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    there is a scene with the hotel’s disturbing proprietor Norman Bates that challenges gender roles and shows the weak positions of power that Hitchcock gives each character in the film. Marion begins the scene by listening in as Norman fights with his mother. She peers out her window at the menacing house and hears the loud voices coming from it. Afterwards Norman brings some food down to Marion. They settle in his parlor‚ surrounded by a collection of stuffed birds. Norman alludes to the connection

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    November 19‚ 2011 Intro to Hum Artist‚ Writers‚ and Composer Goya was most important Spanish artist of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. His full name was Francisco José de Goya‚ Born in Fuendetodos‚ he later moved with his parents to Saragossa and‚ at the age of fourteen‚ began studying with the painter José Luzán Martínez who live from 1710 to 1785. Goya came to artistic maturity during this age of enlightenment. The painter brothers Francisco and Ramón Bayeu y Subías

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    The Similarities of Alfred Hitchcock and Edward Hopper Alfred Hitchcock‚ also known as‚ “The Master of Suspense”‚ was a director to a variety of award winning films. Many Hitchcock movies will be noticeably inspired by numerous paintings‚ including the work of iconic artist Edward Hopper. Hopper‚ born in New York‚ was well known for his realist paintings. Comparing the paintings and films‚ one will see the similarities displayed between the two. Alfred Hitchcock and Edward Hopper are linked by creating

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    Prufrock Paralysis The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock‚ written by T.S. Eliot‚ is a truly depressing poem. The poem concerns with a character (Prufrock) that can see and understand the values in life – love‚ joy‚ companionship‚ and courageousness – but is unable to act on his longings. The poem shows constant struggles of Prufrock’s uselessness. The worst part about his uselessness is that he is conscious of it. T.S. Eliot uses the theme of Paralysis‚ the incapacity to act‚ throughout the whole

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    mood of dreadful suspense and distorted intrigue. Concisely‚ Gothic literature shows the “darker” side of life that strains at the limits between mortality and immortality‚ reason and emotion‚ order and disorder‚ mind and body‚ and love and hate. Alfred Hitchcock kept a Gothic purpose prevalent in his movie Psycho as he created its characters and the romances between them‚ setting‚ and imagery. Characters¾and the romances between them¾are commended in Gothic pieces for their unconscious fear‚

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    Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby and Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman there are several characters that face failure. Their failures are based on their actions and it is the response of the characters that create a tragic story. The characters fail at facing reality and accepting change which affect their way of thinking. One could understand that the final outcome of the two novels is due to the way the characters face his or her own failures. Failure The Great Gatsby Death of a Salesman

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    Just like a roller coaster‚ horror films have brought a sense of excitement into ones personal enjoyment. Horror films tap into the fears of many by using certain phobias such as Arachnophobia‚ Ophidiophobia‚ Acrophobia and Agoraphobia. Psycho by Alfred Hitchcock was one of the few horror films in 1960’s to become a classic. Psycho tells a story of a woman who steals forty thousand dollars in order for the man whom she loves can afford a divorce. However‚ not all goes as plan. She is killed by a

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    In The Great Gatsby Nick Carraway rents a house in West Egg. He was Daisy Buchanans’s cousin‚ who lives in East Egg. Jordan‚ then tells Nick if he knows Gatsby‚ who is a man who is wealthy and throws parties. Nick then realizes that Gatsby is his neighbor. One day Nick gets an invitation to Gatsby party. When Nick goes he sees Daisy. Gatsby then meets Nick and tells Jordan to tell Nick to invite Daisy to tea. When Gatsby goes to Nicks house he has Nicks house lawn cut‚ flowers brought in‚ etc. When

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    Karen Horney and Alfred Adler are two very similar yet different neo-analytic theorists. At first glance‚ it may appear that Horney stole some of Adler’s best ideas. It is‚ of course‚ quite conceivable that she was influenced by Adler. It is clear‚ for example‚ that Horney’s three neurotic solutions are very close to Adler’s personality typology. Horney proposed a series of strategies used by neurotics to cope with other people and Adler developed a scheme of so called personality types that he intended

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    In the film adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby”‚ each character has their own differences and similarities. But the major changes shown in the film‚ are between the characters of Gatsby and Nick. The film’s take on these two characters stays within the style of the book‚ but some information about them are seen to be excluded in the film. Through the directing style of Baz Luhrmann‚ both Nick Carraway and Jay Gatsby are not portrayed in full as F. Scott Fitzgerald had written them

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