1. What is your impression of Deborah, given this brief excerpt? How does the author shape that impression?…
Marilyn Monroe, born Norma Jeane Mortenson on June 1, 1926. Making her 36 years old when she died on August 5, 1962 in her hometown of Los Angeles, California. Monroe became one of the most popular sex symbols of the 1950s and continues to be considered a major popular culture icon. Monroe was a 1950s actress and model. She stared in many movies and became a top-billed actress for 10 years. Her films grossed at about $200 million by the time of her demise in 1962.…
At this time Audrey’s father had disappeared from her life which she says was, “the most traumatic event in my life” (timeline). Although he had visitation rights, he rarely came to see her. Not only was her father no longer in her life but she was living her childhood through the ruling of Hitler and Nazi Germany. She experienced her uncle being executed by the Germans and she had seen Jews being taken away (today). Also, one of her brothers was taken to a concentration camp and the other was in hiding. According to Martin Gitlin, “she had witnessed firsthand man’s brutality against her brother during World War II.” During this time Audrey had been secretly helping the Dutch Resistance by dancing ballet to raise money. She was very lucky to have not been caught, if so she would have been executed by the Germans. Hepburn and her family had gone through famine and other rough times during World War II. She had suffered several illnesses. Once she was rescued by the international aid agencies she was relieved. Years later she began to use this traumatic event to help others in the same conditions that she was once in…
Long considered one of the innovators of photorealism, Audrey Flack emerged on the scene in the late 1960s with paintings that embraced magazine reproductions of movie stars along with Matza cracker boxes and other mundane objects, that referred ironically to Pop Art. As one of the first of these artists to enter the collections of The Museum of Modern Art, Flack later came to excel in vanitas paintings that combined painted renderings of black and white photographs along with detailed arrangements of elegant objects including fruits, cakes, chocolates, strings of pearls, lipsticks, tubes of paint, and glass wine goblets. In works such as Wheel of Fortune (1977-78), she would represent decks of playing cards and other ephemera related to gambling, adding a mirror and human skull, for good measure. Her recent exhibition of Cibachrome prints, curated by Garth Greenan for Gary Snyder Project Space, is titled “Audrey Flack Paints A Picture” and is accompanied by five actual paintings. This show reveals the painstaking process employed in making these fresh and original paintings from the late 1970s through the early 1980s during a highly significant and intensely productive period of her career.…
Paris was a very beautiful girl she had a nice tone towards people, she was a nice shade of darskin with shoulder length curly hair. Paris grew up in an decent town, with a single mother that raised 2 kids including her. As a child paris like to model and play in her clothes even though she was insecure she always felt the need to just do it for fun, since then paris wanted to be a model.…
In the poem, “ The Author to Her Book,” Anne Bradstreet refers to her book like it is her child. Just like a mother critiques her child as she walks out the door, Bradstreet critiques her book before the second edition is published. The poem is her outlet for her emotions regarding the exposure of the first edition, which was published without her knowledge. Bradstreet uses a conceit supported by metaphors throughout the poem, to express maternal feelings such as pride, frustration and protectiveness toward her book.…
The book I was interested in reading was Black Americans of Achievement: Halle Berry. It was written by Rose Blue and Corinne Naden. Halle Berry was born on August 14th, 1968. She was named Halle Berry after a department store where her mother enjoyed shopping. She was born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio. She was also known as "The Girl with the Department Store Name." She is still up and going today.…
Characters: Edna Pontellier is a twenty eight year old wife of Léonce Pontellier, a businessman from New Orleans, In the middle of the book Edna finds herself dissatisfied with her marriage and her limited lifestyle, she soon falls in love with her husbands best friend Robert Lebrun which starts trouble with her relationship with her husband and her husband's relationship with Robert. I chose dissatisfied as an adjective to describe Edna because she is not that happy with her wife role and feels disappointed with herself about falling in love with Robert.…
My duty as a childminder is to provide high quality care for children and young people. In order to achieve this I must ensure I am familiar with the EYFS statutory framework (September 2012) and aware of ratio limits in place (3.39 EYFS)…
Meet Audrey Hepburn: Actress, model, dancer, humanitarian, philanthropist. With her expressive eyes, gorgeous smile, and princess-like aura, it's no wonder she charmed millions of people around the world. Beneath all of that, she was also a genuinely kind and wonderful person. She showed everybody that you can be anything, and you can achieve your dreams. Audrey Hepburn has become such an inspiration to many people in her childhood, adult life, and through her accomplishments.…
Lucille Ball was a hard working, determined women. She was one of the first and most powerful women comedians, made people smile through tough times she grew up in, and had many achievements and awards. She stood out to the world, and did things the way she wanted.…
Note to the teacher: The narrator is referred to as "Marguerite" in the questions that deal with her memoirs, since…
“Norma Rae” is a film based on a true story set in Southern mill-town. The main character and mill workers start a branch of the Textile Workers Union of America through use of leadership. Norma Rae and Rueben Warshofsky reunite their talent to empower and lead the people of the mill from oppressed workers to motivated union members. When Rueben first comes to the town, he finds out that the manager in the farm are very despotic; people have no rights; they work long hours and make small wages. He starts the revolution for the mill workers by inspiring Norma Rae through charismatic leadership.…
There are many major developments that one can consider when discussing the influence that contemporary classical music, particularly the language of chromaticism, pan-tonality, atonality and serialism have had on the impact of Jazz. In this piece I intend to focus on developments in modern and post-modern culture that have seen contemporary classical music flourish into a proliferation of new styles and sounds. To help explain this I will give a brief history as well as use examples from ………… and explore how they have been influenced as well as influenced new styles and sounds in an amalgam of musical genre.…
1. In Girl With a Pearl Earring, Tracy Chevalier treats us to a richly appointed portrait of intersecting faiths, fracturing family dynamics, erotic awakenings, community scandals, religious tensions, and aesthetic compromises—all filtered brilliantly through the eyes of the young narrator, Griet, whose concise, wide-eyed perspective functions much like Vermeer’s camera obscura, rendering with particularly sharp precision and subtle insight the character of seventeenth-century Delft itself. “The camera obscura helps me to see in a different way, to see more of what is there,” Vermeer muses. Discuss the way in which Chevalier’s writing style achieves a similar effect. What techniques does she use to establish the novel’s particular tone and tension, to enrich the imagery, to develop her characters’ motives, and to encourage us “to see more of what is there”? 2. In the particular emotional realm of this novel, the issue of “seeing” is central. Griet endeavors for much of the novel to manipulate all that she sees into a sort of harmony, beginning with the soup vegetables she so carefully arranges so that they will not “fight when they are side by side.” Likewise, Vermeer’s art relies upon his ability to see the universal in even the most prosaic settings. Griet’s father cannot see at all, and not coincidentally, he is perhaps the novel’s most tragic and impotent figure. What does “seeing” mean to the novel’s other characters? Is it fair to say that, of all the characters, it is Maria Thins who sees the most clearly in the end? 3. Compare Girl With a Pearl Earring to other historical novels you’ve read in recent years (e.g.: Jane Smiley’s The Greenlanders, A. S. Byatt’s Possession, Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace, and so on). How does Chevalier's novel—focused, detailed, and tightly framed as it is—complement, complicate, and/or depart altogether from the standard themes and trappings of…