This document traces changing ideas about women in America from 1776 to the present. [1] In 1776, the Declaration of Independence stated "all men are created equal" excluding women. [2] From 1820-1860, the "Cult of Domesticity" idealized women as pious, pure, submissive, and focused on domestic duties like childrearing. [3] In the early 1900s, terms like "spinster" and "old maid" referred to unmarried women, and the card game "Old Maid" reflected social attitudes, while the 1920s flapper represented a new, independent breed of woman.
John Osborne wrote Look Back in Anger in 1956, drawing on his own experiences. It follows Jimmy Porter, a working class man married to Alison from an upper middle class family. Jimmy vents his anger at society through bitter tirades against Alison and her friend Helena. The play was considered revolutionary for using informal language and portraying disaffected youth. It helped launch the "Angry Young Men" movement in British theater.
Themes in John Osborne's, ''Look Back In Anger''Shranti Hake
This document provides a summary of John Osborne's 1956 play "Look Back in Anger". It discusses the play as an example of Kitchen Sink Drama that focused on the lives of ordinary working class people. It outlines the play's themes of alienation, the "Angry Young Man", class conflict, and loss of childhood experienced by the characters. Biographical information is provided on playwright John Osborne and the themes explored in the play including anger, masculinity in art, and the decline of the British Empire.
Kitchen sink realism was a British cultural movement that developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s focused on social realism. It depicted the everyday lives and struggles of the working class through gritty dramas and films set in poorer urban areas. The term originated from a painting by John Bratby featuring a kitchen sink and was later applied to emerging works realistically portraying working class life. Kitchen sink realism gave rise to social realism films and shows that presented realistic characters and situations to audiences.
The document provides a timeline of events involving Eva Smith and members of the Birling family between 1910-1912. It shows that Eva was sacked from her jobs by Mr. Birling and Sheila Birling. She later became Gerald Croft's mistress before he broke things off. Eva discovered she was pregnant by Eric Birling and was denied assistance from Mrs. Birling. She ultimately committed suicide in April 1912. The timeline establishes the connections between Eva and each member of the Birling family that will be explored in the play.
The document summarizes John Osborne's 1956 play "Look Back in Anger". It takes place in the one bedroom flat shared by Jimmy Porter, a lower middle class man, his wife Alison from an upper-class family, and their friend Cliff. Jimmy is intellectually restless and argues with his friends about accepting the world as it is. The situation grows worse with the arrival of Alison's actress friend Helena. Alison confesses to Helena that she is pregnant, and Helena calls Alison's father to take her away from the cramped flat.
John Osborne, Look Back in Anger, Liceo Attilio Bertolucci-ppt Venturini-FerrariChiaraLaura95
John Osborne's 1956 play Look Back in Anger transformed English theatre. It depicted the post-World War 2 climate in Britain through the tumultuous relationship between Jimmy and his wife Alison. Jimmy, part of the new working class, rails against the British establishment through his passionate monologues. The play innovated by taking place entirely in a run-down attic flat and focusing on the domestic lives of ordinary Britons. It explored themes like the decline of patriarchal families, class conflict, and Britain adjusting to its diminished global status following the end of its empire.
Femininity in movies through popular culturepopculture
This document analyzes the portrayal of femininity and women's roles in various films and media over time including:
- Early Westernization brought new roles for educated, working women alongside traditional mothers/wives.
- Disney films often depicted domestic, silent women whose goal was marriage. Later films showed more independent heroines.
- Early Hollywood portrayed women as sexual objects or used stereotypes like vamp/bad women.
- Popular culture and movies influenced fashion trends and views of women's sexuality.
- More recent films sometimes still depict women as uneducated, sexual objects, or victims of violence.
This document traces changing ideas about women in America from 1776 to the present. [1] In 1776, the Declaration of Independence stated "all men are created equal" excluding women. [2] From 1820-1860, the "Cult of Domesticity" idealized women as pious, pure, submissive, and focused on domestic duties like childrearing. [3] In the early 1900s, terms like "spinster" and "old maid" referred to unmarried women, and the card game "Old Maid" reflected social attitudes, while the 1920s flapper represented a new, independent breed of woman.
John Osborne wrote Look Back in Anger in 1956, drawing on his own experiences. It follows Jimmy Porter, a working class man married to Alison from an upper middle class family. Jimmy vents his anger at society through bitter tirades against Alison and her friend Helena. The play was considered revolutionary for using informal language and portraying disaffected youth. It helped launch the "Angry Young Men" movement in British theater.
