"Argumentative essay on power and corruption in the lord of the rings" Essays and Research Papers

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    “I agree with Ralph. We’ve got to have rules to obey. After all we’re not savages.” Lord of the Flies is a novel about some English school boys who end up on an island and struggle with how to organize their new life so it can have a bit of order. In the midst of all of this they rely on the customs of their old life to try and set things up. Throughout the novel leadership and control become a struggle to balance. In the end‚ some of the boys become savages because not matter how hard they try to

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    Sometimes they’re obvious and other times they’re masked though they are without a doubt the most familiar battles occurring on earth. In J.R.R. Tolkien’s Fellowship of the Ring‚ the struggle for power over Middle-Earth and the formation and battle of opposing forces of good and evil is the primary focus in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. The main conflicts seen and foreshadowed in FoTR are man versus man‚ and man versus nature. What is considered good and evil is often subjective in today’s society

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    Power does not have the ability to corrupt someone and change their original belief system into a fraudulent one. Being predisposed to power and having any amount of it cannot turn a relatively nice person with strong values into an unprincipled leader or authority figure. Despite the power someone can get from many positions it is due to their own characteristics‚ and power itself shouldn’t be at fault for corruption that relinquishes from their actions. Each person has the choice to use their power

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    “All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us‚” (LotR 51). Death is a necessary evil‚ an end to life. It’s what we do with our life that is most important. In Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings‚” mortals who acquire immortality end up facing many harsh realities. In the creation of Middle Earth‚ Iluvatar creates the Ainur (Holy Ones) and the Children of Iluvatar. The Ainur are the first‚ and the most powerful beings created by Iluvatar; they are immortal. The Children of Iluvatar

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    Tolkien has experienced a resurgence of interest in the last two decades-in a large part thanks to Peter Jackson’s film adaptations of both The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. However I do not wish to look at the movies‚ or indeed at any of Tolkien’s more prevalent work. I wish to focus on his poetry‚ the poems woven into the narrative of his popular novels (including revised versions published in The History of Middle-earth series) as well as his stand-alone pieces that may have little to do with

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    The expression “Power corrupts” can illustrate how the more power one achieves‚ the more corrupt the person may become. Evidence of this is shown in William Shakespeare’s “Macbeth” as characters that came in contact with power is shown being corrupted and consumed by greed. Lady Macbeth is a character in this play‚ and you view how her gained authority and her ambitions took control of her to do wrongful deeds. Corruption is depicted very clearly in the character Macbeth‚ as his fearful ambitions

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    Frodo’s quest of the One Ring. Two well-known literary works of the twentieth century‚ Lord of the Rings and the Chronicles of Narnia‚ captivate the imaginations of children and adults alike long after their authors have passed them on. Tales of magic‚ both good and evil‚ power and battles‚ elves and dwarves‚ make these stories popular. For over fifty years‚ C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia captured the hearts of millions children around the world. J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings has sold over 100 million

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    who foolishly sought power by riding on the back of the tiger ended up inside." - John F. Kennedy When individuals come into a position of power‚ where the definition of control becomes a new one according to their own point of view‚ they usually open a feeling in their minds that what ever decision they make that directly conflicts the lives of other people‚ that they shouldn’t feel responsible at all. That’s when power corrupts the minds of these people. Corruption is something that is

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    Personal power has the ability to be essential to greatness‚ and at the same time is able to destroy a person’s nature. In the drama Macbeth by William Shakespeare‚ the main character‚ Macbeth‚ becomes corrupt through power that he gains. The play shows that even someone who starts out like Macbeth and does not crave power‚ will do terrible things to gain authority and power. The play begins with the characters King Duncan and Malcolm talking about a "good and hardy soldier" (Act I: ii: 4).

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    Shakespeare’s bloody and tragic play Macbeth‚ written in the seventeenth century‚ portrays blind ambition‚ appearances can be deceiving and corruption of power. It follows the reasons behind Macbeth’s downfall. The play analyzes how other outside forces can easily change the path of ones desires and decisions. The witches’ intrusion‚ Lady Macbeth’s manipulation and Macbeth’s dark desires all interfere and manipulate Macbeth’s decisions. He goes from being praised as a noble soldier to a traitor and

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