to live in a world of peace even when there are bad times. Steinbeck spends the greater part of the book writing about a party that Mac and the boys plan to throw for Doc. The boys believe that since Doc has always been such a nice guy that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. Cannery Row Themes John Steinbeck returns to the Monterey area of California for Cannery Row, a story of a few men living in California in the aftermath of the Great Depression, specifically in an abandoned warehouse. Steinbeck wrote this book at the behest of a WWII soldier who desired to forget the horrors of the war he just endured. Cannery Row mixes multiple themes and tones together in order to bring together a captivating narrative which has endured over time. Cannery Row takes place in the cannery district of Monterey, California, following the story of Mack and his friends as the rent a converted shack from Lee Chong, a local grocer. Mack soon meets Doc, the owner of a local biological warehouse, a man who always has a negative vibe about him yet is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... People who are described as ""whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches"(1) often band together to fight against problems, such as the influenza epidemic. Business owners who are shown throughout the novel that money is a priority such as Lee Chong and Dora deal as often in good will as they do with cash, helping the boys out along their journey. At the heart of this community rests Doc, someone that everyone is in some way indebted to along with being overall a good person and becoming the soul of the community, as when he is wronged the whole town goes into a negative state. Related to this is finding happiness without material wealth, specifically with analyzing the story of Mack and the boys. If you throw out side plots and various other things from the story, it's a few poor guys trying to collect up enough booze and pocket money to throw a party. These men don't value the concept of wealth in material earnings as much as they measure wealth in the sense of good will and the experiences on has in life. The boys described as "not mercantile men. They did not measure their joys in goods sold, their egos in bank balances, nor their loves in what they cost" (108) Steinbecks writing style almost always provides a tone of affection for at least one character or group, in Cannery Row it's almost everyone he feels this way about. He calls Mack and the boys ""the Beauties"(14) and writes about ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Morality in Cannery Row by John Steinbeck In society, people value morality as a human quality. People learn their values from when they are young from various sources. However, who is to say what is necessarily right and wrong? Values and morality can have different meanings, especially if placed in the context of a distorted materialistic society. In Cannery Row, John Steinbeck reminds people about this important theme and how it applies on a bigger scale. The setting of the story is Cannery Row, located in Monterey, California. Steinbeck's choice of setting is significant in that it fully captures the breadth of humanity. On the one hand, it is an area that represents the thriving sardine industry. On the other, it is also an area where the lower classes, including bums and whores could live. In actuality, the story is not really about the sardine industry at all, but is rather a collection of short stories that are all unified about the same theme, the quality and meaning of life. The main plot of this novel is centered on Doc, a marine biologist. It begins when Mack and the boys, Lee Chong, and Dora throw a surprise party for him to show their appreciation and great reverence towards him. By writing about the warm relationships between Doc and the inhabitants of Cannery Row, Steinbeck uses these short stories as his way of talking about life on a bigger scale. In essence, Cannery Row is John Steinbeck's personal philosophy on human importance, his take on what humans should be like, and his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...