was a time when people used metals like gold and silver as currency. Kean talks about the attention gold rushes brings and how people were constantly being confused with iron pyrite. Kean mentions other elements such as tellurium, aluminum and europium and how they were used in currency. In the fourteenth chapter, related to chapter thirteen, Kean talks how money and science comes together since science was becoming more and more expensive, the ones who could make the big discoveries were the ones who had money.…
1. Each Act takes happens in the same place. The entire play takes place in the jury room of a New York City court of law in 1957 during a very hot summer afternoon. It is a large, dull, minimalistic room with three windows in the brick wall which the skyline of New York City can be seen. There is also a wash room and lavatory off the jury room. There is a large, scarred table in the centre with twelve chairs around it. There are pencils pads and an ashtray on the table. There is also a water cooler in the room with plastic cups. The dullness of the room may signify and provide a mood for the act and is evident in the interactions between the jurors. The Twelve jurors are all seemingly awkward and uneasy towards each other once they enter the room.…
In the movie twelve angry man, after the twelve jurors listened to the facts in the trail, the judge gives her instructions to them. The judge told them that the man could face the death penalty if he found guilty. The 12 man gather in a stifling hot room to have a concluding about the case. They start arguing and adding their own experience, culture, and understanding of people's motives as a way of reconsidering the facts. Although all the jurors had listened to the same stated facts and they were in the same situation, each one of them interprets the facts differently. This reflects the differences in people and the different ways that we view the same things.…
Beahs experiences things no child should ever have to experience: “My squad was my family, my gun was my provider and protector, and my rule was to kill or be killed… My childhood had gone by without my knowing, and it seemed as if my heart had frozen”(126). With losing his own family, Beahs tries adjusting to his new soldier friends and bonds with them. Also, his weapons can mean life or death. However, his rough childhood made Beah grow into a person who can accept change. In addition, Beah changes physically and emotionally, he is now a killer and cannot control his state of mind: “The corporal gave the signal with a pistol shot and I grabbed the man’s head and slit his throat in one fluid motion. His Adam’s apple made way for the sharp knife, and I turned the bayonet on its zigzag edge as I brought it out”(125). Here, the author illustrates that a person can change within a matter of time. This part of the memoir can have a huge impact on students because of how gruesome one human can be.…
Moreover, the boys behavior showed warlike themes when they kept their possessions hidden and secret. Hidden away, "Several jugs of very hard cider... were the most cautiously guarded treasure". In war soldiers hide their personal treasures, such as photos, and even alcohol as it is forbidden in barracks and war. The boys announced the beginning of the Carnival with the sound of a trumpet. Before the sports began "Chet released from his trumpet the opening". In the beginning of old battles in a war, both sides would sound the beginning of the battle with a playing from several instruments. Also the boys show their savage side when they fight Brinker. Soon a "circle of boys broke wildly over Brinker" and attacked him. The boys attacking Brinker show that they are barbaric and prepared for the war. Another way the façade of innocence is broken is when they drank alcohol. Later in the carnival, "The hard cider began to take charge of us". Drinking is something that corrupts the innocence of a child, what turns them into an adult, ruins the body and the mind. Alcohol influences anger and violence among those that drink it, alcohol is the drug of angst, one that destroys the body and…
Reginald Rose’s play, Twelve Angry Men, is about a jury’s decision making process in a murder trial. The facts in this play become blinded by the prejudices that some Juror’s possess. A prejudice jury became formed due to a biased testimony and the facts became clouded as generalisations were formed by the Juror’s. Some Juror’s bigotry can be based on their past experiences and discrimination didn’t only happen to the defendant, but it was also experienced by Juror’s themselves…
The movie "12 Angry Men" focuses on a jury's decision on a capital murder case. A 12-man jury is sent to begin decisions on the first-degree murder trial of an 18-year-old Latino accused of stabbing his father to death, where a guilty verdict means an automatic death sentence. The case appears to be open-and-shut: The defendant has a weak alibi; a knife he claimed to have lost is found at the murder scene; and several witnesses either heard screaming, saw the killing or the boy fleeing the scene. Eleven of the jurors immediately vote guilty; only Juror No. 8 (Mr. Davis) casts a not guilty vote. At first Mr. Davis' bases his vote more so for the sake of discussion after all, the jurors must believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty. As the movie unfolds, the story quickly becomes a study of the jurors' complex personalities and how they deal with argumentation within groups and critical thinking. This allows Mr. Davis to try and convince the other jury members that the defendant might not be guilty by using cooperative argumentation, claim, evidence, warrant, facts, etc.…
For fans of courtroom dramas and crime television, these court case movies all revolve around the courtroom. Unlike the orderly process of a real courtroom, the stories are filled with drama, intrigue and corruption. Getting to the truth is seldom as straightforward as it appears within these hit movies.…