Themes in John Osborne's, ''Look Back In Anger''Shranti Hake
This document provides a summary of John Osborne's 1956 play "Look Back in Anger". It discusses the play as an example of Kitchen Sink Drama that focused on the lives of ordinary working class people. It outlines the play's themes of alienation, the "Angry Young Man", class conflict, and loss of childhood experienced by the characters. Biographical information is provided on playwright John Osborne and the themes explored in the play including anger, masculinity in art, and the decline of the British Empire.
Kitchen sink realism was a British cultural movement that developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s focused on social realism. It depicted the everyday lives and struggles of the working class through gritty dramas and films set in poorer urban areas. The term originated from a painting by John Bratby featuring a kitchen sink and was later applied to emerging works realistically portraying working class life. Kitchen sink realism gave rise to social realism films and shows that presented realistic characters and situations to audiences.
The document provides a timeline of events involving Eva Smith and members of the Birling family between 1910-1912. It shows that Eva was sacked from her jobs by Mr. Birling and Sheila Birling. She later became Gerald Croft's mistress before he broke things off. Eva discovered she was pregnant by Eric Birling and was denied assistance from Mrs. Birling. She ultimately committed suicide in April 1912. The timeline establishes the connections between Eva and each member of the Birling family that will be explored in the play.
The document summarizes John Osborne's 1956 play "Look Back in Anger". It takes place in the one bedroom flat shared by Jimmy Porter, a lower middle class man, his wife Alison from an upper-class family, and their friend Cliff. Jimmy is intellectually restless and argues with his friends about accepting the world as it is. The situation grows worse with the arrival of Alison's actress friend Helena. Alison confesses to Helena that she is pregnant, and Helena calls Alison's father to take her away from the cramped flat.
John Osborne, Look Back in Anger, Liceo Attilio Bertolucci-ppt Venturini-FerrariChiaraLaura95
John Osborne's 1956 play Look Back in Anger transformed English theatre. It depicted the post-World War 2 climate in Britain through the tumultuous relationship between Jimmy and his wife Alison. Jimmy, part of the new working class, rails against the British establishment through his passionate monologues. The play innovated by taking place entirely in a run-down attic flat and focusing on the domestic lives of ordinary Britons. It explored themes like the decline of patriarchal families, class conflict, and Britain adjusting to its diminished global status following the end of its empire.
Femininity in movies through popular culturepopculture
This document analyzes the portrayal of femininity and women's roles in various films and media over time including:
- Early Westernization brought new roles for educated, working women alongside traditional mothers/wives.
- Disney films often depicted domestic, silent women whose goal was marriage. Later films showed more independent heroines.
- Early Hollywood portrayed women as sexual objects or used stereotypes like vamp/bad women.
- Popular culture and movies influenced fashion trends and views of women's sexuality.
- More recent films sometimes still depict women as uneducated, sexual objects, or victims of violence.
This document summarizes a film project about a teenage girl and the woods.
The main character is a 16-year-old British girl from a middle-class family. Her father was murdered a year ago. She lives with her emotionally distant mother. In the woods, her life changes and she becomes darker and more damaged. At the end, she commits suicide to save herself.
The antagonist is the woods, where everything changes for the girl and she transforms. At first the woods seems peaceful but it becomes darker.
The film aims to represent the girl's helplessness as she has no one to help her and faces bullying. It also uses stereotypes like the innocent girl and scary woods to tell its
The document provides background information on John Osborne's 1956 play "Look Back in Anger". It introduces the two main motifs of the "Angry Young Man" and "Kitchen Sink Drama". The play was groundbreaking for depicting the domestic lives and raw emotions of the working class in postwar Britain. The main character, Jimmy Porter, came to epitomize the disaffected youth of the time and their anger towards the declining British class system and empire. The play captured the mood of social change in 1950s Britain.
The document provides context about J.B. Priestley's life and political views around the time he wrote An Inspector Calls. It explains that Priestley was concerned with social inequality in Britain and wanted social change. It then gives summaries of each character in the play, including Mr. and Mrs. Birling, Sheila, Eric, Gerald Croft, Inspector Goole, and Eva Smith. Context is also provided about when the play is set and how this differs from when it was written.
Australian soaps originated on radio in the 1940s and first aired on television in the 1950s. They follow a hybrid format of melodrama and realism, featuring realistic settings and middle-class characters along with dramatic storylines. Popular examples include Neighbours and Home and Away. Australian soaps appeal to audiences aged 15-45, especially women, through their exciting plots, attractive young casts, and focus on scandal and gossip. They have found success internationally since the 1980s, especially in the UK and US.
