When reading Farewell to Manzanar and the two sources you can tell that there are many characteristics. But two that really stuck out to me are hope and perseverance. Without hope the characters in the book and the people in the sources that we read about would just give up and not persuit in their life. Also perseverance is important because in the camps they pushed through the rough times even though they were difficult. THESIS!!!…
The Shawshank Redemption (1994) is a spectacular feature film directed by Frank Darabont who adapted Stephen King’s novella Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption (Different Seasons collection). First things first, the poster of the movie has these words “Fear can hold you prisoner, Hope can set you free” on it. This quote clearly explains the power of hope freedom. Now moving to the movie itself, there have been many amazing prison dramas in the past so how does Shawshank Redemption filled with so many clichés differ from them? The movie is spread across a long period of time letting the simplest things take a fuller meaning the smallest details have their importance. This is what makes the main difference. In a place where everything has…
The final example of redemption was at the climax of the movie, where Andy escapes Shawshank through the “tunnel of shit” and poses in the way of a cross, his head held high as the rain washed over him. This is symbolic to Jesus Christ; showing purification and cleansing of all sins. The rain represents freedom, the uproar of triumphant music and the camera shot from behind Andy gives us…
In his article “The Mythology of Hope and Change”, Ira Chernus attempts to explain Americans worldview -one with an built in contradiction. The bases for this statement is as a result of the British Settlers believed that coming to the New World for the reason of the desire for religious and personal free executes from their government. Thus, once they arrive to this brand-new land; they view it as the ancient Israelites had with the New Israel. Going on, Chernus explains that one of the reasons why they found the New World in such perfectness; these people have risked death to create an advanced country or community that they claim as their own. As a result, that is what they precisely did; the settlers took a land that they found uncivilized…
Although it was a chilly, Pre-Winter morning, national star Terry Fox was dripping with sweat and grimacing from pain. Running 40 kilometers daily with only one whole leg is not an easy task. But Terry Fox was not stopped by this. The moment before he collapsed to near death, he was still running.…
Ones’ life is directly impacted by their own view(s) of a specific situation(s) they are placed in or have experienced throughout their lifetime. A remarkable example of this comes to light within the inspirational true story of Michael Oher, a homeless African American teen, who was drug through the foster system for many years solely because he wasn’t born into a forever family. In honor of this courageous male and the family that loved he like their own, movie producer, John Lee Hancock, decided to create the film, The Blind Side.…
The book Unbroken A World War 2 Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand is a story of a true American; Louie Zamperini. Growing up as an Italian American he learned how to value the most out of everything, his entire childhood he would get bullied for who he couldn’t help but being. He would never see himself as less than he was, he was strong minded always rebelling against what he knew was wrong. As a troubled boy he found running, later he went to the olympics setting the new world record in the mile. He then got drafted into the war becoming a bombardier in the Air Corps. The author, Hillenbrand, wrote the novel with great detail showing Louie's perseverance and adversity throughout his life made him the exceptional…
I chose the autobiography Hope Solo: My Story because I was interested in learning a bit about soccer. This is an autobiography, because it discusses Hope Solo’s story with her narrating it. Hope Solo’s wrote this book because she wanted to inform the audience about her life.…
pg. 300). Hope grows dim very fast when the strange twists of life throw their knock-out punches. After being badly beaten by pain or grief or loss, who cares about hope anyway? Who is excited about beginning again? The answer is almost nobody. Like a boxer who has taken eleven rounds of pummeling that last…
