Mass international tourism creates tension rather than understanding between people from different cultures. Do you agree or disagree‚ and why? Tourism develops wherever you live. Thanks to globalization and technological advance‚ people in different regions are able to travel across their boundaries‚ even to the other side of the world‚ without difficulty. Does it mean the relationship between tourists and host communities is getting close together? To a larger extent‚ international tourism fails
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Quote from Text Commentary “I try in vain to be persuaded that the pole is the seat of frost and desolation… and diffusing a perpetual splendour” (7‚ 8). It is interesting to see how this person describes the North Pole because in reality the North pole is a place full of ice where few things have adapted to live. This person is speaking of finding beautiful things there and doing something great but it just doesn’t make sense because the North Pole is more of a barren wasteland than a place of
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later known as the Romantic Movement. Following the Enlightenment and Industrial era‚ Europe had experienced rapid industrialization and a lengthy wartime at the cost of its population. Wishing to free themselves from years of harsh life‚ Europeans began to focus their everyday life on aspects set away from the enlightenment and industrialization‚ mainly pro-logical thought. The romantics focused on individuality‚ religion‚ nature‚ and peaceful times in their history. Romantics idealized aspects
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The Romantic Era was an artistic and scholarly evolution‚ which originated in Europe at the end of the 18th century. This era is best known for its emphasis on emotion and individualism. Throughout this time‚ fantasy and mystery took over the arts. Other trends throughout this time were the interest in nature and an interest in the bizarre cultures of the past. The popularity of music was soon growing and evolving. This expansion of music included a greater selection of timbre‚ and a greater use
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Tamara Haddad Wilhite P.5 Scarlet Letter Dialectical Journal “Like anything that pertains to crime‚ it seemed never to have a youthful era… a wild rose-bush‚ in this month of June‚ with delicate gems‚ which might be imagined to offer their fragrance and fragile beauty to the prisoner as he went in” (Hawthorne 45). Hawthorne describes the door of the jail‚ as well as the rose bush to the side of it. I feel as if this is supposed to represent what Hester is about the experience: the harsh
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Unit Summary – Module 5 The Romantic Period 21 points Please complete each question as thoroughly as possible and submit to your professor by the due date. This summary will function as a one of the study guides for the final exam so it is very important that the information is complete. 1. Describe the characteristics of music in the romantic period. Be sure to include information on each of the following: (6 points) - Romantic music was associated with emotional intensity. These works
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IMAGINATION IN ROMANTIC POETRY A large part of those extracts on Romantic imagination - which are contained in the fascicule on pages D64 and D65 – are strictly related to an ancient theory about Art and Reality’s imitation‚ the Theory of Forms concieved by a Classical Greek philosopher‚ mathematician Plato - in Greek: Πλάτων‚ Plátōn‚ "broad"; from 424/423 BC to 348/347 BC. The Theory of Forms - in Greek: ἰδέαι - typically refers to the belief expressed by Socrates in some of Plato’s dialogues
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Characteristics of Romantic Period * Rachmaninoff Piano concerto No.2 1stmovement Sergei Rachmaninoff’s piano concerto No.2 is composed in 1900 at the end of the Romantic period emphasizing anti-modernism and representing the older Romantic tradition. The first movement is in sonata-allegro form‚ which is exposition‚ development‚ Recapitulation and Coda‚ preserving and extending the formal structure from the Classical period. The piece is very emotional and expressive‚ containing a lot
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Do action movies and Romantic movies have anything on common? Or are they quite dissimilar? We can have two approaches to the matter: Technical and Creative. First I will briefly cover the technical aspects. A typical action movie consists of action sequences‚ explosions‚ car chases‚ fight scenes‚ stunts and stunts coordinator‚ etc. All mean that an action flick needs a bigger budget‚ much bigger than what a typical romantic film would need. On the creative side of the issue an action flick
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Task: To describe how tension is made in Act 2‚ Scenes 1 and 2. English AFL Final Draft By Imani Anderson-Whittington Shakespeare created a lot of tension in Act 2‚ scenes 1 and 2. The tension made is one of the effects caused by the varied sentence lengths‚ pathetic fallacy‚ animal sounds‚ alliterations‚ oxymorons‚ emotions portrayed by the characters‚ and rhyme. Firstly‚ sentence structure is affective because it increases and decreases the ‘flow’ of the play and also‚ the rhyming scheme
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