This document analyzes how literature from the past still influences and repeats itself in modern Hollywood culture and celebrity behavior. It discusses how Albert Camus' The Stranger relates to crimes committed by the Lohan family. It also discusses parallels between Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and speeches by Hollywood elites, as well as how women were portrayed in Conrad's time relates to modern celebrity scandals. Additionally, it discusses how a Lockwood poem about love and loss relates to Kim Kardashian's divorce. Finally, it discusses how themes of youth and war in a Margaret Postgate Cole poem connect to the movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Overall, the document argues that literature from the past still shapes Hollywood culture
This summary provides the key details from the theatre review document in 3 sentences:
The document reviews several London theatre productions, providing details on the venue, dates, plot summaries and critiques for each show. Several of the productions focus on real-world issues like genocide, war commemoration and the life of Eleanor Roosevelt. The reviews provide commentary on the performances, writing and themes explored in each play.
The play explores themes of social responsibility and the interconnectedness of society through the interrogation of a wealthy British family by a police inspector about the suicide of a young pregnant woman named Eva Smith. Each family member is revealed to have played a small role in Eva's downward spiral through selfish actions like firing her from a job or refusing charity, showing how the attitudes and choices of all members of society can impact others. The inspector's compelling arguments seek to persuade the family that true change is needed to build a more just post-war society where people support each other.
This review summarizes the play "Donkeys' Years" by Michael Frayn, directed by Lisa Spirling at the Rose Theatre Kingston. It describes how six former university students reminisce about their college days over food and wine at a reunion, but their evening devolves into drunken antics as they behave like their younger selves. The set effectively shifts between the university grounds and individual rooms. While the physical humor is best in Act Two, Act One could have heightened the comedy more. Each cast member strongly portrays their contrasting characters, particularly Ian Hughes' animated performance as Snell that keeps the audience laughing. The circumstances inevitably lead to embarrassing and misunderstood events.
The document discusses the "Angry Young Men", a group of British authors and playwrights active in the 1940s-1950s who were unsatisfied with the new social programs established after World War II. While the new welfare state aimed to reduce class division through reforms like education opportunities and national healthcare, the Angry Young Men felt the reforms did not go far enough and class divisions remained. The document highlights several key Angry Young Men writers like John Osborne and his play Look Back in Anger (1957), which is said to exemplify their themes of challenging class barriers and personal rebellion through emotionally charged works.
The document discusses conspiracy theories and how they relate to popular TV shows. It provides examples of shows like The X-Files, Twin Peaks, and Seinfeld that cultivate paranoia and distrust among characters. This seeds the ground for conspiracy theories by making motives and relationships ambiguous. It also notes real-life people like Richard Belzer who have written about conspiracies, showing how some shows reflect real-world conspiracy thinking.
Thomas Lanier Williams, also known as Tennessee Williams, was an American playwright born in 1911 in Mississippi. Some of his most famous works examined themes of repression, desire, and the struggle of outsiders in society. One such play, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1955 and explores the fractured relationships within the Pollitt family through characters like Brick and his wife Maggie. Williams drew from his own life experiences with alcoholism, depression, and the difficulties of being a homosexual man in the 20th century when writing about universal human truths in his plays.
The document provides an overview of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. It summarizes the key characters, setting, themes and symbols. The story is set in 1930s Maycomb, Alabama and narrated by Scout Finch as an adult, reflecting on her childhood. Some of the main themes explored are racial prejudice and the mockingbird symbolizing innocence.
The document provides background information on the play Fences by August Wilson and the author himself. It summarizes that Fences depicts life for African Americans in 1950s Pittsburgh through the lens of the Maxson family and explores universal human experiences like family relationships. August Wilson grew up in Pittsburgh in the 1940s-1960s and drew from his experiences to craft realistic portrayals of African American life and struggles with racism in his works. The synopsis then overviews the plot of Fences, focusing on tensions between the father Troy and his son Cory over Cory's hopes for college and Troy's past experiences with racism.
Tennessee Williams was a renowned American playwright born in 1911 in Mississippi. Some of his most famous works include A Streetcar Named Desire (1947), for which he won his first Pulitzer Prize, and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955), which earned him his second Pulitzer. Williams drew from his own dysfunctional family background and struggles with his sexuality to explore themes of escapism, dependence on men, and the battle between reality and fantasy in his plays. He received widespread critical acclaim and honors over his career, including two Pulitzer Prizes and a Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Riverdale is an American teen drama television series based on characters from Archie Comics. It follows Archie Andrews and his friends in the town of Riverdale as they deal with mysteries like the death of classmate Jason Blossom. The main characters are Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead, and Cheryl Blossom. The series debuted in 2017 on The CW to positive reviews and has been renewed for additional seasons.
