tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6528379377051824662024-03-13T21:49:08.472-07:00Who Will Write My PaperLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.comBlogger420125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-33281961660080559872020-08-25T23:36:00.001-07:002020-08-25T23:36:12.709-07:00In Man and Superman Shaw Was Not Writing a Regular Play EssayIn Man and Superman Shaw was not composing a customary play; he just joined up discourse, conversation, contentions to cause them to show up as plays. Still the episodes of circumstances in the play do in one way or the other propagate the quest for man by womanââ¬of Tanner by Ann. The most fascinating is the Hell Scene where the customary Don Giovanni theme is most entertainingly transformed in the soul of satire to validate Shawââ¬â¢s postulation that it is the lady essentially who is boa-constrictor from whom the new Don Juan takes off to spare his individual. The Hell Scene has been united on the plot from outside and it doesn't develop from the dirt of the story. Its focal business is to feature the focal thought process of the playââ¬the pursue of man by lady as a component of the procedure of Creative Evolution just as the enlightenment of damnation as a generally powerful, in this way attractive state of presence which guarantees joy of mankind. The transformation of the characters like Tanner and Ann fitting the climate is astounding; however soon the emotional intrigue melts away as the contentions begin shaking the advantages and disadvantages of the Scene. From the perspective of the power of the contentions the Hell Scene has essentialness, else it looks simply odd and from the perspective of the power of the plot unessential. It can't be denied that the Hell Scene is a most impressive visit de-power of Shawââ¬â¢s creative mind. Shaw had added to the play a protracted Preface, wealthy in thought and content and toward the end we get the Revolutionistââ¬â¢s Hand Book and Pocket Companion. The superseding Shavian pre-occupation with his way of thinking gets the chance to be proceeded in Hell Scene. At whatever point Shae has a chance, he communicates his perspectives (albeit amusingly) on satisfaction, love, marriage, sex relations, ladies, workmanship, communism, majority rule government, industrialisation, religion, profound quality, ideals, sin, demise, harmony, war, subjection and a large group of different themes. Shaw has been fair sufficiently minded to permit even the Devil to have his state and uninhibitedly express his perspective. The prod behind this is the presumption that lady is a long way from frail and powerless and that explicitly lady is Natureââ¬â¢s invention for the propagation of human race. An all the more scary reality is, explicitly man is womanââ¬â¢s creation for satisfying natureââ¬â¢s command in the most ideal manner. Controlled by the visually impaired anger of creation, lady scans for a male naturally generally alluring and when she discovers him, she is generally heartless in her quest for him. The Don Juan in Hell Scene lifts up this essential subject of life-Force and Creative Evolution with Superman and Superwoman into the domain of Shavian-Socratic exchange. Shaw hilariously trades the Superman of Nietzsche (who was a savage being and an epitome of might! ) by another Don Juan; Tanner who considers life to be co-activity with lady in its upward battle. In the event that the evolutionistââ¬â¢s account is exact, life has created in the waters of the sea and the sludge of the sea shores until it came to the immense and since a long time ago terminated animals that inhabited the earth in pre-memorable occasions. In his vision Tanner hears Don Juan express this to him. Life is a power which has made countless analyses in sorting out itself. He further discloses to him that as long as he can consider an option that could be superior to himself, he can't be simple except if he is endeavoring to bring it into reality or making room for it: ââ¬Å"That is an incredible law. That is the working inside me of lifeââ¬â¢s unremitting yearning to higher association, more extensive, more profound, extreme, hesitance and more clear self-comprehension. â⬠The Devil in his turn communicates smoothly and coercively about manââ¬â¢s direct on the planet and takes a skeptical perspective on him. He holds that individuals are both moronic and malicious and making a course for absolute pulverization. Shaw makes a firm differentiation in the process between his two capacities as author: the capacity of a writer from one viewpoint and on the other, that of a dramatist. The significant distinction is that a dramatist needs to put on the stage various characters whose feelings contrast and conflict for the imperative component in dramatization in struggle. It might be physical clash, the contention of feelings, of thoughts or even of convictions. The crowd watches and hurries to the contention; it hears the characters advancing restricting perspectives; and having heard the contentions the individuals from the crowd utilize their own reasoning forces and arrive at their own decisions. Quite a bit of what is said by the Devil in Man and Superman is reasonable proclamation of the pieces of human conduct is embraced in different plays by Shaw. What is in question is the end the Devil draws from the realities. Can man be spared from his own dangerous inclinations? The Devil pronounces that he can't. Wear Juan accepts that he can on the off chance that he is given the good thought to live forââ¬the extraordinary thought, for instance, that man can, on the off chance that he wills, can do the awesome reason (read the motivation behind Life-Force). The mind won't bomb when the will is sincere to Life, the power behind the Man, and keenness is a need on the grounds that without it he bungles into death. Similarly as Life, after times of battle, developed that great real organ, the eye, with the goal that the living life form ould see where it was going and what was going and what was coming to help or compromise, and along these lines maintain a strategic distance from a thousand risks that at long last slew it, so it is advancing to date in mindââ¬â¢s that will see, not the physical world, yet the reason for Life, and in this way empower the person to work for that reason as opposed to foiling and astounding it by setting up silly close to home points as present: ââ¬Å"I sing not arms and the Hero yet the thoughtful man; he who looks for in consideration to find the internal will of the world, in innovation to find the methods for satisfying that will and in real life to do that will. The incomparable triumph of Shawââ¬â¢s dramaturgical logic is to be found in the restoration of remodel of the eighteenth century picture of Don Juan or rather the Spanish Don Giovanni. It is significant in light of the fact that Tanner gets the mantle of the combustible from this excessively human picture. Obviously, the strategy has been one of change of old materials in to nineteenth century terms, both topical and specialized. He dismisses out and out the split oIn Man and Superman Shaw was not composing an ordinary play; he just joined up exchange, conversation, contentions to cause them to show up as plays. Still the episodes of circumstances in the play do in one way or the other propagate the quest for man by womanââ¬of Tanner by Ann. The most intriguing is the Hell Scene where the customary Don Giovanni theme is most cleverly upset in the soul of spoof to prove Shawââ¬â¢s proposal that it is the lady fundamentally who is boa-constrictor from whom the new Don Juan takes off to spare his individual. The Hell Scene has been united on the plot from outside and it doesn't develop from the dirt of the story. Its focal business is to feature the focal rationale of the playââ¬the pursue of man by lady as a feature of the procedure of Creative Evolution just as the enlightenment of hellfire as a generally powerful, hence alluring state of presence which guarantees satisfaction of mankind. The transformation of the characters like Tanner and Ann fitting the environment is stunning; yet soon the sensational intrigue melts away as the contentions begin shaking the upsides and downsides of the Scene. From the perspective of the power of the contentions the Hell Scene has importance, else it looks simply strange and from the perspective of the power of the plot superfluous. It can't be denied that the Hell Scene is a most remarkable visit de-power of Shawââ¬â¢s creative mind. Shaw had added to the play a long Preface, wealthy in thought and content and toward the end we get the Revolutionistââ¬â¢s Hand Book and Pocket Companion. The abrogating Shavian pre-occupation with his way of thinking gets the chance to be proceeded in Hell Scene. At whatever point Shae has a chance, he communicates his perspectives (albeit hilariously) on satisfaction, love, marriage, sex relations, ladies, craftsmanship, communism, majority rule government, industrialisation, religion, profound quality, ethicalness, sin, passing, harmony, war, subjugation and a large group of different subjects. Shaw has been unbiased enough to permit even the Devil to have his state and uninhibitedly express his perspective. The spike behind this is the suspicion that lady is a long way from powerless and vulnerable and that explicitly lady is Natureââ¬â¢s creation for the propagation of human race. An additionally scary certainty is, explicitly man is womanââ¬â¢s contraption for satisfying natureââ¬â¢s command in the most ideal manner. Controlled by the visually impaired rage of creation, lady looks for a male naturally generally alluring and when she discovers him, she is generally heartless in her quest for him. The Don Juan in Hell Scene lifts up this fundamental subject of life-Force and Creative Evolution with Superman and Superwoman into the domain of Shavian-Socratic discourse. Shaw cleverly trades the Superman of Nietzsche (who was a heartless being and an encapsulation of might! ) by another Don Juan; Tanner who considers life to be co-activity with lady in its upward battle. On the off chance that the evolutionistââ¬â¢s account is precise, life has created in the waters of the sea and the sludge of the sea shores until it came to the huge and since a long time ago wiped out animals that inhabited the earth in pre-memorable occasions. In his vision Tanner hears Don Juan express this to him. Life is a power which has made endless analyses in sorting out itself. He further discloses to him that as long as he can consider an option that could be superior to himself, he can't be simple except if he is endeavoring to bring it into reality or making room for it: ââ¬Å"That is a mind-blowing law. That is the working inside me of lifeââ¬â¢s relentless goal to higher association, more extensive, more profound, exceptional, hesitance and more clear self-comprehension. ââ¬ï¿½ Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-19213357053557402032020-08-22T06:12:00.001-07:002020-08-22T06:12:30.905-07:00Choosing the Right Cell Phone EssayCustomer Reports attest ââ¬Å"cell telephones are advancing to permit quicker messaging, Web surfing, GPS route, and person to person communication while staying aware of their day jobââ¬voice callingâ⬠(Consumer Reports, n.d.). When exiting the entryway early today the normal individual got three things; a wallet or satchel, their vehicle keys, and their PDA. The mobile phone, however frequently underestimated has become a type of life backing to many. Before simply hurrying out to buy the best in class here is the thing that shoppers should know before buying their next mobile phone. Set aside the effort to plan and survey before going out to buy a telephone. Numerous regularly take the expression of a sales rep they don't know to choose what is best for them or let a business persuade them regarding what gadget and administration they ought to pick. Picking an inappropriate mobile phone and plan can cost a lot of cash. Everybody has likely made a buy, and afterward gotten their next bill to discover they were completely amazed. To start the quest for the ideal mobile phone one should begin with what kind of telephone the person is searching for. Would a non-flip (confection style telephone) or a customary flip telephone (shellfish shell) better suite their requirements? Flip telephones had been the decision for most consistently yet piece of candy telephones are making a return with contact screens, for example, Droids and iPhones. On the off chance that the telephone will invest a great deal of energy in ones handbag or pocket, one might need to consider a flip telephone to maintain a strategic distance from superfluously scratching the screen and irregular dialing. On the off chance that one is searching for a PDA and completely useful QWERTY keypad, at that point a piece of candy telephone would be the best decision. One ought to likewise choose if the person inclines toward a touch screen, a standard console, or a QWERTY console when settling on the choice on they style of telephone that is best for the m. In the wake of choosing the style of telephone next one ought to consider what innovation they need in a telephone. Do they need content, Internet, email, GPS route, walkie-talkie, applications, worldwide assistance, or simply voice calling? There are such huge numbers of choices and potential outcomes that can cause one to feel overpowered during this procedure. This can be kept away from by doing the correct research early. The quick pace of today makes email in a hurry a need for most. In the event that requiring email one ought not pick a telephone that isn't Internet prepared, and might need to consider a full QWERTY console for quicker making out of messages. Another component accessible is walkie-talkie if this is something that was of intrigue; the person would need to ensure that is an element the telephone offers. Most of telephones can get out globally, however on the off chance that one needs to utilize the telephone abroad the individual in question would need to check to ensure the telephone is world good. In the event that voice calling is every one of the one needs it doesn't bode well to purchase a telephone with all the additional fancy odds and ends. On the off chance that applications are required, one may pick an Android or an iPhone in light of the fact that these telephones offer the biggest choice of applications accessible. In figure 1.A, in view of the best in class innovation out today, here is a rundown of the main three cell phones. Every one of the three of these telephones have full access to the Android Market, and are the equivalent in cost with a certified redesign or new client valuing. Since one has settled on the style of telephone and what highlights are required the individual in question will settle on one of the most significant choices in this procedure. Before settling on a particular telephone one must pick a system. In the past it was simpler to pick a system/supplier on the grounds that just one organization for the most part secured a specific region. Suppliers currently have across the nation arranges, and the significant organizations Sprint, AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon spread practically all regions; settling on this choice a difficult one. While picking the correct help one should exploit the 30-day preliminary offers that most suppliers offer to new clients. With exploiting the preliminary one can utilize the telephone in regions the person in question would ordinarily be in to ensure administration is adequate. This enables them to ensure it will work in their home, office and check whether there are any dead spots in their general vicinity. This will permit them to decide whether this specialist co-op will be useful for their requirements before being held to a two and with certain suppliers a three-year responsibility. The 30-day preliminary additionally relates to hardware, so on the off chance that one isn't content with the telephone the individual can take it back and attempt an alternate model. State on the off chance that they figured they could get to Facebook, at that point during the preliminary understood the telephone they have didn't bolster web; it could be traded. Maybe if camera was a major factor on choosing their telephone, however when they take pictures they come out fluffy and not satisfactory; the 30-day preliminary gives them the opportunity to adjust their perspective. When every one of these choices have been caused one should then to pick their calling plan. While picking a telephone plan there are numerous elements to consider. How long are significant. Chicago Tribune states ââ¬Å"to figure how much talk time you will require, tally the minutes you spend on your present telephone in an ordinary month, at that point add 25 percent to 50 percent as a cushion to maintain a strategic distance from weighty overage feesâ⬠(Choosing the correct cell, 2007). Mobile phone suppliers offer extra administrations for a set month to month cost. Without the right data and thought of what the person in question might be utilizing the telephone for one could pay a for each utilization charge for extra highlights the individual in question neglected to have included. On the off chance that content informing is something that perhaps utilized, it is unquestionably more financially savvy to pay $15 every month; instead of $.20 per single content. With information there is likewise a compensation for each utilization charge of $.03 per kilobyte or a month to month information bundle extending from $15 to $30. An information bundle is something that will be required on the off chance that one needs to utilize email, long range interpersonal communication, picture administrations, applications, and GPS route from the telephone. Figure 2.A is a diagram of a portion of the fundamental things individuals are doing on their cell phones. In the event that the shopper intends to utilize any of these highlights the person in question would need to ensure they have the right arrangement and highlights to keep away from high bills. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-62182290007326291842020-08-11T00:59:00.001-07:002020-08-11T00:59:02.840-07:00Goodbye Fake FriendsGoodbye Fake Friends Dear Fake Friends from My Past: When I walked away from a successful career three years ago, you thought I was crazy. Even crazier when I said I wanted to cultivate my passion, pursue my dream: writing. Itâs all right, thereâs no need to deny it now: save your apologiesâ"Iâm not looking for one. Scores of you, my ostensible friends, talked behind my back. The grapevine is not self-contained, so, yes, I heard the terrible things you said about me. You said I was dumb, out of touch, too idealistic. You gossiped, you told people Iâd lost my mind. I was an idiot, you said. Lostâ"Iâd be broke and alone in no time. It was upsettingâ"gut-wrenching and heartrendingâ"to hear the vitriol. I thought you were different. I thought we were different. I thought we were friends. You, my lip-service friends, told me it was impossible. If people could make a living from their passions, you said, then everyone would be doing it. I was making a mistake, a horrible decision. Iâd regret giving up the money, the status, the ostensible success. My plan would never work. Itâs evident now you were projecting your own fears, hoping I would fail so your flawed idea of success would remain unblemished. I donât regret it, my change in lifestyle: It all worked out. And then some. My life is better now. Substantially better. Be it money, passion, health, growth, contributionâ"my life has improved exponentially. Even my friends are better. My real friendsâ"although they mayâve not fully understood my decision at the timeâ"supported me through the transition. Real support. They encouraged me, cheered me on, offered help when I needed it. It took this radical change to recognize my real friendsâ"and to recognize those just hanging on because I had an impressive job title or the shiny things they wanted. Without the facade of a big paycheck or an oversized house, I made new friends: people whose interests, values, and beliefs align with mine. Wonderful people who care about me for me, not for whatâs printed on my business card. So goodbye, fake friends of old: Iâm walking away for good, and you wonât be able to catch up. Before I go, though, I want to thank you for teaching me one of lifeâs most important lessons⦠You canât change the people around you, but you can change the people around you. Read this essay and 150 others in our new book, Essential. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-73979641691898597032020-05-23T18:03:00.001-07:002020-05-23T18:03:03.766-07:00Classics Essay on the Play Wasps - 1699 Words Literary Conventions Classical authors draw on the literary techniques of their chosen genre to help them communicate their ideas. Discuss the use of either symbolism or allusions to historical events/contemporary politics, in one literary text you have studied. In your answer, you should: * Examine and interpret examples of the symbolism or allusions, as used by the writer * Evaluate the extent to which this literary technique helps reinforce the important themes of the literary work * Provide supporting evidence from the literary text you have written Plan Intro Wasps, Aristophanes, symbolism, theme Main Body One Symbolism, how Cleon is portrayed Main Body Two P educated by B, symbolism of a new world. Old vs. new Mainâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦This contrasts significantly to Cleon, who ruled at the end of the Peloponnesian Wars, which Athens lost to Sparta. This difference is important because it shows two ends of the spectrum and how the Athens involvement in wars over the 5th century impacted greatly on Athenian society. Aristophanes uses symbolism to portray the coming of the new age, with the younger society of Athens and that the downfall of society is because of the older society. For example, Bdelycleon explains to his father that Cleon is actually treating the jurymen as slaves and that even within the ââ¬Ëeliteââ¬â¢ group it is corrupt, ââ¬Å"But what do you get out of it, apart from this absolute pittance? And even that they squeeze out like little drops of oil, just enough at a time to keep you going. They want you to be poor, and Ill tell you why: theyre training you to know the hand that feeds you.â⬠This shows the symbolism of the new leading the old into a new way of thinking, by not just thinking for themselves, but the idea that they should look at the big picture first, instead of prevailing to Cleon straight away. In contrast to the youngââ¬â¢s analytical and logical way of thinking, the old have a slightly different view of the law system, Philocleon says, As I pass, one slips his delicate hand into mine - the very hand that has dipped so deeply into the public funds. And they all bow down low, and plead with me in pitiful tones. Aristophanes is exampling the jurors and how theyShow MoreRelatedMetz Film Language a Semiotics of the Cinema PDF100902 Words à |à 316 Pagesconstitute Chapter 5 was first read, and the Festival of the New Cinema (Pesaro, Italy), which organized the round-table discussion during which the last chapter in this volume was originally presented. The idea of bringing together a number of my essays in a single volume, thus making them more easily available, originated with Mikel Dufrenne, Professor at the University of Paris-Nanterre and editor of the series in which this work was published in French. He has my very warm gratitude. C . M. Cannes Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-64337481735717902602020-05-12T15:54:00.001-07:002020-05-12T15:54:03.770-07:00The Doors Of The Opera House - 2102 Words Becca barged through the doors of the Opera House weighed down by a heavy ballet tote, a substantially stuffed garment bag, and an oversized platter of peanut butter cup cookies. She moved steadily in the direction of the designated cookie drop-off. When she finally got to the changing room, only a few other girls had arrived. Miss Claudine was in the back of the room talking on her cell. She waved at Becca. ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢m so excited!â⬠Abby cried. ââ¬Å"I canââ¬â¢t believe itââ¬â¢s finally here,â⬠Shannon added with a bounce. ââ¬Å"Weââ¬â¢ve been practicing forever.â⬠ââ¬Å"Are you nervous, Becca?â⬠Abby asked. Becca nodded. ââ¬Å"A little, but Iââ¬â¢m ready.â⬠ââ¬Å"You donââ¬â¢t have anything to be nervous about. Youââ¬â¢re, like, the best dancer. Youââ¬â¢re amazing!â⬠Shannon gushed. ââ¬Å"Thank you,â⬠Becca replied with sincerity. ââ¬Å"I donââ¬â¢t know how you do it, Becca,â⬠Abby said with eyes bulging, ââ¬Å"especially the drop.â⬠Miss Claudine finished her call and came over. ââ¬Å"You girls have worked so hard,â⬠she said. ââ¬Å"I have a feeling tonight will be very special.â⬠The girls nodded in agreement, and their teacher moved on to greet the next group arriving. The dancers hurried into their costumes helping each other with zippers, extra bobby pins, and hair spray. Becca was glad to be one of the first ready and to get out of the stuffy commotion-filled room. She went to the backstage area to begin practicing her dance steps. Within fifteen minutes, she was surrounded by other dancers doing the same thing. To pass time, the dancers shared their plans forShow MoreRelatedThe Phantom Of The Opera1387 Words à |à 6 PagesPhantom of the Opera has been around for longer than I can recall, being the musical to talk about among my family as something grand. When I was the age of only fourteen I received the honor of performing the musical for the first time, although I had to learn a great deal about the script for that performance, the history behind The Phantom of the Opera is not clear to me. So I started my research their tied to the original piece. Phantom of the opera.com gave a timeline that had the backgroundRead MoreNarrative And Details Of The Sydney Opera House1051 Words à |à 5 PagesNarrative and Details In 1973, the Sydney Opera House opened its doors for the first time. This came after seventeen years of construction and setbacks. The design for the opera house was chosen from 220 applications through a competition in 1956. The original design was supposed to feature the arches by lining the inside of them with gold leaves and have no sides to the arches. These design details would later be taken out because of cost and structural issues. In 1966, the project came to aRead More The Fantastical Elements of Lerouxs The Phantom of the Opera1214 Words à |à 5 PagesThe Fantastical Elements of Lerouxs The Phantom of the Opera à à à In Gaston Lerouxs The Phantom of the Opera fantastic literature is displayed at its best. Originally published in 1911, this French writer produced one of the most famous novels in French history. Created into a play and a musical produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber, this story has touched millions. However, this transition from a novel to a theatrical performance has caused much of the story to be left out of the production.Read MoreEssay on Swot analysis of the english national opera1747 Words à |à 7 PagesEnglish National Opera nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;STRENGTHS The product is definite. Although there are many different titles of shows and ways of performing Opera, on the whole the customer knows, when attending a performance, what to expect. Accessibility is improving. Through recent more widespread distribution of Videos/DVDs and CDs ââ¬â in well known music stores. Also through Touring and Open-air Opera and to some extent educational workshops and talks, the English National Opera (ENO) has improvedRead MoreThe Importance Of Being Earnest - Original Writing1541 Words à |à 7 PagesTheater in Kendall Hall, the yellow lights were dimmed and there was Opera music playing. The stage was set up as a small living room with purple walls, tan doors, old-fashioned furniture, and a big white couch with an orange blanket hanging over it. Even though it was a small theater, the way the living room was set up made it look bigger, and the settings went very well with the play. The next scene took place at Cecilyââ¬â¢s house in her outside garden. There was a screen with a blue light shiningRead MoreA Comparison of the Great Gatsby and the Virgin Suicides1553 Words à |à 7 Pagessupported by two posts at the front. This protected the stage and perfo rmers from the changeable weather. It also used to secure winches and other stage machinery used for stage effects. On either side at the back was the stage door that lead to dressing rooms or tiring house and the actors entered and exited through here. Ãâh In 1608 the kingà ¡Ã ¦s men acquired a second playhouse, indoors in Blackfriars. It held 700 people with seats for all, facilities for elaborate stage effects and artificial lightingRead MoreMarian Anderson : An American Concert Performer From Philadelphia1385 Words à |à 6 Pagesthem King Gustav of Stockholm and King Christian of Copenhagen. She made her European debut in 1935 at the Paris Opera House and had fans flocking to her superb delivery of Russian folk songs, classic German and French arias, and Negro Spirituals. The Finnish composer Sibelius even dedicated the song ââ¬Å"Solitudeâ⬠to her (Biography 2015). In 1935 Anderson was invited to sing at the White House for the President and the First Lady with great success. Starting in 1936, she began an annual concert to benefitRead MoreMy Dream House Essay835 Words à |à 4 PagesWhat I Call Home In life everyone has their own dreams, whether it be about cars, houses, or their career. Most people I know dream to have the biggest and luxurious houses but I was always satisfied with mine. My house is not a tiny apartment nor a huge mansion but a two story, plain brown brick cozy house with white painted doors. The front yard is decorated with beautiful flowers; roses, lilies, violets, dahlias, daisies and much more, my mother usually plant them. She says, Flowers areRead More Les Gens De Couleur Libres, The Free People of Color in New Orleans1274 Words à |à 6 Pageshairdressers, and cooks while some owned property and kept boarding houses. Some of them were planters before and after the Civil War and owned slaves. Although shocking and incomprehensible to many people today, the fact that some free people of color owned slaves must come to light. Discrimination While financial prosperity was common, discrimination was also. Although business was performed between whites and Creoles of color in public houses, they did not socialize outside of business arrangements. StrikingRead MoreThe Greatest Dramatists Of The Great Composers1718 Words à |à 7 Pagespages. He not only wrote these things, and published them ââ¬â usually at somebody elseââ¬â¢s expense ââ¬â but he would sit and read them aloud, for hours, to his friends and his family. He wrote operas; and no sooner did he have the synopsis of a story, but he would invite ââ¬â or rather summon ââ¬â a crowd of his friends to his house and read it aloud to them. Not for criticism. For applause. When the complete poem was written, the friends had to come again, and hear that read aloud. Then he would publish the poem Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-31679323305475426642020-05-06T12:36:00.001-07:002020-05-06T12:36:22.290-07:00Sunshine Chapter 14 Free Essays string(100) " mark itself seemed weirdly old and sort of half-worn-away-looking the way old scars get sometimes\." I hated it that I now ââ¬Å"sawâ⬠more easily in the dark than I did in the light. In the dark it all made sense. I hated this. We will write a custom essay sample on Sunshine Chapter 14 or any similar topic only for you Order Now I was so clumsy for the first ten days or so that Charlie did another of his drifting-into-the-bakery-and-closing-the-door numbers. Golly, twice in two weeks: I must be a worse pain in the butt than I realized. Damn. He wandered around the bakery for a minute like he was thinking about what to say. I knew better; he figures this stuff out beforehand. When I still lived with him and Mom I used to see him ambling around the house in that fake idle way, figuring out what he was going to say to someone, what they might say back. He thinks of it on the move and he says it on the move. He wandered a lot during the time the city council was trying to upgrade us. The media, who love a good story and truth is noncompulsory, presented Charlieââ¬â¢s as the focus of the neighborhood campaign to stay the way we were: downmarket and crappy. This was not entirely false. Thatââ¬â¢s when Charlieââ¬â¢s kind of got on the New Arcadia map rather than merely the Old Town map, and one of the resu lts was that Charlie could afford to build my bakery. (I have to say he used to wander a lot when Mom and I were at each otherââ¬â¢s throats the worst too. There was some overlap between these two eras. Kenny and Billy are probably scarred for life.) But having him wandering around again in that way I recognized made me feel bad. I didnââ¬â¢t live with him any more, but I had the impression he didnââ¬â¢t wander as much as he had then: that heââ¬â¢d mostly figured out how to say the sort of things he needed to say as Charlie of Charlieââ¬â¢s. I suppose a magic-handling baker with an affinity for vampires is kind of an unusual problem for a coffeehouse. Maybe the bitchiness factor was trivial. ââ¬Å"Youââ¬â¢ve been having a little trouble lately,â⬠he said, mildly and gently, addressing one of the ovens. ââ¬Å"That oven is working fine,â⬠I said, thinking, if youââ¬â¢re going to me you can just do it. He turned around. ââ¬Å"Sorry. Weâ⬠¦Charlieââ¬â¢s has had its rough times, butâ⬠¦having SOFs interested in one of my staff is a new one.â⬠I refrained from pointing out that our regular SOFs had always sort of jived with me. I had thought because I was the one who wanted to hear their stories, but as it turned out, I now knew, because they remembered my father, even if Charlie ââ¬â and for that matter Mom and I ââ¬â didnââ¬â¢t. ââ¬Å"Yeah,â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"It blows. Iââ¬â¢ve been thinking, okay, my dad has always been my dad, but that doesnââ¬â¢t help. I could have gone on not knowing what it meant.â⬠Charlie hesitated. ââ¬Å"Wellâ⬠¦I doubt it, Sunshine. If you just kept coffee hot, maybe. But someone who canâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ His voice faded. ââ¬Å"Have you talked to Sadie about it?â⬠I shook my head. Have I sawn myself in half with a blunt knife? No. ââ¬Å"You know what Sadie is like ââ¬â no one better. You inherited her backbone, her doggedness.â⬠The big difference between my mom and me ââ¬â besides the fact that she is dead normal and Iââ¬â¢m a magic-handling freak ââ¬â is that sheââ¬â¢s the real thing. She may have a slight problem seeing other peopleââ¬â¢s points of view, but sheââ¬â¢s honest about it. Sheââ¬â¢s a brass-bound bitch because she believes she knows best. Iââ¬â¢m a brass-bound bitch because I donââ¬â¢t want anyone getting close enough to find out what a whiny little knot of naked nerve endings I really am. ââ¬Å"And her nasty temper,â⬠I said. Charlie smiled. ââ¬Å"She knew your dad pretty well. Do you know she loved him? She really did. Still does, in her secret heart. Oh, she loves me, donââ¬â¢t worry. And weââ¬â¢re happy together ââ¬â thatââ¬â¢s the point. Sheââ¬â¢s happy running the admin side of Charlieââ¬â¢s.â⬠And ripping self-important assholes to shreds, I thought. But get under cover if there havenââ¬â¢t been any self-important assholes around lately. ââ¬Å"She was often joyful ââ¬â euphoric ââ¬â with your dad, especially at the beginning. But his wasnââ¬â¢t a world she could live in. Mine is. ââ¬Å"My guess is she got out of your dadââ¬â¢s world when she did and took you with her because she knew what you were. I think she knew you were going to be someone pretty unusual. I think she was hoping that what sheââ¬â¢s given you ââ¬â both by being your mom and by raising you in a place like Charlieââ¬â¢s ââ¬â is going to be enough. Enough ballast. When what your father gave you started coming out.â⬠Iââ¬â¢d already figured out that she hadnââ¬â¢t included him in the Bad Cross Watch, so what I was in Charlieââ¬â¢s version of events didnââ¬â¢t include the possibility of a demon taint. On the whole I thought my version was more plausible than Charlieââ¬â¢s. Possibly because it was more depressing. I drifted in a very Charlie-like manner over to the stool and sat down. I looked at my hands, which had a funny red-outlined light-dark edge. I thought about bad gene crosses. I put my head in my hands and closed my eyes. ââ¬Å"What do you think, Sunshine?â⬠said Charlie. ââ¬Å"Is it going to be enough?â⬠ââ¬Å"I donââ¬â¢t know,â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"Charlie, I donââ¬â¢t know.