Write a one page response, skipping lines, for EACH question for a total of two pages.…
Some soldiers, such as Tim O’Brien from The Things They Carried have a personality change; he became obsessed with taking revenge on a fellow soldier who was shocked by all the massacres going on that he froze and failed to get to wounded O’Brien on time. O’Brien, having to suffer the consequences of not getting treated on time was anxious to get well so he could take his revenge on the medic who was in shock by his surroundings. As a result, O’Brien decided to play a cruel prank on Bobby Jorgenson, the medic who treated O’Brien, by scaring him during his night shift knowing paranoia would get the best of Jorgenson. The soldier knew it was wrong for he admitted “In a way I wanted to stop myself. It was cruel, I knew that but right and wrong were somewhere else. I heard myself chuckle” (198). O’brien was so consumed by all the pain he had to go through as a result of the war and not getting treated on time, that he only focused on his vengeance towards Jorgenson. He was affected by war physically, resulting in his change in attitude as well, something that Steinbeck agrees with O’Brien on as well. Steinbeck asserts that soldiers who have had to experience war are “capable of great cruelties” and that they “laugh at things which are not ordinarily funny” which was the case of O’Brien’s “chuckle” when he knew he was acting on hate and cruelty and not taking…
At the commencing of the novel the soldiers were somewhat intrigued at the thought of going to war. Their teachers spoke to them of patriotism and war as a heroic deed in which the young boys should be eager to partake. The students were before war still naïve and had an innocent perception of war, but as the story continues we notice the transformation in the characters and their behavior. By entering actual fighting grounds and seeing the truth about what went on in battle the boys altered their view on war. Having seen so many casualties and deaths…
Despair, longing, entrapment, and instability seem to be encased in the brain of a soldier. The moral of life is familiarity, love, sex, happiness, and stability and the moral of the soldiers is seeking all of these. O’Brien writes his stories with such vivid detail and imagery that allows the reader to effectively interpret what is going through mind of each individual in the story. It allows the reader to see how in The Things they Carried, the soldiers longed for sex, drugs, and keeping the dead alive. However, the biggest and most quintessential problem that these soldiers dealt with was finding ways to be able to bear the scent and putridity of war, being able to escape from hell, and being able to love when the love was just a fantasy. All of these soldiers dealt with these problems differently. Notably, escaping reality should have not been the first choice in some cases. By escaping reality through sexual longing, it led to distraction. By escaping reality through the usage of drugs, it led to a decrease in focus and increase in volatility. However, by escaping reality by animating the dead, it led to inner peace. Finally, by these soldiers escaping reality, it led to the uniqueness in each individual story, and the solutions and problems that came with every day life in a war…
Firstly the boy soldiers in this novel are influenced by the movie Rambo , it encourages them to work harder and more violent. After the young boy soldiers watch Rambo for the first time they were motivated to be just like him and while in battle. “We all wanted to be like Rambo ; we couldn’t want to implement his techniques” (beah 121). This movies showed the boys how to fight , they wanted to use the same techniques to fight against the rebel villages. Some of the boy soldiers have been so influenced by this that they already implemented goals that will allow them to act like Rambo; “sometime I am going to take on a whole village by myself, just like Rambo” Alhaji told me smiling at the new goal he had set for himself” (122). This young boy has been trained to fight and destroy, watching Rambo has influenced him so much that he wants to take a whole village on by himself. Watching violent movies influences the boy soldiers how ever this is not how they gain courage and experience.…
As the war begins, boys are forced to enlist, sending them to war, and a boy does not kill, a man kills. Generally, at the start of a war, militaries will often send their weakest soldiers in their army to the front, which are often boys with the least experience. This forces boys to grow into men, out of their childish-selves as they are forced to kill other human beings. In the novel, “A SEPARATE PEACE”, by John Knowles, the author uses the main character to show the audience that the violence overseas has influenced violence within the young adolescence. “Because my war ended before I ever put on a uniform, I was on active duty all my time at school, I killed my enemy there.” (Knowles, pg. 196). This shows that a boy turns into a man when they inflict pain on another human, because the…
Twelve angry men is a 1957 American Film that originated from a play of Reginald Rose and has been directed to a film by Sidney Lumet. The movie is not just about the outcome of the trial of a Puerto Rican youth who has been accused of murdering his father, but also shows how the beliefs and attitudes of the twelve jurors lead to his acquittal. Aside from that, this movie also shows Leadership traits that can help every individual on developing their leadership capabilities. The story started when the twelve jurors were put together in a sweltering deliberation room somewhere in America where they have been asked for their verdicts whether to put the child on chair or not. Eleven of them unanimously voted that the youth is guilty and must be…