The document provides character summaries for the main characters in J.B. Priestley's play An Inspector Calls:
1) Arthur Birling is a wealthy businessman who believes himself above the law as a former magistrate. He is unaware of how his actions affect others and has unrealistic views about social and economic issues.
2) Sybil Birling is a snobbish woman who looks down on those less wealthy. She is a hypocrite who judges others more harshly than her own family.
3) Sheila Birling realizes the tragedy of Eva Smith's story most quickly. She feels responsible for Eva's firing and tries to get the others to acknowledge their faults.
4) Eric Birling is portrayed
Lorraine Hansberry was the first black playwright to create realistic portraits of African American life. Her play, A Raisin in the Sun, about a struggling black family, was a landmark work and helped bring attention to the civil rights movement. Bruce Norris' play Clybourne Park is a spin-off of A Raisin in the Sun, set in the same house but 50 years later to examine changing race relations and gentrification in Chicago neighborhoods. A key difference between plays and other literary forms is that plays are written to be performed on stage through dialogue between characters, while other forms are generally meant to be read.
The document provides background information on J.B. Priestley, the author of An Inspector Calls, and context about the play. It discusses Priestley's life and experiences, including fighting in WWI. It outlines some of the key themes in the play like class conflict, social responsibility, and the roles of women. It also provides historical context for when the play is set in 1912, covering events like the Titanic and women's suffrage movement.
This document analyzes the representation of women in Disney films from the "Classic Years" of 1937-1967 to the modern "Eisner Era" of 1989-present. It discusses how early Disney princesses like Snow White and Cinderella conform to tropes of being rescued from unfortunate circumstances by a prince after spending their time cleaning and waiting. Later eras saw fewer female leads and more supporting roles for women. Modern princesses like Ariel, Jasmine, and Mulan are portrayed as needing to trade their identities or become men to achieve success rather than gaining power through their own abilities. The document also notes Disney's pattern of depicting female power as evil through wicked witches and stepmothers while weakness
HTML es el lenguaje más utilizado para la presentación de textos estructurados en formato hipertexto y páginas web. Fue desarrollado a principios de los 90 por Tim Berners-Lee y se ha convertido en el estándar para la creación de sitios web. HTML utiliza etiquetas para describir la estructura de un documento y permitir la inclusión de enlaces, imágenes y otros objetos interactivos.
La intranet es una red privada dentro de una organización que permite compartir información de manera segura entre sus miembros. Se compone de una página de catálogo, un gestor de contenidos, una extranet para usuarios externos y una intranet de proveedores. Su construcción requiere el protocolo TCP/IP, un servidor web, definir el tipo de información a almacenar y cómo almacenarla en la web interna.
Bauer Media Group publishes several music magazines similar in genre to the author's own magazine, including Kerrang!, Q and MOJO. As a large, established multi-national publisher founded in 1875, Bauer Media would be the most suitable institution to publish the author's new magazine due to their experience in the music magazine genre.
This document summarizes a film project about a teenage girl and the woods.
The main character is a 16-year-old British girl from a middle-class family. Her father was murdered a year ago. She lives with her emotionally distant mother. In the woods, her life changes and she becomes darker and more damaged. At the end, she commits suicide to save herself.
The antagonist is the woods, where everything changes for the girl and she transforms. At first the woods seems peaceful but it becomes darker.
The film aims to represent the girl's helplessness as she has no one to help her and faces bullying. It also uses stereotypes like the innocent girl and scary woods to tell its
The document provides background information on John Osborne's 1956 play "Look Back in Anger". It introduces the two main motifs of the "Angry Young Man" and "Kitchen Sink Drama". The play was groundbreaking for depicting the domestic lives and raw emotions of the working class in postwar Britain. The main character, Jimmy Porter, came to epitomize the disaffected youth of the time and their anger towards the declining British class system and empire. The play captured the mood of social change in 1950s Britain.
The document provides context about J.B. Priestley's life and political views around the time he wrote An Inspector Calls. It explains that Priestley was concerned with social inequality in Britain and wanted social change. It then gives summaries of each character in the play, including Mr. and Mrs. Birling, Sheila, Eric, Gerald Croft, Inspector Goole, and Eva Smith. Context is also provided about when the play is set and how this differs from when it was written.