â⬠August was less death-defying than usual in terms of temperature (which among other things meant that I hadnââ¬â¢t had to beg Paulie not to quit) if not in terms of numbers of Earth Trek coachloads, and possibly, because all the heat August hadnââ¬â¢t used had to go somewhere, we went straight into Indian Summer September, do not pass Go, do not collect two thousand blinks. So I got out all my least decent little-bit-of-nothing tank tops and wore them. The scar was visible but the skin was flat and smooth, no puckering, and the white mark itself seemed weirdly old and sort of half-worn-away-looking the way old scars get sometimes. You read "Sunshine Chapter 14" in category "Essay examples" I was still having trouble with the idea that what had happened that night counted as healing, but whatever it was, it had worked. I started going home with Mel a lot. He was glad to have me around ââ¬â glad to stop arguing about my going to another doctor. He didnââ¬â¢t know about Con, of course, but he knew plenty ââ¬â too much ââ¬â about recent events. He would know that I needed reassuring without knowing I needed to feelâ⬠¦human. This is really stupid, but I also discovered that I somehow believed that he was the one human at Charlieââ¬â¢s who might be able to stop me in time if my bad genes suddenly kicked in and I picked up my electric cherry pitter and went for the nearest warm body. That heââ¬â¢d drown me efficiently in a vat of pasta sauce while everyone else was standing around with their mouths open wringing their hands and saying, who are we going to get to cover the bakery on such short notice? This was at its worst during Monday movie evenings. The Seddon living room had never seemed so small, or so packed with flimsy, vulnerable human bodies. If Mel didnââ¬â¢t feel like going I didnââ¬â¢t go either. As a romantic fantasy I donââ¬â¢t think itââ¬â¢s going to make it into the top ten ââ¬â most women pining for the presence of their lovers arenââ¬â¢t worrying about needing their homicidal tendencies foiled ââ¬â but it did mean I felt a little safer with Mel around. I probably didnââ¬â¢t believe it at all. I just didnââ¬â¢t want to give him up. He was warm and breathing and had a heartbeat. Human. Yeah. I hadnââ¬â¢t been willing to go see a specialist human doctor, as Mel had kept asking me to. No. I asked a vampire for help. And took it instantly when he offered it. Mel must have wondered what happened to the wound on my breast. But he didnââ¬â¢t say anything. He was very good at not saying things. It had only been since the Night of the Table Knife that Iââ¬â¢d begun to wonder if his reticence was for my sake or his. And if it was for hisâ⬠¦No. I needed him to be steady, solid, secure. I needed it too badly to pursue that one. Too badly to wonder about the number of live tattoos he had. Even for a motorcycle thug. Another of the things Iââ¬â¢d never thought about was the way when we went home together it was always his home. Heââ¬â¢d been inside my apartment a handful of times. If we had an afternoon together we went hiking or went back to his place. If we had an evening together and we decided to go out, we went where he wanted to go because there wasnââ¬â¢t anywhere I wanted to go. I knew his friends. He didnââ¬â¢t know mine. His house wards were set to know me. Mine werenââ¬â¢t set to know him. I didnââ¬â¢t have friends. I had the coffeehouse. A few librarians ââ¬â chiefly Aimil, who had been a Charlieââ¬â¢s regular all her life ââ¬â was as far afield as I went. It is halfway true that if you are involved in a family coffeehouse you donââ¬â¢t have a life. But only halfway. Mel had a life. Iââ¬â¢ve said before that Mel had been a bit of a hoodlum in his younger days, although nobody seemed to be quite sure how much, or maybe his War service had wiped earlier misdeeds off the record. He wasnââ¬â¢t old now but heââ¬â¢d had time to go wrong and then change his mind. There must have been signs he wasnââ¬â¢t going wrong right, though, even at the time. Some of his tattoos were for pretty strange things. Some of them I didnââ¬â¢t know the purpose of because when Iââ¬â¢d asked heââ¬â¢d said ââ¬Å"Umâ⬠and gone silent. Anybody who spent a lot of time on or about motorcycles would have a couple of the regulation anti-crushed-by-flying-metal-or-running-into-trees-at-high-speeds wards, either pricked into your skin or on a chain round your neck or a secret pocket in your belt or the soles of your biker boots. He had those. But he also had a seeing-things-clearly charm that I hadnââ¬â¢t recognized when I saw it the first time: okay, a useful thing for someone on the wrong side of the law (or the wrong side of the battle zone) who needs to have his eyes peeled for trouble, but Melââ¬â¢s wasnââ¬â¢t the conventional block-and-warn ward that most petty crooks used for the purpose. (You could sometimes half-identify the variety of malfeasant you were dealing with by whether or not you could see that ward. Scammers, of course, kept it well hidden: wouldnââ¬â¢t do to have it dangling on a bracelet or tattooed on your wrist when you popped your cuffs at someone you were trying to schmooze. A couple of Melââ¬â¢s old gang who had also changed their minds about being professional bad guys had it on the backs of their gonna-punch-you-in-the-nose hands, so the guy who was about to get punched would see it on the fist being held under his nose.) Anyway. Mel still bought and sold motorcycles. He still drank beer with friends at the Nighthouse or the Jug. Wives and steady girlfriends (very occasionally boyfriends) were expected to show up if they wanted to. (Better yet, we were expected to talk. Of course the women who could talk about ignition mixtures and piston resistance were preferred, but you canââ¬â¢t have everything.) Heââ¬â¢d bought a house in what had been Chesterfield but was now called Whiteout, the worst-Wars-hit section of New Arcadia, had it cleared and re-warded, and was slowly doing it over into something even my mother would recognize as habitable (although the motorcycle-refit garage on what had been the ground floor would probably have given her spasms). He loved cooking and Charlieââ¬â¢s but he wasnââ¬â¢t owned by them. I felt like maybe I should be asking to borrow his survival textbook. Maybe the problem was that the first chapters in it were about running away from home at fourteen and lying about your age, and then being a biker bandit for a few years before deciding that the fact you always seemed to wind up frying the sausages over the fire for everybody was maybe a pointer toward a different way of life with better retirement options, which five years of the Wars had given him plenty of time to consider. Mel would have understood why I drove out to the lake that night. He probably did understand without my telling him. I would have liked hearing him understand. But I didnââ¬â¢t want to tell him. Because I couldnââ¬â¢t ââ¬â couldnââ¬â¢t ââ¬â tell him what happened after. But you donââ¬â¢t have to talk when youââ¬â¢re making love, and bodies have their own language. Also you donââ¬â¢t have to use your eyes so much. There are other things going on. Meanwhile I was still reaching the wrong distance to pick up the edges of baking sheets and muffin tins or the handles of spoons, and fumbling them when I managed to grab them at all, and I walked into doors a little too often instead of through them. At least I knew the recipes I used all the time by heart and didnââ¬â¢t have to bother peering at print midmix or identifying the lines on measuring jugs. Nor had I lost my sense of whether a batter or a dough was going together right or not, or what to do if it wasnââ¬â¢t. I could tell Jesse and Pat about seeing in the dark and let them tell me what to do about it. Or with it. As far as my strange new talents went it beat hell out of Unusual Usages of Table Knives. And maybe if I told them I could bear to tell the people at Charlieââ¬â¢s. Nobody had to know anything about why I could now see in the dark. Including the dark of the day. One day when Pat and John came in for hot-out-of-the-oven cinnamon rolls at about six-thirty-two, I tipped them onto a plate myself and took them out while Liz was still yawning over the coffeepot. ââ¬Å"You have some free time soon maybe?â⬠I said, trying to sound casual in my turn. They both shifted in their seats, trying not to point like hunting dogs. Not very many people, even at Charlieââ¬â¢s, are at their best at that hour, but it doesnââ¬â¢t pay to be careless. And Mrs. Bialosky was there, pretending to read a newspaper while waiting for one of her confederates to turn up to make a clandestine report. ââ¬Å"For you, Sunshine, anything,â⬠said Pat. ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢m off at two,â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"Come round the shop,â⬠said Pat. ââ¬Å"There are two desks in the entry, okay? You go up to the right-hand one and say Patââ¬â¢s expecting you and theyââ¬â¢ll let you straight in.â⬠I nodded. There was a young woman at that desk with a nameplate and a sharp uniform and a sharp look like she should have had a rank to go on the nameplate, but what do I know? She hit two buzzers, one that opened the inner door and one that, presumably, warned Pat, because he came walking out to meet me before Iââ¬â¢d gone very far down the faceless hallway Mel must have brought me out of the last night of the gigglerââ¬â¢s existence on this earth, but it was so characterless I was ready to believe I had crossed one of those distance-folding thresholds and was now on Mars. If so, Pat was there with me. Maybe weââ¬â¢d been on Mars that night too. ââ¬Å"What if the wrong person showed up first and said you were expecting them?â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"I told them middling tall, skinny, weird-looking hair because it will have just been let out of being tied up in a scarf for working in a restaurant and you never comb it, wearing a fierce look,â⬠said Pat. ââ¬Å"I was pretty safe.â⬠ââ¬Å"Fierce?â⬠I said. I also thought, Skinny?, but I have my pride. The part about my hair is true. ââ¬Å"Yeah. Fierce. Through here,â⬠and he opened a door and shepherded me through. This was, presumably, Patââ¬â¢s office. The chair behind the desk was empty, but had that pushed-back-someone-just-got-up look. Jesse was sitting on a chair to one side of the desk. ââ¬Å"Someone I want you to meet,â⬠Pat said, nodding toward the other person in the room, who stood up out of her chair, and said in a rather stricken voice, ââ¬Å"Hi.â⬠Aimil. I looked at her and she looked at me. With my funny vision the sockets of her deep eyes and the hollows of her cheeks had a glittering dark periphery. ââ¬Å"Okay,â⬠I said, planning not to lose my temper unless it was absolutely necessary. ââ¬Å"What are you doing here?â⬠ââ¬Å"Tea?â⬠said Pat blandly. ââ¬Å"Tell me what Aimil is doing here first,â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"Well, weââ¬â¢re in putting-all-our-cards-on-the-table vogue now, arenââ¬â¢t we?â⬠said Pat, still bland. ââ¬Å"Since the other night. So itââ¬â¢s time you knew Aimil is one of us.â⬠ââ¬Å"One of you,â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"SOF. And here I thought she was a librarian.â⬠ââ¬Å"Undercover SOF,â⬠Jesse said. ââ¬Å"Part time,â⬠added Pat. ââ¬Å"I am a librarian,â⬠said Aimil. ââ¬Å"But Iââ¬â¢m sometimes a ââ¬â er ââ¬â librarian for SOF too.â⬠I thought about this. Iââ¬â¢d known Aimil since I was seven and she was nine. She and her family had had Sunday breakfast at Charlieââ¬â¢s most weeks for years, were already regulars when Mom started working there and then when I started hanging out there. She was one of the faces I recognized at my new school. Iââ¬â¢d lost half a year being sick and then Mom crammed the crap out of me the second half of the year so I didnââ¬â¢t lose a grade when I went back to school in the fall. (Yes, I mean crammed. Second grade is freaking hard work when youââ¬â¢re seven or eight.) In hindsight that was the beginning of Charlieââ¬â¢s being my entire life: I didnââ¬â¢t have time to make friends the six months I was being crammed. The only kids I met were kids who came to Charlieââ¬â¢s, not that I got to know many of them because I wasnââ¬â¢t allowed to annoy the customers. But Aimil used to ask for me, so I was allowed to talk to her. She talked to me because she felt so rry for me: I was weedy and undersized and hangdog that half year, and always doing homework. I forget how it started ââ¬â maybe she saw me sitting at the counter studying, which I was allowed to do when it wasnââ¬â¢t too crowded. Weââ¬â¢d managed to stay friends outside of school although not inside so much; two years is the Grand Canyon when youââ¬â¢re a kid. Sheââ¬â¢d gone off to library school my junior year and did an internship at the big downtown library the year after I started working full time at Charlieââ¬â¢s and we used to get together to complain about how hard working for a living was. Two years later she got a job at the branch library near Charlieââ¬â¢s. Sometimes she still had Sunday morning breakfast at Charlieââ¬â¢s with her parents. ââ¬Å"When did you become SOF ââ¬â undercover, part time, or hanging upside down on a trapeze?â⬠I said. I did not sound friendly. I did not feel friendly. ââ¬Å"Twenty months ago,â⬠she said quickly. I relaxed. Slightly. ââ¬Å"Okay. So why did you?â⬠Aimil sighed. ââ¬Å"It seemed like a good idea at the time.â⬠She glanced at Pat and Jesse. I glanced at Pat and Jesse too. If they looked any more bland and nonconfrontational they were going to dissolve into little puddles of glop. Aimil looked back at me. ââ¬Å"Youââ¬â¢re not going to like this,â⬠she said. ââ¬Å"I know,â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"SOF monitors globenet usage for who likes to read up a lot on the Others,â⬠said Aimil. ââ¬Å"Thatââ¬â¢s how they found me. They have a note of everybody who subscribes to the Darkline.â⬠Which included both her and me. In theory any heavy-duty line into the cosworld will let you look up anything you like on the globenet, and the parameters are drawn only by your subscription price and the weight of the line. But in practice it is a little more specific than that. The Darkline is what you are going to choose if what you are chiefly interested in is looking up all the latest the globenet could give you on the Others without going to a Darkshop or the library or some other public hook-in for it. If Iââ¬â¢d ever given a passing real-world thought to anything outside my bakery, I would have known SOF must do stuff like monitor the Darkline. Which would mean they would know I used it. That, with my dad, was easily enough to interest them in me. If Iââ¬â¢d ever given a passing real-world thought to it, which I hadnââ¬â¢t. Iââ¬â¢d lived in my own swaddled-up little world. I who had been the star pupil in June Yanovskyââ¬â¢s vampire lit class. But that was the point, really. The Others were still something that happened between the covers of books like Vampire Tales and Other Eerie Matters. SOF shop talk overheard at Charlieââ¬â¢s was just live stories. Dry guys happened, but never to anybody I knew. Vampires were out there, but nowhere near me. Until recently. ââ¬Å"Weââ¬â¢d already found you, of course,â⬠Pat said to me, ââ¬Å"because of your dad.â⬠ââ¬Å"Yes,â⬠I said. ââ¬Å"You could stop reminding me. Nothing wrong with your dad, is there?â⬠I said to Aimil. Aimil laughed a little bitterly and bowed her head. As her bangs fell across her forehead they left flickering mahogany bars against her skin. I blinked. ââ¬Å"Nothing that I know of. Or with my mom either. Thatââ¬â¢s why it came as such a shock to them when I had two sets of adult teeth come in, one inside the other. Fortunately my mom has a cousin whoââ¬â¢s a dentist. A discreet dentist. And scared to death there might be something wrong with his blood. Also fortunately my second set wasnââ¬â¢t the kind that keeps growing, although they were a funny shape. Once they were out theyââ¬â¢ve stayed out. And my momââ¬â¢s cousin doesnââ¬â¢t have anything to do with our branch of the family any more. But Iââ¬â¢m not registered. Remember Azar?â⬠I was already remembering Azar. Heââ¬â¢d been the year between Aimil and me. My freshman year in high school, he was the only sophomore on the varsity football team. That was before his lower jaw began to drop and widen to hold the spectacular pair of tusks that started to grow at the same time. They took the tusks out, of course, but they couldnââ¬â¢t do much reconstructive surgery on his face till his jaw stopped expanding. After the first surgery his family left town so that he could start school again somewhere they hadnââ¬â¢t known him before. That was after heââ¬â¢d been registered. After our school had taken away all his sports awards because he was a partblood and must have had ââ¬â ipso facto ââ¬â an unfair advantage. Which is crap. And heââ¬â¢d been a nice guy. He wasnââ¬â¢t stupid or a bully. ââ¬Å"Itââ¬â¢s an interesting situation,â⬠Pat interrupted, ââ¬Å"because one of SOFââ¬â¢s official purposes is to find unregistered partbloods, register them, and fine their asses good, if not arrest them and throw them in jail, which happens sometimes too. One of SOFââ¬â¢s unofficial purposes is to find certain kinds of unregistered partbloods, protect them from getting found out, and persuade them to work for us. We really like librarians. They tend to have tidy minds.â⬠ââ¬Å"Librarian partbloods are probably flash easy to find,â⬠said Aimil. ââ¬Å"Weââ¬â¢ll be the ones who belong to Otherwatch and Beware.â⬠These are the two biggest globenet trawlers for Other ââ¬Ëfo, exclusive to the Darkline. For a modest extra monthly fee you too can download eleventy jillion gigabytes every week and experience mental overkill paralysis, unless you are a trained member of SOF or a research librarian or a prune-faced academic and have a cyborg overdrive button for taking in ââ¬Ëfo. I didnââ¬â¢t have the overdrive button. Besides, Iââ¬â¢d always had a guilty preference for fiction. Since I seemed now to be living fiction, this proved to have been an entirely reasonable choice. ââ¬Å"I spend a few hours every week reading certain threads and ââ¬â well ââ¬â following my nose.â⬠ââ¬Å"We contacted her because the filters sheââ¬â¢d set up herself on her subscription passwords seemed to bring her a peculiarly high level of source traffic by Others and partbloods, not just about them. So we had her in for a few chats and once she softened up a littleâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ââ¬Å"Did someone turn blue for you too?â⬠I said. Aimil smiled. ââ¬Å"Yeah.â⬠â⬠ââ¬â We found out that that nose of hers often told her when your actual Other had actual fingers on the keyboard, and that has sometimes been very interesting,â⬠said Jesse. ââ¬Å"Especially when she picks up a sucker,â⬠said Pat. They all saw me freeze. ââ¬Å"Hey, kiddo,â⬠said Pat. ââ¬Å"Thatââ¬â¢s kind of the point, you know? Nailing vampires. Remember?