Darabont and Kesey use messianic imagery to display conflicts between hope and oppression. Darabont portrays Andy as a humble Christ figure who “…had a quiet way about him,” and strolled like he had “an invisible coat that would shield him from this place [Shawshank prison]” suggesting the same modest traits of Jesus. Darabont uses this religious allusion to foreshadow that hope will prevail; Andy’s hope never fades, “…there is something inside that they can’t get to…Hope.” Darabont used a birds-eye-view shot to place the audience in a God-like position when Andy escaped; with his hands outstretched as if to say, ‘thank you God,’ emphasising his hope for success and being ‘reborn’, like Jesus, into freedom. In contrast to Darabont, Kesey uses messianic imagery to convey oppression prevailing. McMurphy states that he is “not a saint or a martyr.” Unlike Darabont’s portrayal of Andy as a sombre and modest Christ figure, Kesey portrays McMurphy as loud and confident but puts on a façade for the sake of others, asking “Do I get a crown of thorns?” when faced with electro-shock therapy and insisting “that it wasn’t hurting him,” telling the others that “all they was doin’ was chargin’ his battery for him.” Kesey portrays him as ‘self-sacrificial’,…
In Dr. Michael Shermer's most recent book, The Moral Arc: How Science and Reason Lead Humanity toward Truth, Justice, and Freedom, he guarantees that we are living in the most good time of our species' history. It is a book about good advance that exhibits through broad information and brave stories that the circular segment of the ethical universe twists toward truth, equity, and opportunity. Of the many variables that have met up throughout the hundreds of years to twist the circular segment in a more good heading, science and reason are principal. The Scientific Revolution drove by Copernicus, Galileo, and Newton was so world-changing that masterminds in different fields intentionally went for upsetting the social, political, and financial…
Most people may not know this book was based off some of Harper Lee's childhood experiences. The theme is based off many things but main thing is moral courage and how it is used in conflict and characterization. In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee shows how conflict and characterization reflected this theme of moral courage through many problems that happened and through many of the characters actions in this novel.…
In existential philosophy, a great deal of importance is placed on the concept of choice. An existential hero will acknowledge that an individuals decisions belong exclusively to that being. Andy Dufresne never tries to blame external circumstances for the events that led him to prison. He willing admits to Red that through choosing to drive her away he killed his wife. He also doesn’t try to negate the punishment for the murders, for he recognizes that it was his choice to drive to the house of his wife and her lover with a gun, regardless of whether or not he chose to shoot. Even once within Shawshank he continues to take responsibility for his actions. When he breaks the prison rules and locks himself in the warden’s office to play music over the loud speaker, he does not argue his punishment of two weeks in the hole, despite its excessiveness and cruelty. Andy also exhibits the existential-hero view that there is no predetermined order or fate, but rather that a man’s path is self-determining and dependent on his decisions. When the other inmates experience hope through Andy’s music and library, it is a type of passive hope that one day things would become better for them. In contrast, Andy does not leave his fate up to chance, but rather makes choices that allow him to take control of his own life. It is align with existentialism’s…
Youth adult writer Brodi Ashton once proclaimed, “Heroes are made by the paths they choose, not the powers they are graced with.” Anyone can be a hero, one only needs the will to do so. Throughout history, archetypal heroes such as Superman from DC comics, have outrageous physical capabilities and superior intelligence. Although these two descriptions may correspond to several heroes, all true heroes have the will to act and persevere, and that is what makes them renowned heroes. But why is ‘will’ so valuable? Well, when one gazes upon the challenges an epic hero undergoes, it becomes obvious. Writer and lecturer Joseph Campbell studied the journeys of multiple epic heroes until finally he made a philosophy called the mono-myth or hero’s journey. This mono-myth consists of twenty five challenging steps, pushing heroes to their limit. However, not so much their physical limit as opposed to their will to act.…
As humans we sometimes want to just give up on life because it is so difficult. All the obstacles that come in our way can end up making us very weak. But in the movie The Shawshank Redemption, one of the most important lessons we learn is that persistence and perseverance are keys to success. The main character of the movie, Andy Dufresne, was an innocent man who was life imprisoned because of a wrongful conviction of murdering his wife and her lover. But he does not give up easily for his freedom, he is very patient and at the end he succeeds. Persistence and perseverance covers the psychological perspective in the Social Sciences because whatever Andy did to succeed and get his freedom, is because of the way he thought and acted.…