SKETCH NIGHT‚ 10 COMEDY SKITS FOR TEENS by Tim Kochenderfer Brooklyn Publishers‚ LLC Toll-Free 888-473-8521 Fax 319-368-8011 Web www.brookpub.com Copyright © 2001 by Tim Kochenderfer All rights reserved CAUTION: Professionals & amateurs are hereby warned that Sketch Night; 10 Comedy Skits for Teens is subject to a royalty. This play is fully protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America‚ Canada‚ the British Commonwealth and all other countries of the Copyright
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Plato proposes in his philosophy The Allegory of the Cave that most people are bound to their obliviousness and materialism‚ either by willful rejection or ignorance‚ which in turn makes them metaphorically blind to the true nature of reality. For instance‚ the people chained within the dark cave is a symbol for the world we currently reside in (or was resided in)‚ and the chains represent each one of us‚ who are either knowingly or unknowingly chained to the material world. The shadows the cave
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Hamlet Close Read In Shakespeare’s play Hamlet‚ Hamlet’s first soliloquy exemplifies his feeling after he goes through a series of traumatic events including his father’s premature death‚ his mother’s hasty marriage and his loss of the throne to his uncle Claudius and new step father. Shakespeare uses this soliloquy to help shape Hamlet’s character as overly emotional but proving to be very intelligent when establishing the theme of the play through the conflict of a man’s emotions and reason.
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TITLE Of Assignment In Plato’s The Allegory of the Cave‚ the allegory narrates three prisoners in a cave who have never seen the outside world. Their arms‚ legs‚ and necks are tied to a rock so all they can see is a bare wall. Behind the prisoners is a fire that emits the shadows of statues onto the bare wall. However‚ the prisoners see the shadows on the wall as real objects because they have been there since birth. They think the shadows are the true forms because that is the only truth they
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What is an allegory? An allegory is a story that has a lesson or moral in it that is not told plainly. An example of an allegory is the tortoise and the hare. The hare thought that since he was faster that he could win the race no matter what happened. So the hare goofed off and and sleep and when he woke up the tortoise was almost at the finish line. The hare tried to catch up but could not. So what the moral is to me from that story is that you do not have to be fast at everything to win the “Race”
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The Allegory of the Cave The Allegory means a lot to people who are very mystical and like to think of different things about life. The allegory is a story about these prisoners whom since they’ve been children have been locked away deep inside a cave with chains all over their bodies including their heads making them be immobilized and their heads facing one certain wall. To the backs of these prisoners there is a fire and between the prisoners and the fire stands a way in which men carry various
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The Allegory’s of Life In The Allegory of the Cave‚ Plato uses a vast spectrum of imagery to explain ones descent from the cave to the light. While Plato uses this Allegory to explain his point through Socrates to Glaucon. This allegory has many different meanings. The Allegory can be used in many different ways‚ from religion to politics to ones own intellectual enlightenment‚ or it can be interpreted as the blinded person in a colt like reality. Are we all prisoners in a world that is forced
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According to Plato’s theory of the allegory of the cave concludes society cannot rely on empirical evidence as a basis source of true knowledge. For example‚ the prisoners‚ in the cave‚ use their sense to give a meaning of what an object can be understood as. However‚ when a prisoner escapes and get a taste of what is real other than his unexamined life‚ he then realize he senses have been fooling him. In addition‚ he see what the objects real look like other than how they appear as shadows.This
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Mid-way through his life and faced with an ignominious end‚ Dante Alighieri wrote his greatest work‚ The Divine Comedy. We can understand Dante’s motive in writing this epic by reading Cantos I through III of Dante’s Inferno. The Divine Comedy was a self-analysis by a man who found himself spiritually lost. Immediately in Canto I we see that Dante "the character" is lost on a spiritual level. He awakens mid-way through his life in a dark woods severed from both light and human connections. Dante
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OF SHAKESPEAREAN COMEDY M.H. Abrams defined ‘comedy’ as ‘ a work in which materials are selected and managed primarily in order to interest‚ involve‚ and amuse us: the characters and their discomfitures engage our delighted attention rather than our profound concern. We feel confident that no great disaster will occur‚ and usually the action turns out happily for the chief characters. Abrams specifies several different types of comedy ‘within the broad spectrum of dramatic comedy’‚ including romantic
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