Australian soaps originated on radio in the 1940s and first aired on television in the 1950s. They follow a hybrid format of melodrama and realism, featuring realistic settings and middle-class characters along with dramatic storylines. Popular examples include Neighbours and Home and Away. Australian soaps appeal to audiences aged 15-45, especially women, through their exciting plots, attractive young casts, and focus on scandal and gossip. They have found success internationally since the 1980s, especially in the UK and US.
This document analyzes how literature from the past still influences and repeats itself in modern Hollywood culture and celebrity behavior. It discusses how Albert Camus' The Stranger relates to crimes committed by the Lohan family. It also discusses parallels between Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and speeches by Hollywood elites, as well as how women were portrayed in Conrad's time relates to modern celebrity scandals. Additionally, it discusses how a Lockwood poem about love and loss relates to Kim Kardashian's divorce. Finally, it discusses how themes of youth and war in a Margaret Postgate Cole poem connect to the movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Overall, the document argues that literature from the past still shapes Hollywood culture
This summary provides the key details from the theatre review document in 3 sentences:
The document reviews several London theatre productions, providing details on the venue, dates, plot summaries and critiques for each show. Several of the productions focus on real-world issues like genocide, war commemoration and the life of Eleanor Roosevelt. The reviews provide commentary on the performances, writing and themes explored in each play.
The play explores themes of social responsibility and the interconnectedness of society through the interrogation of a wealthy British family by a police inspector about the suicide of a young pregnant woman named Eva Smith. Each family member is revealed to have played a small role in Eva's downward spiral through selfish actions like firing her from a job or refusing charity, showing how the attitudes and choices of all members of society can impact others. The inspector's compelling arguments seek to persuade the family that true change is needed to build a more just post-war society where people support each other.
This review summarizes the play "Donkeys' Years" by Michael Frayn, directed by Lisa Spirling at the Rose Theatre Kingston. It describes how six former university students reminisce about their college days over food and wine at a reunion, but their evening devolves into drunken antics as they behave like their younger selves. The set effectively shifts between the university grounds and individual rooms. While the physical humor is best in Act Two, Act One could have heightened the comedy more. Each cast member strongly portrays their contrasting characters, particularly Ian Hughes' animated performance as Snell that keeps the audience laughing. The circumstances inevitably lead to embarrassing and misunderstood events.
The document discusses the "Angry Young Men", a group of British authors and playwrights active in the 1940s-1950s who were unsatisfied with the new social programs established after World War II. While the new welfare state aimed to reduce class division through reforms like education opportunities and national healthcare, the Angry Young Men felt the reforms did not go far enough and class divisions remained. The document highlights several key Angry Young Men writers like John Osborne and his play Look Back in Anger (1957), which is said to exemplify their themes of challenging class barriers and personal rebellion through emotionally charged works.
The document discusses conspiracy theories and how they relate to popular TV shows. It provides examples of shows like The X-Files, Twin Peaks, and Seinfeld that cultivate paranoia and distrust among characters. This seeds the ground for conspiracy theories by making motives and relationships ambiguous. It also notes real-life people like Richard Belzer who have written about conspiracies, showing how some shows reflect real-world conspiracy thinking.
Thomas Lanier Williams, also known as Tennessee Williams, was an American playwright born in 1911 in Mississippi. Some of his most famous works examined themes of repression, desire, and the struggle of outsiders in society. One such play, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1955 and explores the fractured relationships within the Pollitt family through characters like Brick and his wife Maggie. Williams drew from his own life experiences with alcoholism, depression, and the difficulties of being a homosexual man in the 20th century when writing about universal human truths in his plays.
The document provides an overview of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. It summarizes the key characters, setting, themes and symbols. The story is set in 1930s Maycomb, Alabama and narrated by Scout Finch as an adult, reflecting on her childhood. Some of the main themes explored are racial prejudice and the mockingbird symbolizing innocence.
The document provides background information on the play Fences by August Wilson and the author himself. It summarizes that Fences depicts life for African Americans in 1950s Pittsburgh through the lens of the Maxson family and explores universal human experiences like family relationships. August Wilson grew up in Pittsburgh in the 1940s-1960s and drew from his experiences to craft realistic portrayals of African American life and struggles with racism in his works. The synopsis then overviews the plot of Fences, focusing on tensions between the father Troy and his son Cory over Cory's hopes for college and Troy's past experiences with racism.
