Absurdity in to the lighthouse, waiting for Godot, Wasteland and Birthday partyNamrataba Zala
Respected sir and fellow classmates here by i am sharing my presentation of modernist literature topic named "Absurdity in To the lighthouse, waiting for Godot, wasteland and birthday party".
Absurdity in to the lighthouse, waiting for Godot, Wasteland and Birthday partyNamrataba Zala
Respected sir and fellow classmates here by i am sharing my presentation of modernist literature topic named "Absurdity in To the lighthouse, waiting for Godot, wasteland and birthday party".
Module 3 Humanities
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Module 03 Analyzing Humanities.
Abey Mabele
Rasmussen University
Humanities
03/5/21
Choose a film and offer an analysis of why it is an important film, and discuss it in terms of film as art. Your response should be more than a summary of the film.
I choose Forrest Gump. This masterpiece captures a movie story about romance, mentally challenged, and heartwarming character who catches the audience’s attention right away. It covers six different eras. The movie Forest Gump covers many social statements such as love, devotion to family, loyalty to others, determination, and a person’s character. These movie touches base on race relations with the black and white in the southern culture. As a viewer, you experience what it was like to live in the southern culture. His mother named him to prove we do things that do not make sense, which is contradictory to the southern culture and ideology. The differences in characters in this film remain very appealing. They shine light on the different aspects of history through the characters. Most critics base their opinion on the theme or entertainment of a film. Forest Gump gives out a positive message. Forest the character is a symbol of “good and bad.” Overall, the special effects of the historic scenes in the movie dramatize the actions of each character and scene.
Imagine you had known Plato and Aristotle and you had a conversation about how we
fall in love. Provide an overview of how Plato would explain falling in love, and then provide an overview of how Aristotle might explain falling in love.
Plato would explain falling in love is having the best kind of friendship that lovers can have for each other. Plato is the most interested in same-sex relationships between an older and a younger man. He believes in the love by those who are more given to the body than to the soul. Plato explained the rising through levels of closeness to wisdom and true beauty come from Carnal attraction. The next step would be the love for the body and soul. The last step of falling in love is not being connected through the body but entirely with being itself. The role where the friend sees her or his duty as the provision of advice, encouragement, and comfort to the other person.
Aristotle is not nearly as interested in erotic love as he is in friendship. Aristotle believe any relationship had to be about something. The relationship between men and women are so natural. He believes men and women come together because they need and want each other. They need each other in order to have children and continue to brighten this world. You should love and understand what the goal of life is with you and your significant other. You should be united with a common goal. Aristotle wants you to wish good for others for their own sake, not yours.
Compare and Contrast the two poems
The first poem “Love Inconsistency” by Francisco Petrarch is about his struggles with .
1. Jessica Pisciotta
Prof. Swartwout
Catalogue Blurbs
March 25, 2014
Fragments, Marilyn Monroe
Never-before published intimate notes, poems, and letters by Marilyn Monroe have surfaced;
these findings not only prove she was a woman who strove for perfection in her acting, but also
reveal Marilyn’s raw scrutiny of her life and love. Suffering from her nerves during mid-filming,
the time with husband Arthur Green, and her lonely experiences during a stay in the New York
Hospital psychiatric division are just a few of what you’ll find; the documents having been
retyped for clarity. These creative writings and thoughtful rants span from her earliest years of
acting, and to a few years shy of her death. Readers receive the depth and complexity of
Monroe’s feelings off screen within this coffee table turner, and we encourage you to be nosey.
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Eating Fire: My Life as a Lesbian Avenger, Kelly Cogswell
Eating Fire is a rip-roaring good time to be loud and proud about the Lesbian lifestyle. Kelly’s
first-person perspective reveals what activists are willing to do to be recognized as a member of
their surrounding community by hosting events, paying homage to the loss of Hattie Mae and
Brian Mock in the form of fire-eating, and even speaking out to thousands at the White House.
Readers dive into a spectrum world of the 90s where the request for recognition was not always
accepted with open arms. Light-hearted and humorous, Kelly does not scold you for what you
don’t know about the Lesbian movement, but rather hands you an Avenger balloon while you
watch the flames glow bright.
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Bone Palace Ballet: Charles Bukowski
Just when you thought Bukowski had his last hurrah, our loving poet pulls the rug out from his
fans from the grave. With the appropriate name given to this book, Bone Palace Ballet: New
Poems is a collection of work not yet seen by the public. Charles requested these poems to be
printed after his passing. These poems cross a range from childhood memories to sexual
encounters with the women of the night. For old lovers of Bukowski, this book will please and
for those who are just getting a taste, you’ll receive more history of his past than other volumes
have revealed.
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2. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, Tao Lin
With a cynical twist on the perspective of the human race and one lonely, glorified hamster to
house all your sympathy, Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy is a fast read for those who love poetry
that grows passionately throughout the pages and yet, gives a look into the stubborn essence of
Tao Lin’s heavy heart. Writing of concepts that other writers would simply let pass, Tao
describes with bludgeoning accuracy of boredom, laziness, and the very desolation that life can
bestow on a person who feels their every movement should mean something if not change the
lives of those around him for the better. Even if you aren’t the type to overanalyze, this poet will
show you his technique for doing just that, and with ignorance lost, he opens up an avenue
unlikely trekked by someone of his young years. His slacker irony is one we can all appreciate,
but most importantly this poet recites lines that make you think.
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