â⬠I nodded stiffly. The rift ââ¬â or did I mean rifts ââ¬â in my life were getting deeper and wider all the time. I only just stopped myself from reaching up to touch the thin white scar on my breast. If any of these people had noticed that Iââ¬â¢d spent the entire sweltering summer wearing high-necked shirts they hadnââ¬â¢t mentioned it, and they werenââ¬â¢t mentioning that I had suddenly stopped wearing them for a mere autumn burst of pleasantly warm weather either. ââ¬Å"I ââ¬â I just donââ¬â¢t like talking about vampires,â⬠I said, after a moment. If one-fifth of the worldââ¬â¢s wealth ââ¬â or possibly more ââ¬â lay in vampire hands, of course there were a lot of them out there with not just basic com gear to handle their bloated bank balances but monster com networks that meant they had probably stopped noticing they werenââ¬â¢t able to go outdoors in daylight. Plenty of human com techies never went out in daylight either. But com networks would include trog lines into the globenet. And some vampires who had them no doubt amused themselves chatting up humans. I knew this. But those vampires were scary faceless bogeypeople that SOF existed to deal with. What was I doing here in a SOF office? Partbloods sticking together, I suppose. What if I told them I didnââ¬â¢t know I was one of the lucid ten percent? I shivered. Did Bo have a line into the globenet? He was a master vampire. Of course he did. Did Con? I shivered again. Harder. ââ¬Å"Sunshine, Iââ¬â¢m sorryâ⬠Aimil said. ââ¬Å"I know it doesnââ¬â¢t mean much, but sometimes when Iââ¬â¢m tracking some ââ¬â some thing, even that much contact, through however many miles of trog and ether, it starts to make me sick. I canââ¬â¢t imagine what it must be like for you.â⬠True. ââ¬Å"Now, about that tea,â⬠said Pat. ââ¬Å"You still havenââ¬â¢t told me why youââ¬â¢re here, like, today, now, this minute, in Patââ¬â¢s office,â⬠I said to Aimil. She shook her head. ââ¬Å"Serendipity, I guess. I showed up this afternoon to plug in my usual report and Pat brought me in here, said I was about to meet an old friend who was also a new recruit, and maybe I could reassure her that having anything to do with SOF doesnââ¬â¢t automatically mean youââ¬â¢re going to lose your interest in reading fiction and will wake up some morning soon with an overwhelming urge to wear khaki and start a firearm collection.â⬠Pat, who was wearing navy blue trousers and a white shirt, said, ââ¬Å"Hey.â⬠ââ¬Å"Navy blue and white are khaki too,â⬠said Aimil firmly. ââ¬Å"But Rae, I didnââ¬â¢t know it was you till you walked through the door.â⬠ââ¬Å"Then why are you saying youââ¬â¢re sorry about what happened to me? What do you know about it?â⬠How to cite Sunshine Chapter 14, Essay examples Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-84749886206238583872020-05-02T19:34:00.001-07:002020-05-02T19:34:02.847-07:00Osi vs Tcp/Ip free essay sample UDP and TCP defined by TCP/IP Transport Layer correspond to many of the requirements of the OSI Transport Layer. There are some issues over for requirements in the session layer of OSI since sequence numbers and port values can help the Operating System to keep track of active sessions. Most of the TCP and UDP functions and specifications map to the OSI Transport Layer. The TCP/IP and OSI architecture models both employ all connection and connectionless models at transport layer. The internet architecture refers to the two models in TCP/IP as simply ââ¬Å"Connectionsâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Datagramsâ⬠. The OSI model uses the terms ââ¬Å"Connection-modeâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Connection-orientedâ⬠for the connection model and the term ââ¬Å"Connectionless-modeâ⬠for the connectionless model. TCP/IP Internet layer VS OSI Network layer The Internet layer of the TCP/IP model is compared to the Network layer of the OSI model. Both models support ââ¬Å"Connectionlessâ⬠network services, but only the Network layer supports connected-oriented services. We will write a custom essay sample on Osi vs Tcp/Ip or any similar topic specifically for you Do Not WasteYour Time HIRE WRITER Only 13.90 / page The OSI layer is a ââ¬Å"catch-allâ⬠for all protocols that assist in network functionality, where the ââ¬Å"Internetâ⬠layer of the TCP/IP model assist in internetworking using Internet Protocol. TCP/IP Link layer VS OSI Data Link and Physical layer The Link Layer of the TCP/IP model is often compared directly with the Data link layer and the Physical layer in the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) protocol stack. The Link Layer in TCP/IP is still wider in scope and it holds a different concept. This can be observed by certain protocols, such as the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), which is confined to the Link Layer in the TCP/IP model, which fist between OSI model Data Link Layer and the Network Layer. Majority of the time, the lower layers below the Interface or Network layer of the TCP/IP model are rarely discussed. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-62677197964467307182020-03-24T06:15:00.001-07:002020-03-24T06:15:03.058-07:00Chimera of ArezzoLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-44146699721960053512020-03-06T07:07:00.001-08:002020-03-06T07:07:03.105-08:00McDomination and Cultural Imperialism essaysMcDomination and Cultural Imperialism essays America in General is culturally imperialistic. Since European expansion we have impressed the white way upon everyone we have visited. An Indian from the Sioux tribe once said, everywhere on earth the white man has treaded, it is sore. In retrospect to the history of the white man in general, as exploration of the world increased, European nations like France, Spain, England, and Portugal all raced to claim territory in these places in hopes to gain economic wealth. In these new colonies, the European conquerors imposed their language and most importantly, their culture. America today is still very culturally imperialistic. American people are taught to see the other (other cultures) as inferior, and this concept exists with every country America analyses. Imposing Christianity through missionary work in other countries seems to be popular among Americans also. The idea that another religion is inferior to our own is downright ridiculous. Americans believe that by converting a Buddhist man into a Christian man would make him a better person, but the truth is no religion is superior or inferior. This idea alone supports any accusation of Americas imperialistic nature. America is also commercially imperialistic. Specifically, America has capitalized on the economic power of American culture on other countries. And commercial enterprise. One example of Americas commercial enterprise abilities lies on the cover of a book called Cultural Anthropology, by Gary Ferraro. The cover shows a photo of a Masai herdsman from Africa, standing with his cattle. He has a prod in his right hand, and in his left, a cell phone held to his ear. In that same photo, in the background, are a few tall commercial buildings, one of which is the Hilton Hotel, the most successful chain of hotels in America. That hotel building was so high, Africa felt obligated to put up a few skyscrapers"... Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-3243378245540342612020-02-18T22:31:00.001-08:002020-02-18T22:31:02.941-08:00Information Systems-e-commerce and the Internet EssayInformation Systems-e-commerce and the Internet - Essay Example But it is only after the inevitable dotcom bust in the early years of the millennia that e-commerce established itself as a viable and dependable method of conducting business. Technological innovation in terms of developing security software aided this process and so did the process of globalization. As a culmination of these parallel but complementary processes, e-commerce in general and electronic financial transactions in particular has firmly taken root in mainstream global economy. Since the beginning of the 1990s, and with the advancement in global telecommunications technology, e-commerce has really taken off. And online retailing comprises an integral part of this broader phenomenon. In advanced countries, traditional brick and mortar retail stores have extended their services through the Internet, adding new dimensions to the experience of shopping for consumers. New and exclusive online retailers have also sprung up to cater to the newly created demand by consumers online. While there are complaints and concerns about this new mode of business (especially security issues), there are also numerous redeeming features of e-shopping, without which the market share for this fledgling industry would not have risen to 10 percent approximately. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-75399884860889544782020-02-04T01:36:00.001-08:002020-02-04T01:36:04.393-08:00Money,Banking&Finance Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays - 1750 wordsMoney,Banking&Finance - Essay Example The present prices of the bonds would help in the determination of the market rate of interest, or the price that would be paid for the use of the money for a period of time. There exists a functional relationship between the rate of interest and the time of the bonds. The term structure of interest rates or the yield curve shows the relationship between the rate of interest and the yields of the bonds with the terms to maturities. The curve is a representation of the various opportunities that may exist for the arbitrage as well as the expectation of the markets about the interest rates that may prevail in future. Interest Rates While carrying out the analysis of the yield curve it is essential to know the components of the nominal interest rates. This equation shows that the real rate of interest represented by r is the main component of the rate of interest. On the other hand, sigma is the risk premium that is being added to the rate of interest which is open to fluctuations due t o various events. On the other hand, ? is the representative of the rate of inflation while l is the component that would capture the liquidity. The various financial markets would offer bonds and other long term instruments that would be offering a variety of interest or the rates of return (Kettell, 2001, pp. 19-26). The premium is the representation of the consumer behaviour that would depict that the consumers would be unwilling to hold that particular asset class. The following diagram shows the break-up of the various components of the rates of interest. The loans that are provided for the long term cost higher because the premium for liquidity would increase with the increase in the tenure of the bonds. The people would always want to hold liquidity at the present period of time rather than a later period. The opportunity cost of keeping the money in the hand would be less in the present period as compared to the future period. Yield Curve The yield curve is drawn from the yi eld to maturity of the bonds. The yield to maturity (YTM) is considered to be the approximate value of the rate of interest for a particular term to maturity of a bond. The various points of the terms to maturity and the corresponding yields to maturity are plotted on a plane and the curve that is fitted along these points is known as the yield curve. The following diagram is an example of a yield curve. In the plane the vertical axis measures the yield of the bonds and the horizontal axis measures the term to maturity of the bond. Figure 1: Yield curve The yield curve thus summarises yield of the different bonds that are being traded on a particular date. The yields or the different tenors in such cases may be different. The yield of a bond is the unique rate at which the cash flows that is provided by a bond is discounted. Thus even though the accrual of the cash flows are taking place at the different points in time the rate at which it is taking place is the same (Rossi, 2007, p p. 225-241). This rate is known as the yield to maturity of the bonds. In most cases the interest rates are considered to be fixed for the entire tenor. This would give rise to a flat yield curve as shown in the diagram below. Throughout the tenure of the bond the rate of interest that has been offered in case of this yield curve is 3.5%. Figure 2: Flat Yield Curve The Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-68905152155578566752020-01-26T21:58:00.001-08:002020-01-26T21:58:05.654-08:00Realism in English LiteratureRealism in English Literature In general, realism can be defined as the aspect of tending to lean towards being factual and practical on matters of life by representing things, actions, or social circumstances in point of fact, without presenting them in their conceptual form and neither without the influence of feelings or other artistic ideas. However, in order to clearly define or discuss the major distinguishing features of realism, it is best to discuss it under different viewpoints so as to get an extensive description of what this theory of realism in American literature is all about. The theory of realism emphasizes on objectivity and being indifferent, along with unemotional social criticism. By critically referring to minute details and being concerned with petty, insignificant issues. Therefore, through use of literature, realism refers to the attempt of a writer to portray human actions and environment precisely as it appears in every day life. In reaction to romanticism, realists claimed that precise documentation, sociological approach and vernacular diction were the basis of literal realism. The subject matter was sourced from everyday life, and in this case, the people in lower-class life were considered. After the Civil War, it is when realism entered American literature; with authors such as Mark Twain and Henry James being the major initiators of this fictional style of realism in America. The American realistic authors aimed at presenting observations that were objective and without bias. In this light, we can broadly discuss literal realism from the literature point of view. In the school of literature, realism is described as the theory through which fidelity to the natural world or towards life is represented accurately without the practice of idealizing occurrences of life. The works of Daniel Defoe and Henry fielding are some of the earliest cases of realism in English writing, dating back to the 18th century. Through the schools, types and modes of literature, realism can be described as the conformity to accurate literary depiction of real and everyday life without any form of idealization. Through this genre of realism, individuals were just perceived as real people, as opposed to other genres such as romanticism which described an individual as a god and naturalism which perceived a person as a helpless object. (Gray) Realism in American Literature dates back to the 19th century, 1860-1900. In American literature, realism is described as a term that covers the period from the time of the Civil War to the 20th century-an era during which the realism of Twain and James was highly praised. Realism in America was therefore a 20th century idea in literature through which reflections of this era were portrayed. A time in which authors like Mark Twain, Henry James, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemmingway, Toni Morrison and others wrote literature that was dedicated to accurate description and a study of how the Americans lived in different situations during that era. After the Civil War, there was a fast growth in the economy and population in the United States. This rapid growth in the rates of industrialization, urbanization, an escalating population base as a result of immigration, general literacy, social equality and a rise in the affluence of the middle-class population presented a rich base for wri ters and readers who had the urge to understand these rapid changes in the American civilization. In defining the realism in the literary history of America, we refer to that period ranging from 1865 to l914, which has been commonly referred to as the Era of Realism in the American 1iterary history. Therefore, in defining Realism as a literary movement, it should be specifically located in history and not simply artistically labeled to escape being dated. Hence, Realism being seen as a literary movement, it should doubtless be limited to the age from the late 1840s to the mid 1860s. This implies that the theory of focus concerning literal realism of the content should be centered on the ordinary, everyday lives of the lower-class preferably. The American realist writers went ahead to build their plots and characters around the ordinary, daily lives that people led. In addition, their fictional works contained local languages and wide-ranging conversations that attached well with the community. Consequently, readers were ideally attracted to the realistic writers because they coul d see their own struggles in print. The American public had advanced socially, economically and politically and so they tended to prefer writers who plainly described the difficulties of every day life for individuals as opposed to the slow paced writings and symbolism of the romantic writers, which the public had come to develop distaste for. The Americans had transformed to a new age, and realism was the only theory that clearly depicted the situation as it really was during that age. (McDonald) Mark uses local colorism as a theme through which he presents life through representing the characters in his novel as locals from a particular region. The way they did things in a native manner, the clothes that they wore and even how they talked described their lifestyle in a profound way. Mark Twain unlike James Henry wrote about people in the lower-class. Being the kind of life he had lived, he understood this class of people better as seen in his novels. Through use of local colorism, Mark was able to i1lustrate and shed light on issues in the contemporary society. The Gilded age, as Mark Twain commonly refers to as the period of American realism, was a time of materialism and political corruption in the United States. These elements formed ideas on which some important works of fiction on political and social criticism were based on. The novel Gilded Age (1873), which was authored by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner, presents a clear depiction of Washington D.C. The scene describes fraudulent politicians and insatiable industrialists. The novels of this age characterize the beginning of a new twist in the American literature, with the novel acting as a vehicle of social grievances. In an attempt to describe a contemporary view of how things were in reality; writing was used to portray how the culture of the people and the scenic outlook of New York City had transformed in this age. During this period of time, the writers, journalists, musicians and painters had made a major contribution to the thought of realism in the American setting; they had actually come of age. This was actually a new kind of generation writers, journalists and painters who through their writing and works of art were concerned with representing the usual and common aspects of life in a straightforward and unemotional manner, which was assumed to portray life as it actually was. Their approach of treating matters that portray a careful depiction of daily life, more so by the lower and middle classes was partly influenced by the new city life of a people who were more urban as opposed to leading a rural life and partly by the works of older American writers. These American