Tennessee Williams was a renowned American playwright born in 1911 in Mississippi. Some of his most famous works include A Streetcar Named Desire (1947), for which he won his first Pulitzer Prize, and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955), which earned him his second Pulitzer. Williams drew from his own dysfunctional family background and struggles with his sexuality to explore themes of escapism, dependence on men, and the battle between reality and fantasy in his plays. He received widespread critical acclaim and honors over his career, including two Pulitzer Prizes and a Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Riverdale is an American teen drama television series based on characters from Archie Comics. It follows Archie Andrews and his friends in the town of Riverdale as they deal with mysteries like the death of classmate Jason Blossom. The main characters are Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead, and Cheryl Blossom. The series debuted in 2017 on The CW to positive reviews and has been renewed for additional seasons.
The document provides character summaries for the main characters in J.B. Priestley's play An Inspector Calls:
1) Arthur Birling is a wealthy businessman who believes himself above the law as a former magistrate. He is unaware of how his actions affect others and has unrealistic views about social and economic issues.
2) Sybil Birling is a snobbish woman who looks down on those less wealthy. She is a hypocrite who judges others more harshly than her own family.
3) Sheila Birling realizes the tragedy of Eva Smith's story most quickly. She feels responsible for Eva's firing and tries to get the others to acknowledge their faults.
4) Eric Birling is portrayed
Lorraine Hansberry was the first black playwright to create realistic portraits of African American life. Her play, A Raisin in the Sun, about a struggling black family, was a landmark work and helped bring attention to the civil rights movement. Bruce Norris' play Clybourne Park is a spin-off of A Raisin in the Sun, set in the same house but 50 years later to examine changing race relations and gentrification in Chicago neighborhoods. A key difference between plays and other literary forms is that plays are written to be performed on stage through dialogue between characters, while other forms are generally meant to be read.
The document provides background information on J.B. Priestley, the author of An Inspector Calls, and context about the play. It discusses Priestley's life and experiences, including fighting in WWI. It outlines some of the key themes in the play like class conflict, social responsibility, and the roles of women. It also provides historical context for when the play is set in 1912, covering events like the Titanic and women's suffrage movement.
This document analyzes the representation of women in Disney films from the "Classic Years" of 1937-1967 to the modern "Eisner Era" of 1989-present. It discusses how early Disney princesses like Snow White and Cinderella conform to tropes of being rescued from unfortunate circumstances by a prince after spending their time cleaning and waiting. Later eras saw fewer female leads and more supporting roles for women. Modern princesses like Ariel, Jasmine, and Mulan are portrayed as needing to trade their identities or become men to achieve success rather than gaining power through their own abilities. The document also notes Disney's pattern of depicting female power as evil through wicked witches and stepmothers while weakness
HTML es el lenguaje más utilizado para la presentación de textos estructurados en formato hipertexto y páginas web. Fue desarrollado a principios de los 90 por Tim Berners-Lee y se ha convertido en el estándar para la creación de sitios web. HTML utiliza etiquetas para describir la estructura de un documento y permitir la inclusión de enlaces, imágenes y otros objetos interactivos.
La intranet es una red privada dentro de una organización que permite compartir información de manera segura entre sus miembros. Se compone de una página de catálogo, un gestor de contenidos, una extranet para usuarios externos y una intranet de proveedores. Su construcción requiere el protocolo TCP/IP, un servidor web, definir el tipo de información a almacenar y cómo almacenarla en la web interna.
Bauer Media Group publishes several music magazines similar in genre to the author's own magazine, including Kerrang!, Q and MOJO. As a large, established multi-national publisher founded in 1875, Bauer Media would be the most suitable institution to publish the author's new magazine due to their experience in the music magazine genre.
El documento habla sobre el hardware que conforma una red. Define hardware como las partes tangibles de un sistema informático como cables, gabinetes, periféricos y otros elementos físicos. Explica que el hardware típico de una computadora personal incluye el monitor, placa base, CPU, memoria RAM, tarjetas de expansión, fuente de alimentación, unidad óptica, disco duro, teclado y ratón. Además, define una red como el conjunto de técnicas, conexiones físicas y programas usados para conectar dos o más
Segunda presentacion de power point (cubitos)simisear13
El documento describe los pasos para crear un dado virtual en Scratch: 1) se diseñan 6 cubitos numerados del 1 al 6; 2) se programa cada cubito para que al recibir la señal "tirar dados" asigne aleatoriamente un número a una variable; 3) se crea un botón "Tirar" que envía la señal para simular el lanzamiento del dado virtual.
