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    Jean Kilbourne\

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    see dissoluteness and challenging behavior every day in life and we got so used to it in‚ at first sight‚ such small pieces of film‚ and apparently of our day routine‚ as advertisement‚ that we hardly notice the big picture. For over twenty years‚ Jean Kilbourne has been writing‚ lecturing‚ and making films about how advertising affects women and girls. In her essay‚ "‘The Two Ways a Woman Can Get Hurt’: Advertising and Violence"‚ Kilbourne looks very deep into the connection between abuse and ads

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    Jean Baudrillard

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    JEAN BAUDRILLARD – SIMULACRA AND SIMULATION In his work Simulacra and Simulation‚ a post-modern sociologist‚ Jean Baudrillard discusses how Capitalism surrounds the authenticity and social life. He says; “Whence the characteristics hysteria of our times: that of the production and reproduction of the real... That is why today this ‘material’ production is that of the hyperreal itself.” Baudrillard examines how authenticity is displaced in the fields such as economics‚ art‚ science‚ politics

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    Jean Piaget

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    Jean paiget put forward one of the most complex and through account of cognitive development. He believed that children’s intelligence develops through interaction between their biological makeup and the world around them. He also believed that children gain a better understanding of the world through exploring on their own and active engagement and trying out different actions and seeing what effect they had. All the knowledge and new experiences are organised into schemas. Schemas are mental structures

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    Jean Piagets

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    Jean Piagets theory Piaget’s theory is based on stages‚ whereby each stage represents a qualitatively different type of thinking. Children in stage one cannot think the same as children in stage 2‚ 3 or 4 etc. Transitions from one stage to another are generally very fast‚ and the stages always follow an invariant sequence. Another important characteristic of his stage theory is that they are universal; the stages will work for everyone in the world regardless of their differences (except their

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    BREATHLESS ( A BOUT DE SOUFFLE) REACTION PAPER By : Katherine Paler- Rivera According to the many articles and film history that I read‚ this is the first feature film directed by Jean- Luc Godard who was considered the influencial director that started the French New Wave. And based on our lectures‚ what makes the French New Wave famous was the technique like jumpcuts‚ shooting on location‚ using handheld cameras‚ loose narrative form or improvised dialogue. Godard also uses the history of

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    their lives so easily then? It could be because at this point a person is no one. He or she has yet to develop any sense of self in the world. Once a person is born he/she goes through a rapid stage of learning‚ but what comes before that is unknown. Jean-Paul Sartre offers an opinion similar to John Locke’s “tabula rasa” in thinking that “existence precedes essence.” Many argue on the making of a man‚ but Sartre humanistically gives people the ability to decide who they want to be. On the other hand

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    Jean Piaget

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    Jean Piaget was a theorist who studied child development; one of the many aspects of early childhood Piaget studied was preoperational thinking. Preoperational thinking usually occurs from ages 2 through 7 according to Piaget. It’s when a child is not able to think logically and perform activities that require logic. In other words‚ a child is not yet ready at this stage‚ to reason many situations. Piaget created many experiments that could help educators observe and detect the stages and levels

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    girls find themselves in a vulnerable state as their bodies and their minds develop and mature. These films highlight the enormous pressure and dangers that adolescent girls face due to the environment that society provides. In Killing Us Softly‚ Jean Kilbourne delivers a powerful lecture on the insane pressure that the advertising industry puts on women. In her lecture‚ she addresses the fact that the severely photo-shopped images found in magazines lowers women’s self-esteem. These advertisements

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    The Rationale of this task was to create a dramedy of three stereotypes created in society to bump heads in one another‚ as based off of Jean-Paul Sartre’s No Exit. Three characters‚ President Bill Clinton‚ Marilyn Monroe‚ and Dana were selected to all fit into one enclosed space‚ an Art-Deco themed elevator‚ as a different representation for Hell. For this instance‚ the characters were all representations of stereotypes the 20th and 21st century had developed‚ in hopes that each opposite would create

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    hand. Lastly‚ the Romantic Art genre portrays imagination and elaborate emotions. This genre challenged traditional society norms by showing sacrifices in order to establish liberty‚ equality‚ and humanity. An example of Rococo art is The Swing by Jean-Honore Fragonard. In this piece we have a woman on a swing surrounded by men and statues. She is ascending in the air whilst kicking off one of her shoes. At

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