realists did believe that humanitys preferences and freedom of choice were constrained by the supremacy of outside forces, which influence our ways of thinking and consequently our behavior and personality. This was a new age and it had come with a new style and approach of writing and presenting other works of art. (Patterson) Henry James and Mark Twain are some of the renowned writers in this era and together they achieved to bring out the indigenous style in the realistic description of the land and social activities by using the colloquial speech style. By using this approach they managed to survey and use the fictional potential of the interior life of people living at the time. However, the three writers differed in their perception of what they termed as the truth in reality. For instance, Mark and William gave more emphasis to the general life of the Americans, while Henry gave more attention to the sub conscious elements of a person. Henry was of the opinion that literary artists should use words to explore the deepest extents of the mental and ethical nature of people in addition to examining the exterior of social life in certain circumstances. This made him a realist of both the inner and outer life, while Mark and William were merely realists of the exterior life. The contribution of these five authors; Mark Twain, Henry James, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemmingway, Toni Morrison to the American realism through Literature can be viewed as fitting in the realistic period in the American literature in this context. Samuel Clemens, commonly known by his pet name Mark Twain is famous for how he represented realism in his writing (1835-1910). His well-known literary works are Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In his book, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, his most prominent account of realism, he introduced a character Huckleberry Finn who is a mistreated and neglected thirteen years old boy, whose father is a cruel drunk. From Finns view point, we get to see the world as he tries to make sense of the social world around him. In the story, Mark portrays various societal formalities by representing the double standards of the civilized American society in every day life. Mark Twains style, which was based on a dynamic, practical and slang American language, gave to the American writers and readers an admiration of their speech that represented a new form of American fiction. Despite Mark coming from the interiors of the country, he was actually among the most important authors who managed to capture this unique colloquial language and the aspect of iconoclasm of the Americans in his writing. But in his opinion, realism was not just a literary skill: It was a way of revealing the truth and abandoning old-fashioned principle of life. Like other realistic writers at the time, Mark Twain represents life in a practical way. His mode of writing was hilarious, descriptive and one which incorporated the colloquial language of Americans with both slang and iconoclasm. Mark Twain is regarded as a major writer in the realistic period. Through his literature, Mark created the worlds view of the United States. From how he managed to combine the American peoples h umor and serious writing, he produced a very superb form of literature than the earlier novelists had ever done. Throughout his writing career, Mark Twain used the technique of humorous narration in most of his major works of fiction. In his accounts, he ridicules the pompous, self-indulgent old world in mocking tones. He developed his work by drawing upon the views and sensations of his childhood. He narrates about his boyhood ambitions to be the pilot of a riverboat. The episodic encounters of Huck and Jim present us with an illustration of the world in a social perspective by symbolically using the banks of the river and the river that runs through them it to portray our actions in the world, in a realistic way. In The Gilded Age, he uses social satire to explore individuality in a world of speculation and unsteady values, all in the name of getting rich, whether at the expense of others or not. Twain, who over the years had turned in to a disillusioned pessimist, he cynically described the human race as a lost society, which had become obvious due to individualism. Mark also uses the aspects of vernacular in the realism movement. His use of col1oquial words which are real and express in effect, and use of simple sentence structures makes his work very unique. He also uses grammatical incorrect wording that is characteristic of the spoken 1anguage. He uses this colloquialism to powerfully cast his characters unique in their daily lives in a magical way. The fact that his characters have different cultural settings indicates that they speak differently probably with strong accents, which is the basic ideology of local colorism in his work. Like is the case with Huck and Jim, who talk differently because of their different cultural settings. His use of humor is another element he uses to describe realism in his work. Most of his writings are comical and contain practical jokes. Most of his jokes and remarks are his exaggerated stories of his life experiences. He not only uses this jokes to make people laugh but also as a type of artistic approach of criticizing social injustices and mocking the romanticism genre. In the book Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain uses the character Huck, a young lad who described as using the local dialect in scene development plays the role of narrator. The illustration of characters and story renditions are both comical and cleverly iconic. Huck is described as being illiterate and superstitious; however, he happens to have native wisdom and concern-instinctive trends that help him reach the right decisions on certain important matters. After running away from his cruel father, he meets Jim, a runaway slave and together they start on a long voyage down the Mississippi River on a boat. This describes how we are at times faced by lifes challenges and we opt to run away, instead of face them. During the passage, Huck meets members of different communities, which helps him overcome his earlier narrow-mindedness and he learns to revere Jim. The book describes the different classes of people that Huck meets symbolically through the river banks on their journey. The thread which runs through exploration after exploration is the aspect of human cruelty to others. The significance of mark as a realistic writer is the literary creativity he employs in his novels. First of all, the language he uses to write his novels is simple and direct colloquial speech. Secondly, the plot and shape of his writings gives his novels both a realistic and symbolic aspect. Thirdly, he describes how the human race is damned following the kind of actions and decisions wee make concerning various issues. Although Mark and Howells shared the same perception in describing the realities of life in the American culture, each of them had a different stress. Howells preferred to base his argument on how the middle class people lived and conducted themselves in life. Twain focused his argument on having people from a certain region take the center-stage in his stories-local colorism, which was a unique style in the American fictitious realism. Local Colorism was an extraordinary approach in the literary realism age. Generally, the writings by the local colorists were focused on the life of some small, distinct regions. This type of literature portrayed the characters from a specific time, which are manifested by its traditions, language, outfit and other odd customs that have failed to come of age through cultural pressure. The writing is done from a personal experience perspective, whereby they committed themselves to minutely and accurately describe the way of life in theses regions. Thro ugh personal experience, they depicted an exceptional environment, which suggested that the life of the natives was greatly influenced by the conditions of the environment. The works of Mark Twain and Hamlin Garland are characterized by this element of local colors of the people. (Railton) Henry James (1843-1916), was a well-known American-born English author and writer of the realism movement. Among his highly attributable works of fiction are The American (1877), The Portrait of a Lady (1881), The Turn of the Screw (1898), and The Ambassadors (1903). His works were mostly romantic narrative with well developed characters that were set amongst revealing social observations on political affairs, social class and status. He vastly explored topic on feminism, personal freedom and moral decency. In his novels and short stories, he makes use of the interior monologue technique and approach to ensure the readers delight of character approach and sensitivity. James often compares the lifestyle and perceptions of New World with the Old World. In his writing, Henry James who greatly admired the early European culture portrayed a negative image of the money-oriented and twisted life of the Americans. He became a British citizen through naturalization, arguing that he believed that the Americans lacked a culture, a reason why he preferred the European civilization. In his major works more so the novels and essays made him a prominent figure in the American world of literature. There are three periods in his literary profession, in the first his main interest was in global subject matters. Jamess international theme is also another aspect that he uses in fictional realism. He uses America and Europe as the international environment, which centers on the conflicts between these two very diverse cu1tures. Having diverse moral, Americans are naive, ignorant, unsophisticated and individualistic in comparison with European whose personality was that of cultural erosion, deceit and urbanity, a conflict arises. The American in search of success in Europe would be easily deceived and betrayed by the civilized Europeans. In the same context he also uses love and marriage as central points of the conflicts between these two value structures. The character goes through an agonizing progression of spiritual nourishment and achieving an awareness of good and evil from this confrontation. He regards the conflicts between two diverse societies and the emotional and ethical problems Americans in Europe and Europeans in America experienced. Jamess international theme is also another aspect that he uses in fictional realism. He uses America and Europe as the international environment, which centers on the conflicts between these two very diverse cu1tures. Having diverse moral, Americans are naive, ignorant, unsophisticated and individualistic in comparison with European whose personality was that of cultural erosion, deceit and urbanity, a conflict arises. In The Portrait of a Lady, he describes a conflict between the Old and the New World, through the life of an American girl in a European society and environment. The American in search of success in Europe would be easily deceived and betrayed by the civilized Europeans. In the same context he also uses love and marriage as central points of the conflicts between these two value structures. The character goes through an agonizing progression of spiritual nourishment and achieving an awareness of good and evil from this confrontation. Henry Jamess realistic elements are distinguished by his psychological realism style that he uses to approach the subject matter. His world of fiction is more concerned with the inner aspects of life of an individual in preference to the obvious human acts. He makes individual perception and expression of every moment senses of personal experience to be the dramatic production of puzzlement and great findings. We get to view individuals and actions as they are sorted out in an individuals awareness and involve ourselves in this experience. This stress on psychological realism on the human perception shows that this was a major advancement in the writing of novels and a kind of big influence on future generations. James is commonly considered as the initiator of psychological realism, an idea which he incorporated in his work, whereby the characters are portrayed as having a stream of consciousness. In Daisy Miller, one of his most famous works, Henry James uses Frederick, an American emigrant as the narrator of the story. While on a visit to Switzerland, Frederick meets the Millers. The Millers, who are American, believe in social freedom and individuality unlike the Europeans. Daisy, daughter to Mrs. Miller does not regard the complex policies underlying conduct in European society. Daisys adventurous behavior and lack of concern form her mother leave Winterbourne shocked. She later dies of malaria. The theme of the novel is a comparison between America and Europe, centered on the conflict of these two cu1tures as regards their different social values, the moral decadence in Europe and its repercussion as described through the death of Daisy. Jamess literary criticism, described as the theme of the Art of Fiction. His fictional criticism is a crucial element of his input to literature. It is both apprehensive with outward manifestation and dedicated to personality values. This theme plainly signifies that the plan of the narrative is to present life as it really is. He depicts occurrence such as fantasy, desolation, incentives, agony and encouragement. His narrative standpoint and the language he uses are other themes in his realistic literature. Through this literary skill, he places a psychological emphasis in the story. By making his characters build themselves in the plot, devoid of authorial intrusion, we capture the core story by reading it through the minds of the protagonists and in that respect we get to share in their realistic perspectives of life. For his language, James makes a careful selection of words that is intended to bring out the clear and intended meaning without any ambiguity even though it is not e asy to understand his vocabulary. This made Henry James one of the most important realists of this era through his skilled style of writing. The stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) present the edgy and bold atmosphere of the 1920s, a disappointment that resulted from the war. Fitzgeralds distinctive subject matter is articulated expressively in his novel The Great Gatsby. He argues that there is a propensity of the ambitions that youths yearn for end in letdown and disillusionment. Fitzgerald reveals that the failure of some chief American moral standards such as liberty, social harmony, promoting peace and good governance are elements which were endangered by the demands of the 20th century civilization. Ernest Hemmingway, who was also another author during the time (1899-1961) argued that death, violence in the World War I and the bloodshed influenced him to conclude that conceptual verbal communication was typically empty and as such a misleading element. He left out over emphasized wordings from his works, to simple sentence structure. In some way his writing was inspired by Mark Twain who influenced his style of writing. He dwelt on realistic things and actions. He stuck on to an ethical code that emphasized the essence of elegance under pressure, with his central characters being quiet physically powerful who treated women inappropriately. His novels include: The sun Also Rises and A Farewell to Arms. He was one a writer who greatly detested this new civilization in which the people were inelegant and their actions were very much individualistic. Through her novels, Toni Morrison (1930-1950) has used a variety of themes and Practices which represent her contribution to realism in the American literature scene. She uses the element of sense of loss to describe how she deeply feels for the Afro-Americans for losses they have experienced in their movement from the rural areas of the south to the urban centers in the north. They are depicted as a people who have lost their sense of living as a society, a disconnection with their past and traditions. Their culture of oral tradition of story narration and folktales was no longer a basis of their strength as a people. Other foundations of their togetherness like music which they used as a healing element, had been adsorbed by their integration into the white community. Hence portraying a society that had completely lost touch with their roots and had sought to live in a more sophisticated and realistic way, as opposed to their traditional way of life that entailed living as a depend ent community and having a shared history. (Baym) She also portrays her characters as people who are in a constant struggle of trying to identify with society and fulfill oneself. Thee elements of having societal roots, and a community to identity with, which implies having a shared history is what these African-Americans have given up to adopt the American culture. Anybody who does not belong to a community is generally regarded as lost, while those who still hold on to their traditions and communities are depicted as having a high chance of surviving. The lack of societal roots and the detachment of an individual from the society lead to their being alienated. According to her, ancestors are also a necessary part of life for they give cultural information and a link to the past. They are supposed to guide and be concerned about our welfare like parents and grandparents. In her novel, The Bluest Eye, ancestors is one of the distinctive uniqueness of the black community literature, which they have actually given up for a more realistic and fulfilling life. The aspect of characters in extreme situations is also another theme Toni Morrison uses in her literature. She sets her characters in intense situations; she then forces them to the edge beyond their points of endurance. These circumstances disclose their basic personality. Even the good people end up acting in some very horrifying ways. Through this induced push, people are described in their real manner and not in their pretentious good self. Other themes in her works include responsibility, freedom and loss of innocence. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-61121997353609590862020-01-18T18:22:00.001-08:002020-01-18T18:22:03.472-08:00Increased Competition and Pricepressures in Supply ChainCD5590 Professional Ethics in Science and Engineering Presentation: Ethics in Supply Chain Management (SCM) Abedullah Zaman Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Supply Chain Management Definition: The network of retailers, distributors, transporters, storage facilities and suppliers that participate in the sale, delivery and production of a particular product. In the simplest terms, Supply Chain Management (SCM) lets an organization get the right goods and services to the place they're needed at the right time, in the proper quantity and at an acceptable cost.Efficiently managing this process involves overseeing relationships with suppliers and customers, controlling inventory, forecasting demand and getting constant feedback on what's happening at every link in the chain. Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Roots of Ethics Professional ethics is about managing relations which is a crucial part in SCM. Successful companies use supply chains not only to reduce cos t and complement the product but also to nurture long-term valuedadded relationships.Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Why society is concerned about ethics within SCM? Environmental Effects Treatment plants for water, treatment of solid waste, gases Health and Safety In Food Industry- uses of pesticides, hormone-treatment of animals Consumer Rights Legislations about right to safety, right to choose, right to be heard. Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Ethical Model/Process Economic responsibilities: Supply Products and Services. Legal Responsibilities: Ethical Responsibilities: Obey Laws.Conduct business in a way that is morally consistent with the beliefs of society Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Reasons for Increasing Concern about Ethics in Supply Chains The pressure is coming from various sources. A wide range of stakeholders are interested in the social, ethical and environmental performance of the retail industryââ¬â¢s supply chai n. General Public Growing people's awareness of these issues and increasing expectations of companies' responsibilities.Investors and rating agencies It is also coming from investors as socially responsible investment becomes more mainstream. Managing supply chain issues is seen as one indicator of how well a company is run. Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Media The media are also becoming more interested in stories about malpractice, as are campaigning groups as they target new sectors and become more skilled at harnessing public opinion. Consumers More educated and discerning consumers.Government and NGOs Public exposure of poor labour standards in some factories and other establishments, often located in developing countries, can inadvertently undermine progress on establishing ethical trade and good labour practices. Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Examples Marks & Spencer Ethical concerns about child labour, prison labour, discrimination and terms and condition of work environment. M&S Ethical Global Sourcing Strategy: Global Sourcing Principles Partnership with Suppliers Social Audit and Verification Continual Improvements and SanctionsProfessional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Nike Labour involved in production of footballs. Code of Conduct- Improve working conditions in factories. Forced labor, Child Labor, Compensation, Benefits, Hours of work, Safety and health, Documentations and inspection. Reebok Sourcing Procedure- Supplier list based on ââ¬Å"Fair Factories Clearing Houseâ⬠evaluation. Zero Tolerance Strategy GAP Apparel Outsourcing- Social Responsibility Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Addressing Ethical Issues in Supply ChainRole of Certifications Example: World Responsible Apparel Production (WRAP) WRAP is an independent, non-profit organization dedicated to the certification of lawful, humane and ethical manufacturing throughout the world. Other Regulations International Labour Organisat ion (ILO) Conventions United Nations (UN) Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Recent issues with SCM Research Trust in Supply Chains Ethical Supply Chain Ethical supply chain should communicate ethical behaviours and fair treatment to all its stake holders. Supply chains must satisfy societal expectationsProfessional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Discussions Child work can be seen as important in developing responsibility and independence as well as contributing to household economy. Should the societies be let isolated by not giving orders to already poor communities? Engagement or Disengagement strategy? Professional Ethics in Supply Chain Management Five Myths about Business Ethics 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Ethics is personal Business and ethics don? t mix Business ethics is relative Good business means good ethics Information is neutral and amoral Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-22192074831388822292020-01-10T14:46:00.001-08:002020-01-10T14:46:02.948-08:00Beliefs in the sanctity of life EssayExplain how beliefs in sanctity of life may influence ethical approaches to abortion This issue involves the principles associated with abortion and involves the consideration of the act of killing and the ethical questions that this raises. The belief that life is in some way sacred or holy is widely supported throughout several different cultures and religions, and is traditionally understood as being given by God. Believers in the Sanctity of Life take a deontological position in which love and compassion for all human life has a significant role in their everyday lives. The sanctity of life argument is often put forward from a Christian viewpoint, and is also supported in the Roman Catholic Church. The Church of England also combines opposition to abortion with recognition that there can be ââ¬Å"strictly limitedâ⬠conditions in which it is morally acceptable to carry out an abortion. Members of this Church share the Roman Catholic view that abortion is ââ¬Å"gravely contr ary to the moral lawâ⬠, suggesting that life is precious and reinforcing their belief in the sanctity of life. The Church says that human life begins when the womanââ¬â¢s egg is fertilised by a male sperm. From that moment a unique life begins, independent of the life of the mother and father. The features that distinguish us from our parents ââ¬â the colour of our eyes, the shape of our face ââ¬â are all laid down in the genetic code that comes into existence then. Each new life that begins at this point is not a potential human being but a human being with potential, therefore abortion is wrong, because life is precious and created in Godââ¬â¢s image. Kant gives the idea of the sanctity of life a non-religious perspective based on ethical grounds. He considers each human life sacred, and said that everyone has potential to have a good life, therefore against abortion as he believes life starts from conception. Abortion cannot be justified in Kantian ethics if it simply concerns itself because the foetus has intrinsic value based upon the principle of the sanctity of life. However Singer argues from both sides, and says ââ¬Å"To kill a human adult is murder, and is unhesitatingly and universally condemned. Yet there is no obvious sharp line which marks the zygote from the adult. Hence the problem.â⬠By recognising the problem of abortion and when a foetus becomes a person, in which killing it is punishable, Singer considers the social moral grounds of killing and the ethical questions it raises. Therefore by not coming to a full conclusion, we see that not all people have an absolute view on the sanctityà of life in relation to abortion. Some relativists say that they are neither pro-life nor pro-choice, and it depends entirely on the circumstance. For example, if giving birth to a baby would put the motherââ¬â¢s life at risk, then an abortion would be acceptable because it could be argued that a foetus is not a person and that the sanctity of the motherââ¬â¢s life is greater than the foetusââ¬â¢, meaning that they may interpret the terms ââ¬Ëlifeââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëunbornââ¬â¢ differently. Whilst looking at these two interpretations, the sanctity of different stages of life are brought into consideration. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-79547046641638187012020-01-02T11:09:00.001-08:002020-01-02T11:09:04.732-08:00Online Halloween Scavenger Hunt This is a great Halloween scavenger hunt that will have your students scavenging online for the answers to the questions below. Scavenger Hunt Directions Find the answers to questions 1 - 20 (below) on the following pages to complete the following Halloween Scavenger Hunt. Halloween Questions 1. What kind of worms are in wormy apples? 2. What do you get when you cross a Snowman with a Vampire? 3. Name the Halloween Haunted House in Bentleyville, PA. 4. Where does the name Halloween come from? 5. In what year did the Salem witchcraft trials occur? 6. What color should the Walkman box be sprayed in order to complete the Walkman costume? 7. In Halloween Checkers, what type of creature is on your pieces? 8. What label should you look for when purchasing costumes? 9. What do you make the Halloween Spiders legs out of? 10. Who wrote The House of Seven Gables? 11. What three ingredients are needed to make Goopy Slime? 12. In the Easy Halloween Maze, what are you trying to help the skeleton find his way to? 13. Who wrote The Raven? 14. What sign should hang over the entrance to a Harry Potter Halloween party? 15. Where can you see memorabilia from pirates like Blackbeard? Happy hunting! Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-32983181451291098892019-12-25T07:36:00.001-08:002019-12-25T07:36:02.903-08:00Healthcare Business The Legality of Introducing a New... Title of paper: Healthcare Business Legality Introducing a new structure for organ donation Students name: Course name and number: Instructors name: Date submitted: January 23rd, 2012 Introduction The legal and ethical business practices that are maintained to be the standardized rules in primary industries are also critical for the successful, legal and ethical execution in the healthcare industry so that the patients can choose the right healthcare provider and structure. To further illustrate this point, the overall concept of shelf space for a new product on the market will involve buying the shelf space for any ordinary product; however the use of monetary compensation for medical referrals is a criminal offence and can result in jail time. In this paper, we will discuss a specific line of action in the healthcare industry dealing with organ donation and transplantation. The paper will first highlight all the ethical considerations that are related to organ transplant and donation and then the majority of the federal and state legalities will be discussed in the paper. These will be done separately to identify the differences and similarities between the ethical and legal considerations within the healthcare industry when dealing with the organ donation structures. The paper will analyze the standardized ethical considerations of the paper and present the legal issues when dealing with introducing a new organ transplant structure this will be done so toShow MoreRelatedFundamentals of Hrm263904 Words à |à 1056 PagesFunctions 33 Staffing Function 34 Training and Development Function 35 Motivation Function 36 Maintenance Function 37 How External Influences Affect HRM 38 The Dynamic Environment of HRM 38 Laws and Regulation 38 Labor Unions 38 Management Thought 39 Structure of the HRM Department 40 Employment 40 Training and Development 41 Compensation and Benefits 42 Employee Relations 42 vi Contents Top Management Commitment 43 Effective Upward Communication 43 Determining What to Communicate 44 Allowing for Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-75893922143892286542019-12-17T03:26:00.001-08:002019-12-17T03:26:03.485-08:00Literary Analysis The Pit And The Pendulum - 1100 Words India Sherman Tanig English II Pre-Ap 7 November 2014 Literary Analysis Essay What is evil? Reading ââ¬Å"The Pit and the Pendulumâ⬠by: Edgar Allan Poe, ââ¬Å"Marriage Is a Private Affairâ⬠by: Chinua Achebe, and ââ¬Å"Harrison Bergeronâ⬠by: Kurt Vonnegut Jr. shall give a better understanding of defining evil. Evil means to be profoundly immoral and malevolent in all these stories this is something all the antagonist share. They all have their own version of evil, either traditional and strict evil , or insidious and sadistic evil either way there evil is still morally wrong. Okeke is not as evil as the three Judges and Handicapper General. This is because he is not as cruel as the rest. Okekeââ¬â¢s punishments were not the worst possible. Nnaemeka explained to his father, Okeke, that he did not want to marry the women that was chosen for him instead he wanted to marry Nene. ââ¬Å" His father gave him up as lost.â⬠( Achebe p. 989) Nnaemeka disrespected his father by refusing to marry a woman from his tribe. Instead he wanted to m arry another woman outside of the tribe. This shows that his dad has lost respect for his son, and does not want anything to do with him.When Nnaemeka lost his fathers respect he was still able to live his life with his wife, he even had children. Okeke could have had Nnaemeka killed or even the woman he wanted to marry, so that things could go his way. Instead Okeke and Nnaemeka became adversaries. After Nnaemeka and Nene got married they sent a picture of theirShow MoreRelatedLiterary Analysis Of The Pit And The Pendulum773 Words à |à 4 Pagesââ¬Å"The Pit And The Pendulumâ⬠Is A True Horror Story Stephen King once said, ââ¬Å"We make up horrors to help us cope with the real ones.â⬠Bram Stroker, H.P. Lovecraft, Mary Shelley, and Edgar Allan Poe may have been a few of the greatest authors of horror to ever live. Out of all of these authors, Poe may have written the most freighting tales. All of his stories are considered horror, but some of them have more horrific qualities than others. ââ¬Å"The Pit And The Pendulumâ⬠is one of Poeââ¬â¢s most famous worksRead MoreThe Pit And The Pendulum By Edgar Allen Poe1703 Words à |à 7 Pagesappeared swallowed up in a mad rushing of the soul into Hades. Then silence, and stillness, night were the universe.â⬠This quote from ââ¬Å"The Pit and the Pendulumâ⬠is an excellent example of how Edgar Allen Poe is a master at using point of view, setting, and conflict to display the thematic message of fear in his short stories. This example uses all three literary strategies. The setting contributes to the theme of fe ar by stating that the soul was descending to Hades, the Greek god of the underworldRead MoreWilliam Cullen Bryant And The Devil And Tom Walker811 Words à |à 4 Pages An Analysis of American Romanticism The romantic period,1735 to 1830, for writers is a dark and confusing time, it is a time when dark things are made to seem better than they are. Many great literary works come from this period, but at the price of confusing the population. People believe that ââ¬Å"emotions and relationships were not just important, but were the very currency of life.â⬠Three romantic era pieces stand out, The Pit and The Pendulum by Edgar Allen Poe, Thanatopsis by William CullenRead MoreFive Short Stories of Edgar Allan Poe Essay1311 Words à |à 6 Pagesââ¬Å"Thou Art the Manâ⬠, The Cask of Amontillado and The Pit and the Pendulum. The genre, the purpose and role of the narrator and the parallelism between all of the stories will be examined. The five stories can be split up into two groups by their genre: detective story and gothic horror. The detective stories are The Gold-Bug, The Purloined Letter and ââ¬Å"Thou Art the Manâ⬠; while the Gothic horrors are The Cask of Amontillado and The Pit and the Pendulum. Poe gave birth to the detective stories weRead More Juxtaposing the Most Similar Contradiction in Edgar Allan Poes Work2077 Words à |à 9 Pagesseem too apparent, they often overlap within a particular character and their situation. This is shown in the short stories ââ¬Å"The Cask of Amontilladoâ⬠and ââ¬Å"The Pit and the Pendulumâ⬠. Each of the characters is blessed with a contrasting set of prosperity and ill. In ââ¬Å"The Pit and Pendulumâ⬠, Poe creates one of his sanest characters and pits them against one of the hardest emotion to face, hopelessness. His character in this short story does not need to prove his sanity, it is proven by the carefulRead MoreLiterary Analysis Of The Cask Of Amontillado 1493 Words à |à 6 PagesBrooke Womack Literary Analysis Paper Into to Literature: American I Dr. Julia Pond 12 October 2017 The Cask of Amontillado The Cask of Amontillado is a tale of terror written by Edgar Allen Poe. This short story is from the point of view from Montresorââ¬â¢s memory. The setting of this story is in a small unnamed European city, at a local carnival and then at the catacombs under Montresorââ¬â¢s home, around duck. The brief synopsis of this story is about the revenge that the Montresor, the antagonistRead MoreEdgar Allan Poe : A Gothic Romanticism Or Dark Romanticist1562 Words à |à 7 Pagestime and Virginia being on thirteen. Through the help of a friend, Poe was given the job of editor to the Southern Literary Messenger (a job he kept from 1835 to 1837), along with having many of his works published along with his own criticm of other publihsed stories. One of Poeââ¬â¢s most fluental, and highly believed to be his most important, contribution to criticism was his analysis of ââ¬Å"the distinctive genetic characteristics of short fictionâ⬠in which Poe reviewââ¬â¢s Nathaniel Hawthorn eââ¬â¢s Twice-ToldRead MoreEdgar Allan Poe : A Literary Catalyst2302 Words à |à 10 PagesEdgar Allan Poe: A Literary Catalyst Edgar Allan Poe created a new age of poem and prose though his articulate calculation of production and fantastic usage of poetic effect. His way of creating a work was to mathematically draw the poem from the atmosphere or effect backwards, running this idea throughout the piece. Many people consider Edgar Allan Poe as one of Americaââ¬â¢s greatest authors, but still question that without Poe, the unveiling of the human propensity represented in poetryRead MoreCommon Themes of Edgar Allan Poe3152 Words à |à 13 PagesAn Analysis of the Common Themes Found in selected works of Edgar Allan Poe A Research Presented to The faculty of the English Department In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements in English IV By March 2010 Acknowledgement The researcher would like to thank the following people who help and give guidance to make this project To the Project adviser and the home room adviser of the researchers, who gave his outmost patience and time to check the drafts and format of eachRead MoreCommon Themes of Edgar Allan Poe3166 Words à |à 13 PagesAn Analysis of the Common Themes Found in selected works of Edgar Allan Poe A Research Presented to The faculty of the English Department In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements in English IV By March 2010 Acknowledgement The researcher would like to thank the following people who help and give guidance to make this project To the Project adviser and the home room adviser of the researchers, who gave his outmost patience and time to check the drafts and format