O documento descreve a tecnologia em desenvolvimento de um "super DVD" que pode armazenar quase meio milhão de músicas ou mais de 2 mil filmes. Isso é possível gravar dados em várias camadas usando lasers com diferentes cores e polarizações. O documento também discute a hospitalização de Susan Boyle após o programa "Britain's Got Talent" e as críticas sobre o apoio psicológico fornecido aos candidatos.
El documento resume el descubrimiento del exoplaneta Kepler-22b, el primero encontrado en la zona habitable de su estrella. Kepler-22b tiene un radio 2,4 veces mayor que la Tierra y orbita su estrella cada 289 días. Fue descubierto en 2009 pero no se anunció hasta 2011. Podría albergar vida debido a su temperatura y tamaño adecuados para la existencia de agua. Sin embargo, se desconoce su composición exacta.
Josh Goldberg describe cómo era de pequeño: era callado pero juguetón, tenía el pelo castaño oscuro y pecas, y le gustaba aprender y era curioso. Disfrutaba viendo dibujos animados por las mañanas, jugar deportes con amigos, trepar a los árboles en el bosque donde vivía, y jugar al pilla-pilla en el recreo. De niño quería ser arquitecto.
Los antidepresivos y ansiolíticos pueden tener efectos adversos durante el embarazo. Una búsqueda en bases de datos médicas como IME, CINHAL, SPORTDISCUS y PSYCINFO sobre los términos "antidepressive agents OR anti-anxiety agents AND pregnancy AND adverse effects" arroja información sobre posibles riesgos para la madre y el feto asociados al uso de este tipo de medicamentos durante la gestación.
Este documento presenta las herramientas principales para crear presentaciones en PowerPoint. Describe los botones de modo de visualización, las plantillas, las barras de herramientas estándar y de formato, y las herramientas para insertar y formatear texto, imágenes, tablas, hojas de cálculo, gráficos, organigramas y para configurar efectos de animación.
A group of students in Bragado, Argentina called "Agents for Change" want to improve their city by addressing several problems. These include pollution in the local lagoon, a lack of safe places for children and teens to spend time with friends, stray animals roaming the streets, insufficient vaccination programs, poor street lighting and traffic signals leading to more accidents, run-down settlements with inadequate services and facilities for schools. The students hope to give talks to raise awareness about health issues and advocate for improved healthcare access for all residents.
Structurally and biochemically similar individuals share common characteristics and are considered homologous, indicating a close evolutionary relationship. Homologous DNA and fossils provide evidence of evolutionary relationships by linking past and present species. Similar embryonic development in chickens and humans also suggests an evolutionary relationship.
El documento presenta la misión, visión, valores y fortalezas de Esperanza Montes Ccompi, quien estudia administración de negocios internacionales. Su misión es obtener su título universitario y altas calificaciones, y su visión es crear un negocio familiar o trabajar para una empresa que le brinde experiencia. Sus valores incluyen ser creativa, confiable, honesta, humilde y responsable. Sus fortalezas son la curiosidad, perseverancia, integridad, entusiasmo y sentido del humor.
This project provides basic information about the job interview process through animations, infographics and illustrations. It was created by a graduate student at the University of Miami to offer guidance to both job hunters and other graduate students. The project sources its information from career centers and articles related to interview preparation, rejection, and reapplying for jobs.
Una extranet es una red privada que permite compartir información de forma segura con socios, proveedores, clientes u otros negocios, funcionando de manera similar a una intranet pero con acceso limitado y regulado para ciertos usuarios externos autorizados.
1. Who was General Tso and why are we eating his chicken?
The Search for General Tso
This film traces the origins of Chinese American food through what is arguably America’s most popular takeout meal–
General Tso’s Chicken. Using this Americanized dish as a lens onto a larger story of immigration, adaptation, and
innovation, the film takes a lighthearted journey, grounded in cultural and culinary history, through restaurants, Chinatowns,
and the American imagination. The film’s lively soundtrack and shadow-puppet animations contribute both whimsy and
momentum, as viewers find they’re on a search to answer a deeper question: how did America’s Chinese food become
so… American?
2. A parable of guilt, redemption, and identity crisis for a small town caught in the glare of the national spotlight.
Happy Valley
The town of State College, the home of Penn State University, has long been known as Happy Valley, and its iconic figure
for more than 40 years was Joe Paterno, the head coach of the school’s storied football team. But then, in November 2011,
everything came crashing down when Assistant Coach Jerry Sandusky was charged with 40 counts of child sex abuse.
Filmed during the year after Sandusky’s arrest, Happy Valley deconstructs the story we think we know to uncover a much
more complicated and tragic tale. Key players in the scandal share their stories.
