When looking at the works of Alfred Hitchcock there are many recurring themes. Wrong man‚ classic Hitchcock villains‚ and the use of staircases are just three of the many attributes you see when watching a Hitchcock film. My favorite‚ however‚ would have to be Hitchcock’s portrayal of the mother. Whether she is there for comic relief as we see in Shadow of a Doubt‚ or as the root of all evil as you see in Strangers on a Train and Notorious‚ the mothers he creates are far from ordinary. Either
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from interpersonal affection ("I love my mother") to pleasure ("I loved that meal"). It can refer to an emotion of a strong attraction and personal attachment.[1] It can also be a virtue representing human kindness‚ compassion‚ and affection—"the unselfish loyal and benevolent concern for the good of another".[2] It may also describe compassionate and affectionate actions towards other humans‚ one ’s self or animals.[3] Ancient Greeks identified four forms of love: kinship or familiarity (in Greek
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Rear Window Director: Alfred Hitchcock Cast: James Stewart‚ Grace Kelley‚ Wendell Corey‚ Thelma Ritter‚ Raymond Burr Screenplay: John Michael Hayes based on a short story “It Had to be Murder” by Cornell Woolrich published 1942 Cinematography: Robert Burks Music: Franz Waxman Paramount Pictures Use of Subjective point of view. Someone said there are two kinds of people in the world‚ there are people who
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Response to “The Book of Songs” #2 While “Air of the States” depicted the thoughts of the ordinary‚ minor and major odes have poems that portray the views of nobility and rulers. The Minor Odes is mainly written by aristocratic people‚ and The Major Odes has the words of the kings and rulers. Divided by decades‚ the poems tend to talk more about broader themes. Readers can find those implications from the specific examples shown in the poems. The poem “What Plant Is Not Faded?” is the last
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Bull Song→ point of view of the bull (sad treatment of animals) Capots→ Cape used in bullfighting (Vocab) ** contrast of the violence of the bull from the bulls point of view with the grace and beauty and artistry of matadors Bull is male Bull symbolizes power Repetition of like flies‚ like flies roaring- associate roaring with lions ( unusual image of like flies roaring)→ negative image! Shift to second stanza Stood dizzied: Sun and anger: reminiscent of the stranger ( killing
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07 March 2012 Alfred Lord Tennyson: Poet Extraordinaire of his time during the mid-1800s Alfred Lord Tennyson’s life and opinions are reflected in his poetry without the concern of admirers or critics. His opinion questions the challenges of death‚ love‚ and faith as natural occurrences in life. These engagements of Tennyson’s thoughts are reflected in three of his poems‚ “In Memoriam A.H.H.”‚ “To the Queen”‚ and “Faith”. With the publication of his poems in 1842‚ Alfred Lord Tennyson was
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Notes on Emily Dickinson Poems This is my letter to the world Theme- nature holds beauty‚ truth‚ love Speaker – nature lover‚ poet Imagery/ Symbols – hands = people of the world Figurative Lang. – metaphor letter = poem‚ personification (world cannot write to her) Sound Device – slant rhyme – world and told‚ dashes – pauses for effect Structure – 2 quatrains Tone – hopeful Mood - hopeful Hope is a thing with feathers Theme – hope endures‚ hope sustains us through life’s hardships Figurative Lang
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Ulysses It little profits that an idle king‚ By this still hearth‚ among these barren crags‚ Match’d with an aged wife‚ I mete and dole Unequal laws unto a savage race‚ That hoard‚ and sleep‚ and feed‚ and know not me. I cannot rest from travel; I will drink Life to the lees. All times I have enjoy’d Greatly‚ have suffer’d greatly‚ both with those That loved me‚ and alone; on shore‚ and when Thro’ scudding drifts the rainy Hyades Vext the dim sea. I am become a name;
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famous quote by Alfred Lord Tennyson. What this quote means is that the experience of being in love‚ even if not successful is better than never having been in love at all. The experience is so valuable that having it alone is a good thing‚ even if you lose at love. Some people or scholars may believe that this quote is not true‚ but personally I think it is true. There are two main reasons why this quote is true and they are if you have never loved than you do not know what love is‚ and if you don’t
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Alfred Adler‚ a psychoanalytical-social theorist strongly believed personality developed on a much more intimate and individual basis than many of the other personality psychologists of his time. According to the Adler Graduate School (2016)‚ “Adler developed the first holistic theory of personality‚ psychopathology‚ and psychotherapy that was intimately connected to a humanistic philosophy of living” (para. 1). His theory of individual psychology emphasizes the social perspective of personality
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