of each part of this very Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-16592172457558982222019-12-09T00:09:00.001-08:002019-12-09T00:09:02.713-08:00Memento by Christopher Nola Essay Example For Students Memento by Christopher Nola Essay In the film Memento by Christopher Nolan, reverse chronology causes the audience to view Leonard Shelby as a sympathetic victim. Viewers start to watch the film when the story has reached its end. This confusing plot puts the audience in Shelbys position. They see things from his point of view. Another thing that causes Leonard to seem like the victim is his condition, which does not let him make new memories. This makes him appear to be vulnerable. Finally, the other mysterious characters such as Natalie and Teddy make Shelby seem like the innocent victim. According to what Leonard wrote in the back of his picture, Teddy cant be trusted. This makes the audience suspicious of him throughout the entire movie. While watching this movie, one must pay close attention. The audience is just as confused and uneasy about what is going on as Shelby is. It is as though viewers also have the condition that Shelby has because of the reverse chronological order this movie follows. The audience, too, must have that same jolt of fear from scene to scene, the recognition that they have no clue where they are or how they got here. Viewers feel sympathy because they start to see things from Leonards perspective. They feel they need to help him find his wifes killer and take each and every one of his little facts into consideration to try and figure out the answer. The audience also sympathizes with Leonard because of his condition. He suffers from a rare form of amnesia, which renders him incapable of retaining memories on a short-term basis. Any bit of information he learns since his injury must be recorded or will be quickly forgotten. As a result, he must use an elaborate system of notes, photographs and even tattoos to keep everything straight. This makes his investigation so much more difficult. One generates sympathy for a man who wants to avenge his wifes death even if he knows he wont remember that he did it. This makes it impossible to absolutely trust anyone. He feels he can only trust himself. The sympathy grows for Leonard as viewers see how vulnerable he is to manipulation. Leonards vulnerability to Teddys greedy manipulations and Natalies terrifying dishonesty further enhances the audiences sympathy for him. The petty criminals who befriend Lenny for their own distasteful purposes make the audience feel sorry for him. The two mysterious, but seemingly helpful people who may or may not be as friendly and helpful to Shelby as they appear, are Teddy and Natalie. These two make Lenny seem like the victim since they take advantage of him. For example, Teddy takes advantage of his condition when he goes along with trying to find John G. He uses this to make Leonard kill Jimmy Grants in order to get the money form a drug deal. Natalie also takes advantage of his condition. She makes Lenny hit her and then makes it seem as though it was Dodd who hit her. She does that because she knows that Dodd will chase after Leonard, getting him off her back. The backward story telling and the constant mystery of who is friend or foe make the audience feel compassionate towards Leonard Shelby. As the film unfolds, it becomes clear that Leonard is actively re-writing his past so that it will conform to his preference for seeing himself as a victim, innocent and virtuous. Since viewers put themselves in Shelbys position and see things through his point of view, they feel sympathy for him. The determination to find his wifes killer makes the audience suspect nothing of him. Another thing that makes him look like the victim is his short-term memory. .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 , .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .postImageUrl , .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .centered-text-area { min-height: 80px; position: relative; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 , .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42:hover , .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42:visited , .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42:active { border:0!important; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .clearfix:after { content: ""; display: table; clear: both; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 { display: block; transition: background-color 250ms; webkit-transition: background-color 250ms; width: 100%; opacity: 1; transition: opacity 250ms; webkit-transition: opacity 250ms; background-color: #95A5A6; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42:active , .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42:hover { opacity: 1; transition: opacity 250ms; webkit-transition: opacity 250ms; background-color: #2C3E50; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .centered-text-area { width: 100%; position: relative ; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .ctaText { border-bottom: 0 solid #fff; color: #2980B9; font-size: 16px; font-weight: bold; margin: 0; padding: 0; text-decoration: underline; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .postTitle { color: #FFFFFF; font-size: 16px; font-weight: 600; margin: 0; padding: 0; width: 100%; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .ctaButton { background-color: #7F8C8D!important; color: #2980B9; border: none; border-radius: 3px; box-shadow: none; font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 26px; moz-border-radius: 3px; text-align: center; text-decoration: none; text-shadow: none; width: 80px; min-height: 80px; background: url(https://artscolumbia.org/wp-content/plugins/intelly-related-posts/assets/images/simple-arrow.png)no-repeat; position: absolute; right: 0; top: 0; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42:hover .ctaButton { background-color: #34495E!important; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .centered-text { display: table; height: 80px; padding-left : 18px; top: 0; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42 .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42-content { display: table-cell; margin: 0; padding: 0; padding-right: 108px; position: relative; vertical-align: middle; width: 100%; } .uf3f0917974819ff1ad1a7238a95f9e42:after { content: ""; display: block; clear: both; } READ: Emotions and feelings in Star Wars EssayThis makes him vulnerable and easy to take advantage of. The other characters that manipulate Shelby in this movie make the audience feel sympathy towards him. Every scene casts a different light on Teddy; he is never trusted, but one is never exactly sure why. It may have something to do with the fact that the photo Leonard has of Teddy has the phrase Dont trust his lies written on the back. Also, why is Natalie so willing to help him? Her Polaroid says she will help him out of pity but she also takes advantage of him. Its hard to trust anyone in this movie. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-54884324138938952002019-12-01T11:50:00.001-08:002019-12-01T11:50:03.570-08:00Netball Essay ExampleNetball Essay My sport,being netball,is easy to identify strengths and weaknesses on the court due to the game being in quite a small area compared to games like rugby or football,and also doesnt have too many people on the court (7 players to each team), therefore its not hard to concentrate on all the players. Here,i am evaluating my strengths and weaknesses for certain aspects of my game. I play GA (Goal Attack) in netball,which is one of the most important positions on the court,due to it being an attacking player,it also 1 of the 2 layers that can shoot,so good shooting techniques and attacking is essential. Things like co-ordination,agility,balance,fats reactions,etc is vital when playing this position. Skills/Techniques My strength for this section would be co-ordination. I fell my co- ordination is strong as when i have the ball,i can concentrate on all the players ahead of me and more importantly,can focus on the players that i need to pass to to get the ball into the shooting circle. I can also throw the ball in the right spot for an oncoming player which doesnt waste time. My co-ordination strength would be shooting aswell,as my shooting is mostly perfect,if not i can always get the target,but its the case of perhaps not lifting the ball high enough if i miss. My weakness here would be agility. Even though i feel my agility is reasonably good,there is alot of room for improvement. If i have a good defence against me,it can be harder to change direction quickly as they are sticking by me constantly to prevent me getting the opportunity to shoot. We will write a custom essay sample on Netball specifically for you for only $16.38 $13.9/page Order now We will write a custom essay sample on Netball specifically for you FOR ONLY $16.38 $13.9/page Hire Writer We will write a custom essay sample on Netball specifically for you FOR ONLY $16.38 $13.9/page Hire Writer In netball,it is vital to be able to move quickly,so this,i need to practice more to nable myself to challenge good defenders more than i do now. A perfect netball model would be incredibly agile and challenge all her opponents without struggle or effort. Strategies/Tactics One of my strengths for this section would be working with my neighbour positions (GS,WA and C). In our team we work well together and can all understand each other. I know when to recieve from the center or wing attack as we all need to ball to be recived by me or the GS to be able to score. I find it easy to get into the right spaces in our attacking third as there is no vercrowding in the attacking third and everyone is working together. I can create moves to confuse the defender whic gives the other attacking players time to get away from their defenders. My weakness would come under the fact that when the ball is coming down the court from our defenders,I sometimes tend to rush into the centre third to bring the ball up to the shooting area. This often causes abit of rushing in the centre third,panicking and confusion. It also prevents the team from getting the ball down to the shooting hird due to an extra player being in the centre third when they should be up in the shooting third. The perfect netball model would be aware of the space she needs to create and only move to the centre third when is absolutly necessary e. g the other attackers cannot get away from their defenders. Fitness Finally,i see fitness as the most important aspect of any physical game. My strength for fitness would be my muscular endurance. I rarely ever feel my muscles getting tired through a game as i have developed muscular trength and endurance over the years and as ive got older its become stronger. My muscles can work for a long period of time i feel,and even towards the end of a game i can use them just as much and they work just as well as in the beginning of a game. The strength of my muscles especially in my legs help me to jump to intercept passes from the opposing side or a rebound off the shooting post. My weakness however would be my cardiovascular fitness. I dont feel know where near as fit as i could be. I think my ardiovascular fitness isnt as good as it used to be due to not doing as much training as i used to. I think it is vital in an all important match,coming towards the end of the game and you need just a couple of goals to win,fitness can change a game. Improving my cardiovascular fitness will help me become a better player by being able to constantly be on my toes and 100% alert,therefore help the game become more fluent. A perfect netball model would have superb fitness as it is essential,and would be able to keep strong throughout the game. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-44651802819880588182019-11-26T16:08:00.001-08:002019-11-26T16:08:04.386-08:00Effects of Eminem on Rap and Black Culture essaysEffects of Eminem on Rap and Black Culture essays The Effects Of Eminem on Rap and Black Culture The popularity of Marshall Mathers III, a.k.a. Eminem, in todays rap culture is undeniable; with his Marshall Mathers LP selling 1.76 million copies in its first week after release and The Eminem Show selling 285,000 copies on its first day. (mtv.com) Since his entry into a predominately African-American art form, Eminem has been thrust into the spotlight, and has done more than just live up to expectations, gaining countless loyal fans and even more bitter enemies along the way. Among the enemies is Raymond Benzino Scott, a rapper and co-owner of The Source, the largest Hip-Hop magazine in the country. Recently, Benzino released a song aimed to attack Eminem, entitled Pull Your Skirt Up. The lyrics attacked Eminems race, along with his street credibility and skill as a rapper. Eminem wasted no time answering back, releasing The Sauce, an attack at the magazine and Benzino, in which he states that he did not start the battle, but he will finish it; furthermore Nail in The Coff in, an attack aimed solely at Benzino, takes shots at his age, business practices, and promotion of his nine year old sons rap career. While Benzino insists that his opinion in no way reflects the opinion of the magazine, every issue since the beginning of this feud has included at least one article aimed to attack either Eminem or another artist on his record label, Shady Records. The most recent was aimed at 50 Cent, the newest addition to Shady Records, who currently has the one of the top selling albums in the country. The magazine has also begun to print a comic strip in every issue that illustrates the evil powers that have taken over rap (Eminem, Shady Records, and Dr. Dres Aftermath Record.) And the good forces (black rap artists) are fighting back to take over what is rightfully theirs. The ... Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-83317214912499083602019-11-22T23:42:00.001-08:002019-11-22T23:42:04.640-08:00Environment and Animal Rights - Contrast and CompareEnvironment and Animal Rights - Contrast and Compare Updated and Edited byà Michelle A. Rivera,à Animal Rights Expert for About.comà May 16, 2016 The environmental movement and the animal rights movement often have similar goals, but the philosophies are different and sometimes cause the two camps to oppose each other. The Environmental Movement The goal of the environmental movement is protect the environment and use resources in a sustainable manner. Campaigns are based on the big picture - whether a practice can continue without harming the balance of the ecosystem. The environment is important as it affects human health, but the environment is also, in itself, worth protecting. Popular environmental campaigns include protecting the Amazon rainforest from deforestation, protecting endangered species, reducing pollution, and fighting climate change. The Animal Rights Movement The goal of the animal rights movement is for animals to be free of human use and exploitation. Animal rights is based on a recognition that non-human animals are sentient and therefore have their own rights and interests. While some activists work on single issue campaigns such as fur, meat, or circuses; the broader goal is a vegan world where all animal use and exploitation is eliminated. Similarities Between the Environmental and Animal Rights Movements Both movements recognize we must protect the environment. Both oppose unsustainable practices, and both seek to protect wildlife from habitat loss, pollution and climate change. These threats affect not only whole ecosystems but individual animals who will suffer and die if we continue to ignore environmental issues. We also often see environmental and animal rights groups taking the same position on an issue for different reasons. While animal rights groups oppose eating meat because it infringes on the rights of the animals, some environmental groups oppose meat eating because of the environmental devastation of animal agriculture. The Atlantic Chapter of the Sierra Club has a Biodiversity/Vegetarian Outreach Committee, and calls meat a Hummer on a Plate. Both movements also work to protect endangered animal species. Animal rights activists work to protect spotted owls because they are sentient beings, while environmentalists want to see individual spotted owls protected because the individuals are important for the survival of the species; and that species is important in the web of life. Differences between the Environmental and Animal Rights Movements Most animal rights activists also try to protect the environment, but if there is a conflict between environmental protection and the lives of individual animals, animal rights activists will choose to protect the animals because the animals are sentient and the rights of the individuals cannot be infringed to protect trees or a collective group. Also, environmentalists may not object if an activity kills or threatens individual animals without threatening the species or ecosystem as a whole. For example, some environmentalists do not oppose hunting or may even support hunting if they believe that hunting will not threaten the survival of the species. The rights and interests of individual animals are not a concern to some environmentalists. However, hunting cannot be considered acceptable to animal rights advocates because killing an animal, whether it is for food or trophies, infringes on the rights of the animal. This applies whether or not the species is endangered or threatened. To an animal rights activist, the life of a single animal matters. Similarly, environmentalists often talk about conservation, which is the sustainable use of a resource. Hunters also use the word conservation as a euphemism for hunting. To animal rights advocates, animals should not be considered a resource. This difference in philosophies causes People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals to refer to the World Wildlife Fund as the Wicked Wildlife Fund. WWF is not an animal rights group, but works to conserve nature. According to PETA, WWF has demanded more animal testing of genetically modified organisms before they are approved for human consumption. To WWF, the potential threat of GMOs to the environment and to human health outweighs the lives of animals who are used for GMO safety testing. Animal rights advocates believe that we cannot exploit animals in laboratories by conducting GMO testing, or in any other testing, regardless of the possible benefits. According to PETA, WWF also does not oppose the killing of seals for fur, since they do not believe that the practice threatens the survival of the seal population. Wildlife While the deaths of individual animals are not usually considered an environmental issue, environmental groups do sometimes get involved in non-endangered wildlife issues. For example, some environmental groups work to protect all whale species, even though some whale species - such as minke whales and Brydes whales - are not endangered. The protection of large, iconic animals like whales, panda bears and elephants will probably always be championed by some environmental groups regardless of their survival status due to the popularity of these animals, which gives them a high profile. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-78850540437857907832019-11-21T03:42:00.001-08:002019-11-21T03:42:14.152-08:00British expatriate managers coping with culture shock in the USA DissertationBritish expatriate managers coping with culture shock in the USA - Dissertation Example Various researches show that many of the expatriates who relocate to US to live and work often have mixed views regarding this, relatively, new nation. Many non-Americans, including many expatriates from UK, who relocate to the United States to do business to their bewilderment, find themselves undergoing a severe case of ââ¬Å"corporate culture shock.â⬠This article will examine the various problems and dilemma experienced by the expatriate managers when they relocate to foreign locales, with special focus on the British expatriate managers who generally face a culture shock as they move to live and work in the USA British expatriate managers coping with culture shock in the USA 1 Introduction 1.1 Background history ââ¬Å"I think thereââ¬â¢s just some incredible things that we could learn from other peopleââ¬â¢s culturesâ⬠- anonymous US expatriate manager. ... e managers with a bid to expand globally (Mercer Human Resource Consulting, 2001), while almost three-fourth of the expatriates are accompanied by their family members (Dickmann, Doherty, Mills, and Brewster, 2008). Expatriates within multinational companies play a vital role in initiating various foreign ventures and subsidies, and during troubleshooting at these offshore project sites. Globalisation along with economic liberalization that started in the early half of the 20th century made it necessary for many of the business firms to expand their trade and commerce globally, along with establishing an international distinction. In this context Bartol and Martin (1998) tells us that the process of globalization is in reality a strategy for worldwide integration where the chief objective of the various business firms is developing comparably standardized materials with a global address, along consolidating all the operations taking place at the worldwide level. In order to achieve t his goal, the organizations must necessarily send their chosen representatives for the various foreign projects, in order to oversee the work at site locations, and maintain the product and service standards in these foreign countries. Companies that with globalisation, have broadened their scope to create a worldwide presence and name, are often referred to as the multinational companies or MNCs (ibid). The origin of the modern form of multinational companies or MNCs that we see today can be traced back to the post World War II era. Though some companies may have started during the late 19th century, the development actually started from the late 1940s. However, it was only during the early 1980s, that various researchers in the fields of global HR management and expatriation (Evans, Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-48879283612471038352019-11-19T14:08:00.001-08:002019-11-19T14:08:05.183-08:00Compliance of Businesses with the Principles of United Nations Global Essay - 1Compliance of Businesses with the Principles of United Nations Global Compact - Essay Example Alcoa Inc., being an international organization with 31 headquarters all over the world and working in all the major aspects of its industry (developing technology, performing mining, refining, smelting, fabricating, and recycling of aluminum), believes it has enough expertise and experience for making recommendations to the Australasian Local Network. Furthermore, these particular principles are a basis of our Vision & Values statement, which makes us responsible for protecting and promoting ââ¬Å"the health and well-being of the individual and the environmentâ⬠(Vision & Values 2011). Alcoa Foundation, one of the largest corporate foundations in the U.S., is an outstanding project of our company, the activities of which are aimed at supporting our host communities worldwide (Alcoa Foundation 2011). The organization works as an independent foundation for addressing both global and local challenges of the communities. These activities are consistent with the vision and mission of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) in terms of supporting ââ¬Å"economic and social well-being of people around the worldâ⬠(OECD 2011), and of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) in regards to ââ¬Å"promoting social justice and internationally recognized human and labour rightsâ⬠(ILO 2011). Therefore, on the basis of our experience working towards the outlined above principles, we would like to propose the following recommendations: 1. Design, implement and control the fulfillment of a statement of protecting human rights in all the communities the company operates in (Global Compact Principle One 2011). Benefits & Implications: The companyââ¬â¢s vision regarding human rights protection is clearly outlined and, thus, it is easier to develop corresponding structures and policies Communities differ and, therefore, some general and universal principles should be outlined in the statement instead of those to which a particular l ocal community is accustomed. A unified statement, being fulfilled, will not only promote human rights protection within the community but will also help to educated communities on what they should claim from organizations in terms of respecting and supporting peopleââ¬â¢s rights. Lessons Learnt The statement of protecting human rights of Alcoa Inc. now includes only the points regarding paying employees guaranteed minimum wages and prohibiting slavery (Health 2011), and we are working on improving this aspect. This shortcoming of ours has caused many problems in the past ââ¬â we have even been blamed for putting corporate interests above the interests of people, governments or the planet. There, however, already exist good examples: the Human Rights Policy Statement of Continental Airlines, for instance, deals with such issues as ethical business conduct, as well as protection of the rights of co-workers and children (Continental Airlines, Inc. 2011). Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-12587469184756378642019-11-17T02:40:00.001-08:002019-11-17T02:40:03.612-08:00Employee Relations Essay Example for Free Employee Relations Essay In various business organizations, we find that, many employees are neglected and are most often demoralized, not motivated in performing their duties in the particular organisation, thus encouraging a poor employee relations, but in the United Kingdom, many businesses are flourishing, since they have set up an enabled system that tends to come up with factors that makes the firm to get a frequent and significant recognition of its employees, thus enhancing a good employee relations. The factors that are known to be most influential in the shaping of these employee relations in the United Kingdom are as follows: Communication In this case, we find that, most managers come up with a system to re-examine the performance of their employees. This system normally, include a precise communication system that brings an understanding between the employees and the management team, under which, the employees seem to appreciate the principles on which they are assessed thus, encouraging justice and equal opportunities in the organisation. The firms have an established internal coordination system and structure; this is usually a practical cooperation that helps to build stronger relationships among the employees. Thus there is the recognition of each employeeââ¬â¢s contributions. In a firm every department has employees with different skills that are required at different roles. Therefore, the managers bring all these skills together, so that the firms objectives are achieved, and therefore, each employee is meant to understand what these objectives are, and how the different skills and functions within the firm are to contribute in achieving the goals of having a better employee relations, therefore they should know why they need to support each others efforts. Motivation The success of an organisation basically, depends on the employees using their full skills and knowledge in their production, therefore, these employees require motivation, and this motivation can be done in different ways and by different things. The employee Motivation in the United Kingdom normally involves, the compensation system which is the activity of giving the employees what they really want most from work, it therefore makes the manager, get his expectations from the employees, this expectations may include; production of quality goods and services. Motivation will enable the employees to have their goals in the organisation achieved; they will have a positive perspective on their position in the organisation. Motivation also creates the influence to change and build employees self-esteem and capacity to work. The managers have the responsibility of motivating workers, when the organizational structure is experiencing changes, and in this case, we find that the manager comes up with a plan that is used to define the environmental factors that brings an atmosphere of integrity, honesty, and confidence to the employees. Under this, the managersââ¬â¢ plan considers the factors that motivate the employees; this involves the determination of the important factors to the employee in his working life, and how they relate to his productivity. He also finds out what motivates the employees in their work, this is a situation where, we find most employees wanting a privileged compensation, an enhanced working environment, and flexible benefits from the amount of work that they do. This is always done by, asking them during the performance assessment, attitude inspection, and is also retrieved from informal discussion on what the employees want most from their jobs. On the other hand, the managers also spot the de-motivating factors of the organisation to the employees; these factors may be physical factors which include buildings or equipment or psychological factors such as monotony, injustice, barriers to promotion and lack of appreciation which normally affects the employee relations in an organisation. Since most workers in the United Kingdom claim to be working for money, and that their extreme benefit is encouragement; under this, money is always regarded to be a low motivator, and that it is only a short time motivator, after a rise is given to the employees salary, so the managers are always aware that benefits given after a particular performance rarely motivate their employees to use their potential effectively, most of the employees say that, the benefits are only used to motivate the new employees in the organisation but not the existing ones. Change Management Poor employee relations is normally said to be a leading factor to a change in an organizationsââ¬â¢ performance; therefore most managers have been seen adopting a policy for managing changes within their organizations. In this case, we find that the introduction of this change is always meant to be motivating to the employees, since it is always used as an entry to the firmsââ¬â¢ better achievement of its goals. To achieve a positive change in an organisation in the UK, the managers do not tell or instruct the employees, this does not help, but it only creates ignorance to the doubts and expectations of the employees, therefore the management team in an organization carry out discussions, through which the sharing of a particular problem helps in the creation of a better actions in dealing with the issues that are predicted to affect the productivity of the firm, due to the shared ideas and decision making processes derived from the open discussions, the employees are able to realize a change in the organizational performance. Changes in any organisation in the United Kingdom, normally involve learning, where the managers are able to know the learning capabilities of every employee in the organisation. Under this, one finds that his employees are categorized as follows; activists the manager may find that some of his employees like involving themselves in new ideas, problems, or opportunities meaning that, they do not like being impartial, Theorists, this is the category of learners, who are always comfortable with ideas they do not prefer involving themselves deeply without a reason. The other category is that of reflectors; they like taking time to think through things, thus they do not like being forced to move from one thing to another rashly and lastly the pragmatists they normally prefer to be linked between issues and their job description. Therefore, the manager is always in a position to deal with his employees who have different learning preferences and approaches, who may also respond differently to diverse situations affecting the organisation. In this learning process the manager is expected to give feedback, that plays a major role in motivating the employees, thus he should not leave the employees guessing the progress of their accomplishments, therefore, the managers always give adequate and accurate information on the development. Employee Recognition This is another factor that the employers put into consideration for the organisation to improve its employee relations, this is basically a communication instrument, which strengthens and compensates the most significant production that the employees have created for the organisation. The recognition structure is always made simple, instant, and effectively supportive to the employeesââ¬â¢ relations and the organisation at large. Under this, the management team ensures that a principle for performance is established, involving the rewardable behaviour of the employees thus all of them are entitled to the recognition by the employer. This recognition supplies the employees with specific information about the behaviour they are being rewarded for. The management therefore, states that any employee who performs at a specified level receives a reward. Basically recognition occurs hand in hand with performance of the employees, thus it reinforces the employeesââ¬â¢ encouragement and thus improving the workforce relations. Culture This is another factor that is most influential in the employee relations in an organisation, culture basically means, the environment surrounding an employee at work. In the United Kingdom we find that, culture is meant to shape the relationship of an employee and his work in an organisation. Culture represents an employeeââ¬â¢s personality that carries principles, attitude, fundamental interests, knowledge, background, and behaviour that creates a personââ¬â¢s behaviour. Culture is particularly inclined by the organizationââ¬â¢s management team due to the roles in decision making and strategic direction they impose in the organisation. We find the managers put in mind that culture is learned, thus employees are capable of learning how to perform, employees value rewards that are not associated with behaviours, since they have different needs, shared rewards from co-workers or have their most important needs met in their departments or project teams. Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-652837937705182466.post-27151095005818398712019-11-14T15:11:00.001-08:002019-11-14T15:11:02.583-08:00Post Traumatic Stress Disorder :: Post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSDIntroduction There has been a proliferation of interest in the development and nature of individualââ¬â¢s thinking patterns and processes following traumatic psychological exposure (Ehlers, Mayou, & Bryant, 1998). In particular, previous research has suggested that specific thinking styles and patterns preceding trauma predict a greater vulnerability and a poorer long-term prognosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (Dalgleish, 2004). Moreover, the literature has illustrated that adolescents can be predisposed to developing PTSD which develops as a result of either direct or indirect exposure to a trauma. For example, witnessing a trauma directly or learning about a specific traumatic event experienced by others (Finkelhor & Dziuba-Leatherman, 1994). Previous research has highlighted that adolescents that have been exposed to a trauma and PTSD may also be more vulnerable to developing aggressive and antisocial behaviours (Falshaw, Browne & Hollin, 1996), alcohol and drug dependence, hypervigilance and impulsive misconduct (Lynam, Caspi, Moffitt, Wikstrà ¶m, Loeber & Novak, 2000). Erwin, Newman, McMackin, Morrissey and Kaloupek (2000) suggest that a reason for this is that early exposure to trauma can have severe impact on adolescentââ¬â¢s functioning in terms of their emotions, cognition and behaviour, poor self-regulation and information-processing. Adding to this, Tyson & Goodman, (1996) suggest that it is these deficits in functioning coupled with the individualââ¬â¢s inability to regulate emotions that predispose them to engaging in protective aggression and dangerous re-enactment behaviours as a way of dealing with their exposure to trauma. The link between dysfunctional cognitions and PTSD has been widely explored by various researchers, and it has been suggested that a tight relationship exists between PTSD and antisocial behaviour in youths (Danckwerts & Leathem, 2003). However, little is yet known about the psychological mechanisms which underlie the relationship. This literature review will explore the underlying mechanisms which predict a greater vulnerability to the onset, development and maintenance of PTSD associated with young offenders. More specifically, depressive cognitions such as rumination and counterfactual thinking will be explored with reference to their link with PTSD. Defining Rumination and Counterfactual Thinking Individuals affected by PTSD often report symptoms of incessant ruminative thinking associated with a traumatic experience. The DSM-IV (American Psychiatric Association, 1994) does not however distinguish intrusive rumination and intrusive memories associated with the trauma in the development of PTSD. However, more recently various theoretical perspectives propose that the two are functionally distinct and should be regarded as separate entities (Ehlers & Clark, 2000; Joseph, Williams & Yule, 1997; Ehlers & Steil, 1997). Lhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03882291664013534027noreply@blogger.com0