3. Painfully but permanently connected.
Liv & Ingmar
This feature documentary is an account of the 42- year and 12- film long relationship of Liv Ullman and Ingmar Bergman.
Told entirely from Liv’s point of view, this rollercoaster journey of extreme highs and lows is constructed as a collage of
images and sounds from the timeless Ullman-Bergman films. With behind the scenes footage, still photographs, passages
from Liv’s book Changing and Ingmar’s love letters to her, the film is a homage to two of the greatest film artists of our time.
4. Starring magnificent horses, this is cinematography at its most beautiful.
Of Horses and Men
In a remote valley in Iceland, Of Horses and Men tells the tale of the human streak in the horse, and the horse streak in the
human. Love and death become interlaced with immense consequences. The fortunes of the people in the country are
revealed through the horses’ perceptions.
5. Bellissimo!
The Great Beauty
Journalist Jep Gambardella has charmed and seduced his way through the lavish nightlife of Rome for decades. Since the
legendary success of his one and only novel, he has been a permanent fixture in the city's literary and social circles. When
his sixty-fifth birthday coincides with a shock from the past, Jep finds himself unexpectedly taking stock of his life, turning his
cutting wit on himself and his contemporaries, and looking past the extravagant nightclubs, parties, and cafés to find Rome
in all its glory: a timeless landscape of absurd, exquisite beauty.
6. With Barbara Hershey as the unstable mother.
Sister
Billy Presser left his home in Long Island at 17 to pursue an acting career in Hollywood. He has never looked back. His wife
Melissa desperately wants to start a family, but is starting to realize that Billy is too immature and selfish to move forward.
The scars from Billy’s own childhood and the dynamics of his dysfunctional family have left him paralyzed in a state of
adolescence. He’s jolted out of complacency when his father is killed in a car accident and he is forced to take custody of his
eleven-year-old adopted sister, Niki, whom he barely knows. To complicate matters further, Niki is on a cocktail of anti-depressants
and Ritalin and has been thrown out of several schools due to her violent behavior.
7. “The personal is political.”
She’s Beautiful When She’s Angry
This film resurrects the buried history of the outrageous, often brilliant women who founded the modern women's movement
from 1966 to 1972. Director Mary Dore takes us from the founding of NOW, with ladies in hats and gloves, to the emergence
of more radical factions of women's liberation; from intellectuals like Kate Millett to the street theatrics of WITCH ("Women's
International Conspiracy from Hell!"). Artfully combining dramatizations, performance, and archival imagery, the film recounts
the stories of women who fought for their own equality, and in the process created a world-wide revolution.
8. Boys and men taking responsibility for their actions…and for each other.
Hellion
Thirteen-year-old Jacob is spiraling out of control. The motocross-obsessed teenager’s delinquent behavior pushes his
family to the brink of collapse. All hell breaks loose when Jacob enlists his younger brother, Wes, as a partner in crime. Still
reeling from his wife’s death, Jacob’s dad, Hollis (Aaron Paul), has all but abandoned his sons. When Child Protective
Services removes Wes to live with his Aunt Pam (Juliette Lewis), Hollis and Jacob are forced to face their culpability as they
strive to bring Wes home. Hellion is set in southeastern Texas where the flames and lights of refineries frame the skyline and
create a haunting backdrop for this fractured family of motherless men.
9. “Fashions fade, style is eternal”
Yves Saint Laurent
In January 1958, 21-year-old Yves Saint Laurent was unexpectedly called upon to oversee the legendary Paris fashion
house established by recently deceased Christian Dior. All eyes turned to this very young assistant as he presented his first
collection for Dior and instantly ascended to the heights of haute couture's elite class. During Saint Laurent's breathtaking
and groundbreaking show, he met with another fate by being introduced to Pierre Bergé, patron of the arts, future love of his
life and lifelong business partner.
10. Famed director and playwright Alejandro Jodorosky’s first film in 23 years.
Dance of Reality
Young Alejandro lives with his Jewish-Ukrainian parents Jaime and Sara in Tocopilla, Chile. Alejandro’s father is a
communist and die-hard follower of Joseph Stalin, and he raises his son with great severity. Jaime plans to assassinate the
right-wing president of Chile, and he becomes the president’s groom.
11. The Lunchbox
Discovering a new sense of self and finding an anchor to hold on to through
a series of lunchbox notes to a stranger
This story, set in the city of Mumbai, evolved from a wrongly delivered lunchbox to the story of
how hope can sometimes come from quarters we least expect.